- Drocourt-Quéant
The "Drocourt-Quéant" switch of the
Hindenburg Line fromDrocourt, Pas-de-Calais toQuéant ,Pas-de-Calais was the site of aWorld War I engagement of German defenders with Canadian and British forces in France on 2-3 September, 1918, part of the SecondBattle of Arras .Built in 1918 by the Germans at the road from
Arras toCambrai . The line was defended by a broadglacis , protected bymachine-gun nests and wide belts of barbed wire with large, deep tunnels to protect thegarrison .Order of Battle
*
British First Army :
**Canadian Corps 1st Canadian Division and4th Canadian Division ,British XXII Corps 11th Division
*British Third Army :
**52nd Division , 57th Division,63rd (Royal Naval) Division
* German 17th Army
*German 3rd Army V CorpsThe attack
The line was attacked at 0500 by the First and Fourth divisions of the Canadian Corps, with the support of a large number of tanks and of
Brutinel's Brigade (formerly theCanadian Independent Force ) The line was carried 6,000 yards deep along the whole of the Canadian front with the capture of 5,000 unwounded prisoners by the Canadians in this one operation. [citation |author=Wallace W. Stewart (editor) |title=The Encyclopedia of Canada |volume=2 |place=Toronto |publisher=University Associates of Canada |date=1948 |pages=236] Together with the capture ofMont St. Quentin and Péronne (see theBattle of Mont St. Quentin ) by the Australians this leftLudendorff 's Winter Defence Line unsupportable, forcing him to withdraw the 17th and 3rd Armies behind theSensée and theCanal du Nord on the night of 2/3 September. [cite web |url=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/05/0518/051806/0518060601_e.html |title=The 2nd Battle of Arras |publisher=Veterans Affairs Canada |accessdate=2008-02-22] [cite book |title=The Silent General:Horne of the First Army |publisher=Helion |page=207 |pages=319 |isbn=187462299X]Citations
Seven
Victoria Cross es for valour were awarded for "... most conspicuous bravery, or some daring or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice, or extreme devotion to duty in the presence of the enemy" for actions on September 2 to: [cite web |url=http://www.vac-acc.gc.ca/remembers/sub.cfm?source=memorials/ww1mem/dury |title=Dury Memorial |publisher=Veterans Affairs Canada |date=1998-08-12 |accessdate=2008-02-22] [cite web |url=http://legionmagazine.ca/features/victoriacross/05-11.asp?id=print |title=The Magnificent Seven |journal=Legion Magazine |date=2005 |accessdate=2008-02-22]# Private
Claude Joseph Patrick Nunney of the 38th (Ottawa) Battalion (Infantry) atVis-en-Artois .
#Lance-Corporal William Henry Metcalf was an American-born member of the 16th Canadian Scottish Battalion atCagnicourt
#Lieutenant-Colonel Cyrus Wesley Peck , the commanding officer of the 16th Battalion
# PrivateJohn Francis Young , a stretcher bearer with the 87th Battalion (Canadian Grenadier Guards )
# PrivateWalter Leigh Rayfield of the 7th (1st British Columbia) Battalion
#Captain Bellendan S. Hutcheson, an American-bornMedical officer with the75th Battalion, CEF [citation |author=McKillican Donald R |title=The Hodden Grey: A Short History of The 75th (Mississauga) Battalion Canadian Expeditionary Force World War I and the Toronto Scottish Regiment 1915-1995 |place=Toronto |date=1995]
# ActingSergeant Arthur George Knight of the Tenth Battalion (Calgary Highlanders )Memorials
The Canadians contribution to the success of the attack on the Drocourt-Quéant line is commemorated at the Canadian Dury Memorial which is located on the North side of the D939 Route Nationale, south of Dury, between Arras and Cambrai.
References
Further reading
*
External links
* [http://www.1914-1918.org/MAPS/maps/allied18i.jpgmap]
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