key battles

Cards (7)

    • many battles took place at Ypres
    • fighting took place here because it was on rout to channel ports of Calais and Dunkirk
    • British needed to defend to make sure troops still recieved supplies and reinforcement
  • Ypres:
    • 1 - prevented Germans from taking control of English channel used for supplies and reinforcements
    • 2 - after Hill 60, first use of chlorine gas
    • 3 - British to break out of Ypres, weather made ground waterlogged and muddy
    • Hill 60 was fought over during the battle of Ypres
    • it was a manmade hill
    • the hill was captured by Germans, so gave advantage to Germans of seeing the enemy
    • the British mined Hill 60, and tunnelled under the hill
    • explosives were used which ruined the land
  • Somme:
    • launched by British in July 1916
    • death of 20,000 British and 57,000 injured - led to medics needing to work under pressure
    • tanks destroyed ground - difficult for wounded to be transported for treatment
    • first use of tanks - many problems
  • Arras:
    • took place in 1917
    • 24,000 British attacked German trenches from tunnels
    • before battle, British soldiers dug tunnels in chalky ground
    • fitted tunnels with lights, water and electricity and used as accomodation
    • underground hospital fitted with operating theatres
    • sheltered men from German attacks
  • Cambrai:
    • took place in 1917
    • tanks used on larger scale than during Battle of Somme
    • 450 tanks used
    • tanks ruined ground
    • tanks did not have enough infantry support
    • British lost all ground they took
  • problems:
    • dropping of bombs left holes that made transported injured difficult
    • bacteria in soil led to infected wounds - land was once fertilised farmland
    • stretcher bearers worked day and night so had to move during fighting
    • ambulances difficult to move in mud - soldiers left injured for days
    • high casualty rates slowed down medical treatment
    • more medical treatment available away from frontline