The Battle of Broodseinde
On the 4th October 1917 as part of what is generally called the 3rd Battle
of Ypres (Passchendaele) the battle of Broodseinde was fought.
The New Zealand Division of II ANZAC Corps was to be heavily involved in
this attempt to take the village of Gravenstafel and a spur to its right
nicknamed the Abraham Heights by the Canadians in 1915. The 1st and 4th
Brigades of the Division formed the front line of the assault with the 4th on
the right. To their right was the 3rd Australian Division.
The Commander: General Sir Herbert Plumer, was an advocate of small advances
which would then be consolidated before moving on. A system of bite and
hold. For this reason the objectives were quite meagre when compared with
the grand sweep intended on the first day of the Somme.
Looked at today it is hard to comprehend how these slight rises in the
ground were so important strategically. Yet because the land is by and large so
flat every bump in the terrain took on enormous significance.
By this stage in the war the German system of defence was far more elastic
than it had been a year earlier on the Somme. There the British Army had been
flung against an entrenched and heavily defended system.
The Germans had replaced this with a system of mutually supporting bunkers
and pill boxes with interlacing but lightly held trench systems. The intention
was to suck the enemy in and attack them from all sides.
Many of these pill boxes have survived until today. They were invulnerable
to all but a direct hit from very heavy artillery - something the British did
not have large numbers of.
Nevertheless, things had also changed on the Allied side and the artillery
barrage that went down that morning prior to the attack was no longer a simple
rolling line of shells, but a mixture of static bombardments and creeping
barrages.
In a twist of fate, just prior to the allies advance the Germans put down a
barrage in preparation for one of their own attacks. This caused numerous
casualties but they in turn were equally badly mauled as the British
bombardment began on their forward lines.
The terrain in October was heavy going, the streams and drainage systems
that should have been carrying the rain away had long been pulverised into
nothingness. Today, the very word Passchendaele conjures up a vision of life
sucking mud and horror. Fortunately the weather had been kind for the previous
few weeks, but there was pressure on the commanders to make significant headway
before the autumn settled in properly.
Despite the heaviness of the ground the New Zealanders made excellent
progress and by the end of the day they had succeeded in taking all of their
objectives. 3rd Otago took the village of Gravenstafel and captured a number of
German prisoners.
The Division now pushed on up the road towards their final objective: the
Bellevue Spur on the main road and on the southern edge of the Passchendaele
Ridge itself. Evidence of the intended German attack manifested itself in the
number of German dead in the trenches - caught by the sudden counter
bombardment.
General Plumer's system of bite and hold seemed to be working. By the
end of the day The Division had taken 1500 Germans prisoner and taken all of
their objectives.
That night the feared autumn rain began.
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