Frank Toogood
The Battlefield Guide

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Guild of Battlefield Guides,
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The Great War plaque in Mons
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Film




Two companies and a Stokes Mortar team from 1st Battalion, the Lancashire Fusiliers form up for the assault in a sunken lane opposite Hawthorn Ridge during the Battle of the Somme in 1916. Twenty minutes after this film was shot they attacked under heavy machine gun fire following the Hawthorn mine exploding. Only 50 of them reached the low bank beyond the lane: filmed by the British War Office during the Battle of the Somme.



Hawthorn mine exploding at Beaumont Hamel, Somme, France, 7.20 a.m. lst July 1916. The mine was exploded by 252 Tunnelling Company, Royal Engineers using about 40,000 lbs of ammonal. The resulting crater was 80ft deep and measured 150 yds by 100 yds.


Fact...


...the first British regiment to cross the Rhine into Germany at the end of the Great War was commanded by an Officer of the Essex Yeomanry! Great War Essex Yeomanry cap badge

The officer who had that proud distinction was Maj. Ruggles–Brise MC. After the Essex Yeomanry had been disbanded, Maj. Ruggles–Brise went onto be the second–in–command of the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards having done a short stint with the 11th Hussars.

As the senior regiment of the brigade, the 4th were the leading regiment on important occasions and as the commanding officer of the 4th was on leave, command devolved to Maj. Ruggles–Brise, who led the 4th Dragoon Guards across the little stream, the Redwasser, dividing Belgium from Germany at 9 a.m. exactly on December 1st, 1918.

For more information, visit the website of the Essex Yeomanry »
Great War


At the beginning of the twentieth century, Europe was a "tinderbox"; its countries were locked in a series of continental alliances, it's colonies were expanding, particularly in Africa and one nation, Germany, was trying to establish herself as one of the Great Powers. To achieve this and defend her gains, Germany started to built up her army and navy and in doing so, triggered an arms race. Between 1908 and 1913, the military spending of the European powers increased by fifty percent.
The Menin Gate Memorial
Was history repeating itself in Europe a century later, but with the Germans replacing French? One thing is sure, Graf Alfred von Schlieffen must have studied Napoléon's strategies and knew that to fight numerically superior forces on two fronts at the same time would lead to defeat, so the order of the day would be to divide and conquer. Von Schlieffen's strategy called for a holding force to be sent east, whist the main German army would mass to the west for a pre–emptive strike designed to knock out France. Having achieved that, the main German army would then be free to join the holding force in the east and attack Russia before she could mobilise and concentrate her forces. The plan that took von Schlieffen name was not without risk – speed and strength would be key to its success if it were to be used.

map key

If you click and drag the map, you can move it to view any part of map. Blue; French. Red; German.

The assassination on the 28th of June 1914 of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the Austro–Hungarian Empire, by a Serbian whist on a state visit to the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina, was the "spark that lit the tinterbox." The Austria declaration of war against Serbia led to the activation of the continental alliances, which within weeks saw all of the major European powers at war and gave Germany the excuse to implement von Schlieffen's plan. (Or the alternative view as described by Baldrick in Blackadder Goes Forth, the war began when "Archie Duke shot an ostrich because he was hungry".)
Tyne Cot Cemetery
By 1913, von Schlieffen could see that tensions were rising in Europe to such a degree, that on his death bed, he reputedly said, "It must come to a fight."

As France had fortified its borders with Germany, von Schlieffen's plan was to swing Germany's main force with its centre of access at the point where France meets Belgium, anticlockwise through neutral Belgium, around to Paris and on to envelope the French Army defending its border with Germany.

When Germany launched its invasion though Belgium, Britain declared war on Germany on the 4th of August 1914 with the stated aim of restoring Belgium's neutrality. In reality it was more about putting a brake on Germany's imperial and maritime power and colonial expansion. Britain committed the British Expeditionary Force, (BEF) of just 100,000 men to the cause who took up their positions in Belgium to the left and alongside the French Army.
The Lochnagar Crater
By comparison to the continental armies who were numbered by the million, the BEF was small – the Kaiser referred to them as this "contemptible little army". However, whatever they lacked in size, they made up for it with their professionalism and training. So much so, they held–back the Germans with their firepower at Mons and Le Cateau, until overwhelming German numbers forced them back.
The Thiepval Memorial
The BEF and the French finally halted the German advance along the River Marne. To gain the advantage, both sides then tried to outflank each other in a series of marches towards the north and back into Belgium, which became known as the "Race to the Sea". With no more flanks to turn, both sides had to stand and fight, which they did at Ypres between the end of October and the beginning of November 1914. This was to become known as the First Battle of Ypres. By the end of November stalemate ensued; exhausted, both armies dug themselves in along a 500 mile front, stretching from the North Sea all the way down to Switzerland. This became known as the Western Front and the start of trench warfare.
The Passchendaele Musueum
War wasn't to be over by Christmas – it went on for four more long years, with battles like Ypres, Loos, the Somme, Arras, Vimy Ridge, Passchendaele and Combrai to name a few, that have gone down in history together with the men that fought in them from all nations.

Take a tour with The Battlefield Guided and see for yourself Ypres and the Somme and hear about the actions that took place and the men that fought in them.


Above


Lewis Gunner from the Suffolk Regiment on the Western Front.


Itinerary


Below is an example of some of the sites to visit. As each tour is bespoke, you will receive confirmation of your personal itinerary with your booking confirmation.
  • Ypres
  • Menin Gate Memorial
  • Passchendaele Museum
  • Langemark Cemetery
  • Tyne Cot Cemetery
  • Essex Farm
  • Poperinghe
  • Sanctuary Wood (Hill 62)
  • Ploegstraat
  • Monchy le Preux
  • The Somme
  • Lochnagar
  • Hawthorn Ridge
  • Beaumont–Hamel
  • Delville Wood
  • Flers
  • Pozières
  • Thiepval Memorial
  • Ulster Tower
  • Newfoundland Memorial Park

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Frank Toogood
The Battlefield Guide
Cobwebs Barn
Canterbury Grange
Bocking, Braintree
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Fact...




...established by Royal Charter in 1917, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) pays tribute to the 1,700,000 men and women of the Commonwealth forces who died in the two world wars. It is a non–profit–making organisation that was founded by Sir Fabian Ware. The Commission's principles are that
  • Each of the dead should be commemorated by name on the headstone or memorial
  • Headstones and memorials should be permanent
  • Headstones should be uniform
  • There should be no distinction made on account of military or civil rank, race or creed
For more information, visit the website of the CWGC »



Film




An excract from the 2008 film "Passchendaele" – very moving scenes of the Canadian's fighting. Worth watching, though the end is a little...



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