55th (West Lancs:) Divisional Artillery Appendix II

SECRET

Appendix II

Copy No 14

 

55th (West Lancs:) Divisional Artillery

Order No 9

 

4-3-16

Ref Maps 1/20,000 sheet 51c S.E.

1/100,000 sheet 11 LENS

 

  1. In accordance with instructions from 7th Corps, the 4th North Midland F.A. Bde (How) will be withdrawn from the 55th Division, and will march to FREVENTto rejoin the 46th Division
  2. B/85th Battery (from 4th West Lancs How Bde R.F.A.) will replace it in the Left Group and will take over the positions occupied by the 1st and 2nd Derby Batteries as follows:-

On the night 5/6th March

One section B/85th Battery will relieve Right section 2nd Derby Battery at R9a9.3.

One section B/85th Battery will relieve Left Section 1st Derby Battery at R9b5.5.

Sections of 1st and 2nd Derby Batteries will on relief move to wagon lines.

On 6th March at 7 p.m. remaining sections 1st and 2nd Derby Batteries will vacate their positions and move to wagon lines.

No movement of vehicles from wagon lines at MONCHIET will be made before 5.45 p.m. on each night.

  1. O.C. B/85th Battery will take over command of his sections at new positions at 7 p.m. on 6th February (March) under the direct tactical control of the Left Group Commander.
  2. O.C. 4th North Midland (How) F.A. Bde will leave all telephone communications as they stand. The Left Group Commander will arrange for direct communication from B/85th Battery to Left Group H.Q.
  3. at and from 7 p.m. 6th March B/85th Battery will be under O.C. 14th Bde R.F.A. for administration and discipline. Section 85th Bde Ammn Column will be attached to 14th Bde Ammn Column at and from the same hour.
  4. On March 7th 4th North Midland (How) F.A. Bde will march under Brigade arrangements to new area. Route and destination will be notified later. Detachment 46th Div Ammn Column (attached 55th D.A.C.) will accompany it.

 

  1. Benson

Major R.A.

Brigade Major

55th Divisional Arty.

 

 

Issued at 8.30 p.m.

Copy no    1.  Right Group Comdr. 1st W.L. F.A. Bde.

  1. Centre Group Comdr 2nd W.L. F.A. Bde.
  2. Left Group Comdr 3rd W.L. F.A. Bde.
  3. 4th W.L. (How) F.A. Bde.
  4. 4th N. M. F.A. Bde.
  5. 14th Bde. R.F.A.
  6. 55th Div. Amm. Col.
  7. 55th Div (G)
  8. 7th Corps Artillery
  9. Staff Captain
  10. File
  11. Signals
  12. War Diary.
  13. War Diary.
  14. 164th Inf Bde.
  15. 165th Inf Bde.
  16. 166th Inf Bde.

 

 

Officers with 17th F.A. Brigade Feb 1916

WAR DIARY

 

Of

 

17th F.A. Brigade

29th Divisional Artillery

 

February 1916

 

 

Place       Date    Hour                                                Summary of Events and Information

 

LIST of OFFICERS serving with 17th F.A. Brigade on 29-2-16

Headquarters

Lieut A.E.G. Leadbetter a/Adjutant

Captain H. Harris R.A.M.C.

Captain Magill A.V.C.

 

26th Battery                                                                             92nd Battery                                         13th Battery

Captain D. Daly (Commanding)                                             Lieutenant J.E. Mocatta                      Captain R.S. Leach

2/Lieut H.R. Remmington                                                      Lieut R. Marx                                     Lieut H.T. Clare

2/Lieut R. Chalkley                                                                 2/Lieut M. Sleilt                                  2/Lieut D.M. Ely

2/Lieut J.H.S. Faixley                                                             2/Lieut R.M. Dale                               2/Lieut W. Dalziel

2/Lieut. T.C. Ratsey

 

17th Bde Amm Column

Major T. Hagan

2/Lieut A.J. King

2/Lieut A.W. Pewtress

2/Lieut R.W. Williams

 

On leave to ENGLAND Colonel W.P. Monkhouse C.M.G., M.V.O. (Commanding)

  • Major R.C. Williams 92nd Battery

 

Officers who left 17th Brigade during February 1916

 

CAPTAIN T.S. MALCOMSON R.F.A. sick to hospital, SUEZ.

2/Lieut H.R. Emery R.F.A. to 460th (How) Battery.

 

Officers who joined 17th Brigade during February 1916

 

2/Lieut R.M. Dale from “B” Battery R.H.A. (15th Bde)

Captain Magill A.V.C. joined 23-2-16 vice **** last seen when he left C.HELLES.

2/Lieut A.T. King, 17th BAC from hospital 26-2-16

 

A.E.G. Leadbetter

Lt. R.F.A.

Adjutant 17 Bde R.F.A.

17 Field Artillery Brigade War Diary Feb 1916

WAR DIARY

 

Of

 

17th F.A. Brigade

29th Divisional Artillery

 

February 1916

 

 

Place       Date    Hour                                                Summary of Events and Information

 

SUEZ           1st onwards          The 26th Battery equipped with 42nd D.A. horses was at AYUM MUSA, on the E. side of SUEZ CANAL.  At the extreme limit of the Canal defences.  It is about 5 miles from EL SHATT, which is opposite PORT TEWFIK, but only 2 miles from the sea.  (Gulf of SUEZ).  Communications by water from PORT TEWFIK to QUARINTINE STATION **** are within 2 miles of AYUN MUSA.  AYUN MUSA is constructed into a fort with carefully sited trenches.  10th Battery R.G.A. was also there (147th Bde).  The camp also consisted of 3 Battalions of INDIAN TROOPS of the 20th Garhwal Brigade, 10th Indian Division.  Headquarters of the Division were at EL SHATT and AYUN MUSA formed the right hand fort a detached fort.  On the right of AYUN MUSA the Navy was allotted most of the ground for defence.  Water arrangements at AYUN MUSA were good.

The rest of the Brigade remained encamped at SUEZ, awaiting the arrival of equipment of all sorts and also horses.

We were partially made up by drafts from General Base Depot SIDI BISHIR, and about 70 draft horses also arrived, some of which had been sent away from the Brigade from HELLES in November 1915. 12 new guns for the Division arrived, of which the Brigade got 2.  Certain amount of harness was also issued.

21st                        13th Battery R.F.A. relieved the 10th Battery at AYUN MUSA.

22nd                        It was decided to send the whole of the Brigade to AYUN MUSA.  The whole of the 15th Brigade to EL SHATT, and the scheme was to have 147 Bde at EL KUBRI.   All the D.A. on the East of the Canal.

25th                        The rest of the Brigade (Headquarters, 92nd Battery, & 17th Bde. A.C.) went to AYUN MUSA.

27th                        13th Battery moved out to the PLATEAO to be ready to occupy a position about 1 ½ miles North of AYUN MUSA.  Orders were received from D.A. H.Q. at EL SHATT to move back to SUEZ next day.  Orders also said that we were now under orders for FRANCE.

28th 29th                 H.Q. B.AC & 92nd Batteries returned to SUEZ CAMP.

The Brigade handed over its old guns to 42nd D.A. and we got new ones in exchange, also we were made up with new wagons from 42nd D.A.  It seems that they were issued to them in error as they had only had them a few days.  We drew most of our harness and made most things to establishment as far as Ordinance could supply.  A few riders & mules were drawn from 29th Train.

 

 

This diary compiled by me

AEG Leadbetter

Lieut. R.F.A.

Adjutant 17th F.A. Bde.

For Lt. Colonel Commanding

 

1/3/16

55th West Lancs War Diary Feb 1916

WAR DIARY

 

Of

 

Headquarters 55th West Lancashire Divisional Artillery

 

1st February 1916 – 29th February 1916

 

 

HALLENCOURT 2nd           Orders for move into area vacated by 36th Division.

Visit by Lord Derby – 3rd W.L.F.A. Bde – paraded 2.30 p.m. N.E. of YANVILLE.  Appendix I

4th – 7th                     Moves carried out in accordance with Appendix II.

FRANSU 9th                           B/85th Bde joined from 18th Div attached to 4th W.L.F.A. (How) Bde with section B.A.C. and 4 wagons for D.A.C.

Div Operation order No 2. Received.

11th                           Moves in accordance with Appendix III.

12th                           2nd & 4th N.M. Bdes – joined 55th Division from 46th Division.                                 Appendix IV

12-24th                      Occupation of positions.                                                                                             Appendix V

24/25th                      Reallotment of Div front – moves in accordance with Appendix VI.

25/26th

25th                           Moves of B.A.C.s and D.A.C. in accordance with Appendix VII

27th                           Moves of Wagon Lines in accordance with Appendix VIII.

 

MARCH 1916

MARCH 1916

The Western Front

 

 

The German Imperial Navy begins its extended Submarine campaign on the 1st March 1916. Permission was granted to attack armed merchant ships during February 1916.

 

On the 5th March 1916 the Allies began their advance on Kilimanjaro in German East Africa. The Allied Commander, South Africa’s General Jan Smuts, was un-able to entrap the highly mobile German forces under the command of General Lettow-Vorbeck. The Germans used these guerrilla tactics in Africa until the end of the war in 1918.

 

On the 6th March 1916 the Women’s Land Service Corporation was formed in Britain. In addition to aiding agricultural production, it enabled more men to be conscripted for military service.

 

On the 9th March 1916, Germany declared war on Portugal, who had joined the allies in part to defend and to extend its African empire.

 

A military conference was held by the allies on the 12th March 1916, at Chantilly in France (The Chantilly Conference) to discuss a summer offensive to counter the German attack on Verdun.

 

Chief of Staff of Navy High Command, Admiral von Tirpitz resigns on the 14th March 1916. Kaiser Wilhelm was unwilling to allow the full use of German sea power, von Tirpitz protested and finally resigned his command.

 

Austria/Hungary declared war against Portugal on 15th March 1916 following Germany’s declaration of war against Portugal.

 

On 21st March 1916, allied action of Kahe (East Africa) brings the Kilimanjaro operations to an end, with the German forces retreating.

 

On the 24th March 1916, the British passenger liner S.S. Sussex was torpedoed by submarine UB-29 in the English Channel. The Sussex manged to limp onwards and be towed into Boulogne. There were 25 American civilian casualties on board, out of a total of 80 casualties, of whom there were 50 fatalities.

 

Edward Noel Mellish was a 33-year-old assistant curate at St. Paul’s church in Deptford. Offering his services as a Chaplin, he became Captain the Reverend Mellish, Army Chaplains Department. In 1916 Reverend Mellish was attached to the 4th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers, serving in the Ypres Salient. On the 27th March 1916, Mellish was involved in the attack at the St. Eloi craters. Several enormous mines had been exploded under the German trenches and the British attacked and secured the position. During heavy fighting, Mellish repeatedly went backwards and forwards between the British and captured German trenches, to tend and rescue wounded men. He brought to safety ten badly wounded men from ground swept by machine-gun fire. The 4th Battalion was relieved on the second day of the battle, but Mellish again went into no-mans land and brought in twelve more wounded men. On the third night he led a party of volunteers into the trenches and rescued the remaining wounded men. For this action Mellish was awarded the Victoria Cross and was the first clergyman to be awarded the V.C. in the Great War.

 

On the 30th March 1916, The Russian Hospital Ship Portugal was struck by a torpedo from the German U-boat U33. The Portugal was a French built ship and requisitioned by the Russians for a hospital ship in the Black Sea. The Portugal was towing a string of small flat-bottomed boats to ferry wounded troops from the shore to the ship. Off Rizeh, on the Turkish coast of the Black Sea, she had stopped as one of the small boats was sinking and repairs needed to be made. The ship was not carrying any wounded personnel at the time, but had a staff of Red Cross physicians and nurses on board, as well as her normal crew.

The ship’s crew saw a periscope approaching the vessel but as the ship was a hospital ship and protected by The Hague conventions no evasive action was taken. Without warning the submarine fired a torpedo which missed. The U-boat came round again and fired a torpedo from a distance of 30 feet, which hit near the engine room, breaking the ship in half.

 

On the 31st March 1915, German Zeppelin L15 commanded by Kapitanleutnent Joachim Breithaupt, was hit by anti-aircraft guns from Purfleet ranges in the Thames estuary. Although high enough to avoid fighter attacks the Zeppelin was vulnerable to anti-aircraft fire. L15 had four of its gas filled cells destroyed and gradually lost height before crashing into the sea near Margate in Kent. One crew member died and the remainder survived the crash. Presumably the survivors were taken prisoners of war.

 

America had protested strongly that German U-boat attacks on allied shipping had caused American civilian deaths. The German foreign minister, Dr. Arthur Zimmermann, vowed that should America enter the war, Germany would encourage Mexico to reconquer her lost territories of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. Germany would offer Mexico generous financial terms.

A message was forwarded to the German minister in Mexico, but was intercepted by the British Admiralty intelligence, deciphered and passed on to the American President Woodrow Wilson.

On the 31st March 1916, General John J. Pershing, future US commander in Europe, defeated the Mexican troops of General Pancho Villa. Pershing retaliated after a raid by Villa into New Mexico, during which 18 Americans were killed.

 

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Verdun

 

On 6th March 1916, the Germans renewed their Verdun offensive, this time attacking along the west bank of the Meuse River. Their target was two strategic hills northwest of Verdun that formed the main French position. However, by the end of March, the heavily defended hills were still only partially in the German hands.

 

The devastated village of Vaux was taken by the Germans on the 31st March 1916. The village had changed hands 13 times during the month of March.

 

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The Eastern Front

 

On the 18th March 1916, the Lake Naroch Offensive (128km/80miles NW of Minsk in the present day Republic of Belarus) was launched at the request of the French in an attempt to relieve the pressure on Verdun. It was hoped the Germans would transfer more units to the East to counter the Russian offensive. Czar Nicholas II agreed to the French request, and chose Lake Naroch as the Imperial Russian Army had a significant superiority over the German forces, commanded by General Hermann von Eichhorn. The initial Russian artillery bombardment lasted two days but was inaccurate, leaving the German artillery intact. When the attacks were conducted the Russians made the mistake of crossing no-man’s land in groups rather than in scattered advance giving the German machine guns easy targets. The Russians greatly outnumbered the German forces and gained 10 kilometres but did not inflict any serious damage to the well organised and fortified German defences. The territory gained by the Russians was lost to subsequent German counterattack.

 

On the 21st March 1916, a secondary attack near Riga (Russian/Polish border) had no better luck than the Lake Naroch Offensive.

 

General Alexei Evert, the Russian Commander, called a halt to the attack on the 30th March 1916. The Lake Naroch Offensive had turned out to be an utter failure. Fading Russian morale, due to continuous waves of troops attacking over the same ground with the same catastrophic results and had not been of any assistance to the French at Verdun. Also the warm weather and abundant rains had turned much of the area into swamps.

 

 

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The Caucasus and the Middle East

 

 

On the 18th March 1916, Russia launched an offensive against the Germans East of Vilna (Russian/Polish border). The attempt to recapture the important railhead and major road networks was at the request of the French to divert German troops away from Verdun. Limited gains were attained at the cost of heavy casualties.

 

On the 19th March 1916, General Sir Archibald Murray was appointed commander of Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) in Egypt. With additional resources of men and equipment and by stages, the mission of the EEF evolved from a defensive position of Egypt to an invasion of Palestine

First, the Sinai Desert, with its sand storms and searing temperatures, had to be crossed, a test of endurance as well as of engineering for the troops involved. Access to water dictated what could be achieved. Tens of thousands of camels and drivers were required to supply the thirsty soldiers, while a pipeline for water and the railway system were extended to the borders of Palestine.

 

 

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THE GREAT WAR – MARCH 1916

THE GREAT WAR – MARCH 1916

The Western Front

 

1st March                 Germany extends submarine campaign

5th March                 Allies advance on Kilimanjaro

6th March               Britain forms Women’s Land Service Corps

9th March               Germany declares war on Portugal

12th March               Allied Military conference

14th March               Admiral von Tirpitz resigns as Minister of Marine High Command

15th March               Austria/Hungary declare war on Portugal

21st March             German forces withdraw from Kilimanjaro

24th March             British Passenger ferry torpedoed

27th March              Edward Mellish VC – gallent curate

30th March             Germans sink Russian hospital ship Portugal

31st March              German Zeppelin shot down near Thames estuary

31st March               Pershing (USA) defeats Mexican troops

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Verdun

 

6th March                 New German offensive on Verdun

31st March               Germans take the Village of Vaux

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The Eastern Front

18th March                Russia launches the Lake Naroch offensive

21st March               Russian secondary attack near Riga

30th March                Russia calls a halt to the Lake Naroch Offensive

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The Caucasus and the Middle East

18th March                Russian offensive at Vilna begins

19th March                Commander of British forces in Egypt replaced

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