Mametz Wood Memorial

Mametz Wood Memorial
38th Division memorial

Mametz Wood was the objective of the 38th (Welsh) Division during the First Battle of the Somme. The attack occurred in a Northerly direction over a ridge, focussed on the German positions in the wood between 7 July and 12 July 1916. The attack of the 7 July failed to reach the wood before the men were halted by machine gun fire. Further attacks by the 17th Division on 8 July failed to improve the position.[1]

Infuriated by what he saw as a distinct lack of 'push' Sir Douglas Haig and Henry Rawlinson visited the HQ of the Welsh Division to make their displeasure known. Major General Ivor Philipps, officer commanding the Welsh Division, was subsequently relieved of his command.

Battle at Mametz Wood by Christopher Williams (1918)

Haig passed control of the Division to Major General Herbert Watts, commander of the 7th Division and told him to use it 'as he saw fit'. Watts planned a full scale attack for the 9 July but organising the attacking formations took some time and the attack was subsequently postponed until 10 July 1916. The operational order was blunt, stating that the Division would attack the wood with the aim of 'capturing the whole of it'.

The 10 July attack was on a larger scale than had been attempted earlier. Despite heavy casualties the fringe of the wood was soon reached and some bayonet fighting took place before the wood was entered and a number of German machine guns silenced. Fighting in the wood was fierce with the Germans giving ground stubbornly.

The 14th Welsh (Swansea) Battalion went into the attack with 676 men and after a day of hard fighting had lost almost 400 men killed or wounded before being relieved. Other battalions suffered similar losses. However, by 12 July the wood was effectively cleared of the enemy. The Welsh Division had lost about 4,000 men killed or wounded in this searing engagement. It would not be used in a massed attack again until 31 July 1917.

It was at Mametz that the war poet Siegfried Sassoon made a single handed attack on the enemy trenches on 4 July 1916, as recorded in his memoirs.

The Welsh poet Owen Sheers wrote a poem after the event in his Skirrid Hill collection:

"This morning, twenty men buried in one long grave,
a broken mosaic of bone linked arm in arm,
their skeletons paused mid dance-macabre"

A vivid description of the fighting in Mametz Wood may be found in In Parenthesis, a modernist novel written by British poet and visual artist David Jones, who took part in the battle.

The wood still stands today, surrounded by farmland. Overgrown shell craters and trenches can still be made out. There is a memorial to the 38th Division nearby on a rough single lane road at approximately Lat: 50:00:36N (50.0099) Lon: 2:45:02E (2.7504). This can be reached from the village of Mametz on the D64 road. The memorial takes the form of a red Welsh Dragon tearing at barbed wire on top of a 3 metre plinth.

References

External links

  • The Welsh at Mametz Wood by Christopher Williams Painted at the request of the Secretary of State for War, David Lloyd George. Christopher Williams visited the scene in November 1916 and later made studies from a soldier supplied for the purpose. In the collection of the National Museum of Wales, to whom it was presented by Sir Archibald Mitchelson, Bart. 1920.
  • 'Mametz Wood' The definitive story, by MichaelRenshaw. Published by Pen and Sword Books, 1999.



Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • War memorial — Contents 1 Symbolism 1.1 Historic usage 1.2 Modern usage 2 …   Wikipedia

  • Battle of Delville Wood — Part of the Battle of the Somme in the First World War …   Wikipedia

  • Flag of Wales — Name Y Ddraig Goch (The Red Dragon) Use Civil and state flag …   Wikipedia

  • Welsh Dragon — This article is about a part of the Welsh flag. For the snooker player with the same nickname, see Matthew Stevens. Y Ddraig Goch on the flag of Wales …   Wikipedia

  • 38th (Welsh) Infantry Division — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 38th (Welsh) Division caption= dates= December 1914 June 1919; 1939 44 allegiance= branch= New Army type= Infantry role= size= command structure= current commander= garrison= ceremonial chief= colonel of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Christopher Williams (Welsh artist) — Christopher Williams Self portrait Birth name Christopher Williams Born 7 January 1873( …   Wikipedia

  • Wales — This article is about the country. For other uses, see Wales (disambiguation) …   Wikipedia

  • Jones, David Michael — (1895 1974)    He was born in Brockley, Kent, of a Welsh father. From 1910 to 1914 he was a student at the Camberwell School of Art, London. In January 1915 he enlisted in the Welch Fusiliers, was wounded in 1916 in the attack on Mametz Wood on… …   British and Irish poets

  • Cecil Rawling — Infobox Military Person name= Cecil Godfrey Rawling lived= February, 1870 28 October 1917 placeofbirth= London, England placeofdeath= Hooge Crater, Belgium caption= nickname= allegiance= flagicon|United Kingdom United Kingdom serviceyears= 1891… …   Wikipedia

  • Charles Blackader — Charles Guinand Blackader Born 20 September 1869(1869 09 20) …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”