Le Cateau (26-27 August 1914) was the second major action fought by the
BEF in the Great War. His men exhausted after fighting at Mons and by
the subsequent speedy retreat, Lieutenant-General Horace Smith-Dorrien
(commanding II Corps) decided that he had to make a stand in the
vicinity of Le Cateau.
There his men took on elements of four German corps in an action that
succeeded in giving the BEF a respite, but at considerable cost. Amongst
other elements of controversy in the conduct of the battle was the
handling of the Royal Artillery.
The battle also undermined the already fraught relationship between
Smith-Dorrien and the BEF's commander, John French. The battlefield
today remains largely as it was, open countryside, and it is an ideal
location to view one of the most significant British battlefields of the
early days of the war.
In this action no less than five Victoria Crosses were won, three of
them in one howitzer battery and two by men of the 2nd King's Own
Yorkshire Light Infantry.