Battle of Vimy Ridge
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| Battle of Vimy Ridge | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the Western Front (First World War) | |||||||
| Image:The Battle of Vimy Ridge.jpg The Battle of Vimy Ridge after a painting by Richard Jack. Canadian War Museum. | |||||||
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| Combatants | |||||||
| Image:Canadian Red Ensign.svg Canada Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom | Image:Flag of the German Empire.svg German Empire Image:Flag of Austria-Hungary.svg Austria-Hungary | ||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Julian Byng Image:Canadian Red Ensign.svg Arthur Currie | Image:Flag of the German Empire.svg Ludwig von Falkenhausen | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 30,000 | Unknown | ||||||
| Casualties | |||||||
| 3,598 dead 7,104 wounded | 20,000 dead 4,000 captured | ||||||
| Western Front |
|---|
| Frontiers – Liège – Antwerp – Great Retreat – Race to the Sea – Neuve Chapelle – 2nd Ypres – 2nd Artois – Hill 70 – 3rd Artois – Loos – Verdun – Hulluch – Somme – Arras – Vimy Ridge – 2nd Aisne – Messines – Passchendaele – Cambrai – Lys – 3rd Aisne – Belleau Wood – 2nd Marne – Château-Thierry – Hamel – Hundred Days |
The Battle of Vimy Ridge was one of the opening battles in a larger British campaign known as the Battle of Arras during the First World War. It is also considered a major event in Canadian history for the primary role Canadian forces played in the attack.
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[edit] Overview
Vimy, located in northern France, was one of the most heavily defended points on the entire Western Front and was thought to be an impregnable fortress. The ridge would be a key asset for the rest of World War I. The German army had fortified it with tunnels, three rows of trenches behind barbed wire, massive artillery, and numerous machine gun nests. The French and British had suffered thousands of casualties in previous attempts to take the ridge; the French alone lost 150,000 men at Vimy Ridge in 1915. The ridge, stretching from the town of Vimy to Givenchy-en-Gohelle, was a crucial point that allowed the Germans to control much of the surrounding territory. The ridge was the only major barrier keeping the allies from the wide open Lens-Douai plain.
The Allied commanders decided to launch another assault in 1917. The duty was given to the still relatively fresh, but previously successful, Canadians. For the first time the four divisions of the Canadian Corps were brought together. They were joined by the British 5th Infantry Division.
The Canadian Corps' commanders were determined to learn from the mistakes of the French and British and spent months planning their attack. They built a replica of the Ridge behind their own lines, and trained using platoon-level tactics, including issuing detailed maps to ordinary soldiers rather than officers or NCOs alone. Each platoon was given a specific task by their commanding officers, rather than vague instructions from an absent general. They also employed older techniques such as the detonation of large mines under the German trenches.
On April 2, 1917, the Canadian Corps launched the largest artillery barrage in history up to that point. They shelled the German trenches for the next week, using over one million shells. They used sound and light from the German Artillery to determine where their cannons were, as they were hidden by the ridge. This proved very successful, they destroyed about 86% of the German artillery. The Canadians also did many night trench raids during this week, although General Arthur Currie thought this was a stupid risk and a waste of men. The German and Prussian troops called this week the "Week of Suffering". The attack was loud enough that it could be heard in London. At dawn on Easter Monday, April 9, the 30,000-strong Canadian Corps began the attack, using a creeping barrage. The creeping barrage had been used by the British at the Battle of the Somme but had failed as it outpaced the soldiers. However, the Canadians managed to perfect the technique. Soldiers walked across no-man's land, just behind a continuous line of shells (an improvement over previous battles, in which both sides had often shelled their own troops). Several new and untested methods of counter-battery fire were also used successfully at the start of the battle. This disabled a large portion of the German artillery and protected the advancing infantry. The Canadians also used a new technique they called "Indirect Fire", which utilized machine guns to hold German troops down in their trenches and also provide cover for their own troops.
After less than two hours, three of the four Canadian divisions had taken their objectives; the fourth division, however, was caught by machine gun nests on the highest point of the Ridge known as Hill 145. The 87th Battalion suffered 50% casualties. The 85th Nova Scotia Highlanders, who had been intended to be in a supply and construction role, were sent into the battle and the division captured the hill by the end of the day.
It is said that upon learning of the victory, a French soldier replied, "C'est impossible!" ("It's impossible!"), and upon learning it was the Canadians who won, changed his answer to "Ah! les Canadiens! C'est possible!" ("Ah! The Canadians! It is possible!"). <ref>Return to Vimy site</ref>
By April 12 the Canadians controlled the entire Ridge, at a cost of 3,598 men killed and 7,104 wounded. The German Sixth Army, under General Ludwig von Falkenhausen, suffered approximately 20,000 casualties. The Canadians also took 4,000 Germans as prisoners of war. The loss of the ridge also forced the Germans to retreat to the lower plains that were far more costly to defend. The attack and objective had only limited grand-strategic significance, and as the simultaneous British and Australian attack to the south of the Ridge was unsuccessful, very little was actually achieved after the Canadian victory.
However, in a war in which, battle after battle, thousands died for gains measured in yards, the breakthrough had tremendous tactical importance. It relieved the city of Arras from immediate threat of attack and proved that the front lines could be moved forward once again, after years of bloody stalemate. Vimy Ridge was the first Allied victory in almost a year and a half and it was especially demoralizing for the Germans who had viewed the Ridge as one of their most impregnable strong points.
A year later in April 1918, the fact that Vimy Ridge continued to be held even as German advances reached the outskirts of Paris was also quite significant. The ridge provided a leverage point behind the lines from which an extremely effective counter-attack was launched (see Technology during World War I.)
[edit] British forces
Vimy is properly considered an Allied victory rather than purely a Canadian one. While the Canadian Corps planned the battle and provided the majority of participants, British participation was also sizeable.
- British I Corps provided 132 heavy artillery pieces and 102 field guns to the 863 of the Canadian Corps, or 21 percent of the artillery involved.<ref>Rawling, Bill. Trench Warfare: Technology and the Canadian Corps 1914-1918 (University of Toronto Press, 1992). pp.107-108</ref>
- Of the 13 brigades of infantry employed in the assault, one entire brigade was British (the 13th Brigade of the British 5th Division).
- 16 Squadron of the Royal Flying Corps employed 24 aircraft as artillery spotters from 1 April to 13 April, losing three.
- Considerable effort was also made by British logistical units throughout the Lines of Communication supporting the assault.
[edit] Legacy
To Canadians, the name Vimy Ridge has been historically very meaningful. It was the first time in the nation's history that a corps-sized formation fought organized as such. The success of the attack, resulting from detailed planning and a variety of innovative tactics standing in stark contrast to what had happened at the Somme only months earlier, sealed the reputation of the Canadians as among the finest troops on the western front. The capture of the Ridge by the Canadian Corps, under the command of British General Julian H.G. Byng (with Canadian General Sir Arthur Currie acting as Chief-of-Staff), was a turning point for Allied Forces during the First World War. The success of the Canadian forces in this battle, at Passchendaele, and in Canada's Hundred Days helped earn Canada a place at the Versailles peace negotiations. Some have suggested that Canadian unity was fostered - all nine provinces were represented in the order of battle of the Canadian Corps - but as Pierre Berton points out in the seminal work regarding this battle (titled Vimy), the taking of the ridge achieved legend status very quickly, and with it the myths often surrounding legendary feats.
[edit] The Vimy Memorial
The battle is commemorated by the Vimy Memorial, set atop Hill 145 near Vimy and Givenchy in the French Pas-de-Calais. It is the largest of Canada's war monuments.
In recognition of the great sacrifices made by Canada, the French government formally granted Canada a portion of the ridge in perpetuity. Since the memorial stands on Canadian soil, it is tended by Veterans Affairs Canada.
In 2002 the Royal Canadian Mint released a 5-Cent Sterling Silver Coin to commemorate the 85th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge.
The plot of The Stone Carvers, a 2001 novel by Canadian author Jane Urquhart, revolves around the construction of the Vimy Memorial.
[edit] Further reading
- Berton, P. (2003). Vimy. Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 0-85052-988-3
- Cave, N. (1997). Arras, Vimy Ridge. Cooper (Battleground Europe). ISBN 0-85052-399-0
- Federal Govt of Canada. (1992). Canada and the Battle of Vimy Ridge. Canadian Government Pub Centre.
- Turner, A. (2005). Vimy Ridge 1917: Byng's Canadians Triumph at Arras. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-871-5
[edit] References
<references/>
[edit] External links
- The Battle of Vimy Ridge Battle info, video footage and photos.
- Canadian War Museum — The Battle of Vimy Ridge, 9 April–12 April 1917
- Historica Minutes Vimy Ridge



