This is an account of the British Expeditionary Force's defensive battle
on the Somme in March and April of 1918. It starts with the huge German
offensive along a 60 mile front on 21 March. Third and Fifth Armies then
had to make a series of fighting withdrawals in which some battalions
had to fight their way out while others were overrun.
Over the days that followed, men were called upon to fight all day
against overwhelming numbers and then march all night to escape. After
three years in the trenches, men had to battle in the open without tanks
and often without artillery support. As communications failed, battalion
and company commanders found themselves having to command in what was
essentially a desperate infantry struggle.
Each stage of the two week battle is given the same treatment, covering
details about the most talked about side of the campaign, the British
side. It explains how the British soldier time and again stood and
fought. Over fifty new maps chart the day by day progress of each corps
on each day.
Together the narrative and the maps explain the British Army's
experience during a fraught battle for survival. The men who made a
difference are mentioned; those who led the advances, those who stopped
the counterattacks and those who were awarded the Victoria Cross.
Discover the Somme 1918 campaign and learn how the British Army's brave
soldiers fought and died trying to stop the onslaught.