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AUTHOR: Wyrall, E
FORMAT: 376pp 13 Bw 9 maps Pb
The Northumbrian Division, a pre-war Territorial Force formation, went to
France in April 1915. Saint Julien (first Western Front gas attack), Somme,
Scarpe, Passchendaele, Lys and Aisne (1918). Estimated casualties at least
34,000. Order of Battle, succession of GOCs and brigade commanders. The 50th
(Northumbrian) Division was a pre-war Territorial (TF) division which recruited
from Northumberland, Durham and the North and East Ridings of Yorkshire. The
infantry battalions came from the Northumberland Fusiliers, East Yorks, Green
Howards and Durham Light Infantry. The division crossed to France on 16th April
1915 and by 23rd April it had completed its concentration in the area of
Steenvoorde, about 14 miles west of Ypres; the next day it was in action at St
Julien during the German gas attacks and by the end of 4 May, the day after the
battle of St Julien ended, it had suffered 3746 casualties. The division had
been given no period of acclimatisation which was given to all other divisions
on arrival on the Western Front.The division remained in the Ypres area till
August 1916 when it moved down to the Somme, to III Corps, where it took part in
the battles of Flers-Courcelette, Morval and the Transloy Ridges with losses of
just over 4,000. The Somme offensive ended on 18 November 1916, but the division
remained in that area till March 1917 when it moved up to the Arras sector where
preparations were underway for a new offensive by Allenby’s Third Army, which 50
Division now joined. It took part in the First and Second Scarpe and the capture
of Wancourt Ridge at a cost of 2750 casualties during the two weeks 11to 24
April. The division did not enter the Third Ypres campaign till late in October
1917, in time to fight the Second Battle of Passchendaele from 26 October to the
end of the offensive on 10 November.When the Germans launched their final
offensive on 21 March 1918, 50th Division was back on the Somme, this time in
Fifth Army and in that first week its casualties numbered nearly 3,500. In April
it was with First Army at the Lys where it incurred further losses of 4,265. It
was then one of the divisions sent down to the Aisne, in the French sector, with
IX Corps, ‘for a rest;’ it arrived in time for another major German attack on 27
May, and by 6 June the division had lost almost 7,600 men. It was pulled right
back, to the coast in the Dieppe area, and completely reorganisedThis history
was the last of the Great War divisional histories to be published, written by
the most prolific of all the Great War historians - eight regimental and four
divisional histories. Wyrrall died just as he completed his task. In this book
he relies considerably on the war diaries and histories of various units, on
personal diaries, letters, experiences and anecdotes which together provide a
history of the division’s activities seen very much at unit level and in detail.
Appendices list all divisional and brigade commanders and the order of battle of
units with changes. Reprint of the 1939 original edition.
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