After the great victory in the famous tank battle at Cambrai in 1917
the church bells, having been silent for three years, rang out
joyously all over Britain But within ten days triumph turned to
disaster. How did this hapPen & why?William Moore, a distinguished
First World War historian, attempts to explain what went wrong. All
the advantages gained were thrown away; thousands of British troops
were captured and hundreds of guns were lost. Seventy years after
these events Mr Moore has studied the evidence (much of it previously
unpublished) contained in the inevitable enquiry that followed the
disaster and he seeks to answer a number of questions. Was
Field-Marshal Haig really as dour as he has been portrayed or was he a
reckless gambler and was General Byng, whose troops and guns were
captured, really a brilliant planner or a haughty aristocrat dedicated
to proving that cavalry still had a place on the battlefield? And why
were they both obsessed with capturing Bourlon Ridge on which stood
the sinister Bourlon Wood? A Highland Division, a Welsh Brigade, a
Yorkshire Division (twice), the Guards, Ulstermen, Lancashire-men,
Londoners and Midlanders- all were drawn into the maelstrom in an
attempt to consolidate the Cambrai victory They failed. It was left to
the Canadians to carry the Bourlon position in one of the finest feats
of arms of the Great War. The British are always reputed to take a
perverce interest in their own military blunders. This strange episode
is one that most people have been happy to forget. All those involved
in hight places sought to make excuses; some indulged in a profound
exercise of duplicity implying that the soldiers themselves were to
blame. Mr Moor's book throws new light on a dark episode in British
Military History.
Les mer
The Cover-up after Cambrai, 1917
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781473820890
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Vendor
Leo Cooper
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter