- High Wood
High Wood is a small
forest nearBazentin le Petit in theSomme "département" of northernFrance which was the scene of intense fighting for two months from14 July to15 September ,1916 during the Battle of the Somme. The French name for the wood was "Bois des Foureaux" (now called "Bois des Fourcaux") but to the British infantry who fought there, it was known as High Wood and, like neighbouringDelville Wood , it earned an evil reputation. The stench of rotting corpses in the wood was overwhelming in summer and it inspired E.A. MacKintosh* to pen aparody of "Chalk Farm to Camberwell Green"::"High Wood to
Waterlot Farm , All on a summer's day, Up you get to the top of the trench Though you're sniped at all the way.If you've got a smoke helmet there You'd best put it on if you could, For the wood down by Waterlot Farm Is a bloody high wood."The
British Fourth Army ofLieutenant General Henry Rawlinson first attempted to capture High Wood on14 July ,1916 during theBattle of Bazentin Ridge . Though the wood was initially abandoned by the Germans, delays, confusion and hesitation meant that the British did not attempt to occupy it until the evening when two regiments ofcavalry , the7th Dragoon Guards and the2nd Deccan Horse , made the only cavalry charge of the battle. Though the cavalry gained a foothold and held out until the morning of15 July , they were unsupported and forced to withdraw.The next attempt on the wood was made by a single company of the 16th Battalion,
King's Royal Rifle Corps , 33rd Division on15 July but by this time there Germans had reoccupied the wood in numbers. High Wood became an anchor for the new German defensive trench line, known as theSwitch Line , that connected their second defensive line nearPozières with their incomplete third defensive line east of Flers. The Switch Line ran through the northern tip of High Wood and both proved impregnable to the piecemeal attacks mounted by the Fourth Army.The 33rd Division attacked again on
20 July and managed to capture part of High Wood while the 5th Division and 7th Division attacked the Switch Line to the east. (It was during the 7th Division's attack that Private Theodore Veale won theVictoria Cross .) The next major Fourth Army assault came on the night of 22-23 July and on this occasion the 51st (Highland) Division attacked High Wood but here, as everywhere else on the Fourth Army front, they were repulsed with heavy casualties. Sergeant Bill Hay of the 1/9th Battalion,Royal Scots , described the attack thus::"That was a stupid action, because we had to make a frontal attack on bristling German guns and there was no shelter at all. ... There were dead bodies all over the place where previous battalions and regiments had taken part in previous attacks. What a bashing we got. There were heaps of men everywhere — not one or two men, but heaps of men, all dead. Even before we went over, we knew this was death. We just couldn't take High Wood against machine-guns. It was ridiculous. There was no need for it. It was just absolute slaughter."
The British
field gun s had difficulty supporting attacks on High Wood because they had to fire over Bazentin Ridge. The low elevation of the guns meant the shells were just skimming over the British trenches and the margin for error was small with numerous casualties fromfriendly fire .On
18 August the 33rd Division was called on to attack High Wood once again and once again failed. The division tried again on24 August between High Wood and Delville Wood and as preparation for this assault, amachine gun barrage was laid down by the 100th Machine Gun Company (100th Brigade) which, in twelve hours, fired over 1 million shells from ten machine guns.Another failed attack was made on
3 September as part of the fighting forGuillemont . By14 September it was estimated that the British had suffered 6,000 casualties in the struggle for High Wood.High Wood was finally captured, along with the
Switch Line , in the next major British offensive, theBattle of Flers-Courcelette on15 September ,1916 . Success was not achieved without further blunder and sacrifice. Due to the close proximity of the two front-lines, the III Corps commander,Lieutenant General Sir William Pulteney, decided to use the newly introducedtank instead ofartillery . After two months of constant fighting High Wood was not ideal terrain for tank operations, especially these first, under-developed tanks. Four tanks were allocated to High Wood but only one, "D-13", penetrated any distance and its presence was not decisive.The task of capturing High Wood had fallen to the 47th (1/2nd London) Division. Their first attempt with tank support had failed but the attack resumed and, after a hurricane bombardment of German positions by
Stokes mortar s, in which 750 shells were fired in 15 minutes, High Wood was finally in British hands. Ironically, the 47th Division's performance was considered a failure — High Wood was only one of their objectives for the day — and after four days of fighting in which the division suffered over 4,500 casualties, the commanderMajor General Charles Barter was relieved of command for "wanton waste of men" (though prevailing opinion lays the blame with Pulteney).There is an interesting 'soldier's eye-view' of the July 14th attack and its aftermath in chapter IX of "The War The Infantry Knew 1914 - 1919" by Captain J. C. Dunne (Abacus, 1st edition 1987; ISBN 0-349-10635-5). Dunne was a doctor with the Royal Welch Fusiliers who, from recollections of his own and those collected from others, privately published what he considered to be a more accurate and honest account of the Great War as experienced by the soldier on the ground.
On the edge of High Wood is the
London Cemetery and Extension . This Commonwealth cemetery was opened with the interment of 47 soldiers of the 47th Division in the days following the 15th September 1916. The men were buried in a large shell hole. The cemetery now contains the remains of some 4000 men, the vast majority being First World War casualties.*Footnote: all the best poems of Lieutenant E Alan Mackintosh can be found in the biography Can't Shoot a Man With a Cold Lieutenant E Alan Mackintosh MC 1893-1917 Poet of the Highland Division Campbell and Green Argyll Publishing 2004 ISBN 1-902831-76-4 £12.99
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