It seems absurd to claim it, but the Battle of Passchendaele was in many
ways worse than the Somme. The British offensive, also known as the
Third Battle of Ypres, was launched on the Belgium battlefield at 3.30
a.m. on 31 July 1917. It was a massive effort by General Sir Douglas
Haig and the British Army to achieve a strategic breakthrough and defeat
Germany. Attrition would defeat a Germany that was, many believed, 'on
the ropes'. Just one more 'big push' would secure victory - yet it
failed. Passchendaele continued until November 1917 and became
synonymous with the tragedy of the Great War: abominable weather, mud
and filth; horrific injuries inflicted by increasingly industrialised
warfare including tanks, gas, mines and flamethrowers; the enormous
casualties (600,000) and the futility of the operation all combined to
form a nightmare vision of war in the trenches. What was life like for
the ordinary British soldier? Was the whole bloody effort necessary or
were there alternatives? What, if anything, did it achieve?
Passchendaele 1917 answers these questions while reminding us of the
sacrifices and heroism of the soldiers who fought it.