- Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt
Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt was a German front-line fortification west of the village of
Beaumont Hamel on the Somme. It was the scene of a number of costly attacks by Britishinfantry during theBattle of the Somme in 1916. It was also the site of one of the most famous pieces of film footage ofWorld War I when the Hawthorn Ridge mine was detonated beneath the redoubt at 7:20 am on1 July ,1916 , thefirst day on the Somme .The Hawthorn Ridge mine was the northern-most of the ten mines detonated on
1 July and one of the three large mines, the other two being theLochnagar mine and the Y Sap mine atLa Boisselle . The mine contained about 40,000 lb (18long tons ) of explosives. The plan was to detonate all other mines at 7:28 am, two minutes before Zero hour when the infantry advance would begin, butLieutenant-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston , whose VIII Corps was holding the Hawthorn Ridge sector, favoured blowing the mine hours before the main attack, believing this would give his 29th Division time to capture and consolidate the crater. However, the Fourth Army commander, Lieutenant-General Henry Rawlinson rejected this proposal on the grounds that the Germans would probably take possession of the crater. In this stance he was supported by General Sir Douglas Haig, commander of theBritish Expeditionary Force . As a compromise, Hunter-Weston was allowed to blow the mine ten minutes before Zero, rather than two minutes.One witness to the detonation of the Hawthorn Ridge mine was British
cinematographer Geoffrey Malins who was filming the 29th Division's attack. He had his camera set up about half a mile away, trained on the ridge and waiting for the explosion.Once the debris subsided, two
platoon s of the 2nd Battalion,Royal Fusiliers (86th Brigade, 29th Division) were sent forward to occupy the crater. However, the German defenders succeeded in holding the eastern lip of the crater. The early detonation alerted all Germans in the vicinity that the long-expected attack was now imminent. By the time the infantry went over at 7:30 am, the Germanmachine gun s were sweepingno man's land andartillery fire was falling on the British trenches. The attack on Hawthorn Ridge redoubt, and on the entire VIII Corps front, ended in failure. By 8:30 am, the only "gain" by the 29th Division was one company clinging to the western lip of the crater but by the end of the day this too was lost.After the disaster of the first day on the Somme, British efforts were concentrated south of the Albert-
Bapaume road and the Hawthorn Ridge sector was not subjected to further major attacks until the final push of the battle on13 November with the opening of theBattle of the Ancre . For this attack another mine was laid beneath Hawthorn Ridge, this time containing 30,000 lb (13 tons) of explosives. On this occasion, superior British planning resulted in a successful assault and Hawthorn Ridge as well as Beaumont Hamel were finally captured.
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