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| IRISH
BATTALIONS - MAJOR BATTLES (PART I of XI) |
Almost
a decade before the war, the Germans started developing a strategy
to invade most of northern Europe. Ruthlessly efficient, the Schlieffen
Plan was implemented on August 6, 1914. 3,120,000 men on eleven thousand
trains, were transported through Belgium and France.
The British Expeditionary Force arriving in France on August 23rd,
was about 100,000 strong, faced German forces of around 250,000. The
2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers formed part of the 10th Brigade, 4th Division
and this army was under the command of General French. The Kaiser
reputedly ordered his soldiers to walk over French's 'contemptible
little army', so earning them the nickname, 'The Old Contemptibles.'
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BATTLE OUTLINES
LE
CATEAU AUGUST 1914
The Dubs had their first wartime engagement at Le Cateau. On August
26th, many, cut off from their battalions, were taken prisoner by
the German forces (which outnumbered them 3:1). They were held at
Limburg Prisoner-of-War camp, where hundreds of Irish died. After
twenty days of fighting, the 2nd Royal Fusiliers had just 10 officers
and 478 other ranks left from an initial force of 22 officers and
1,023 other ranks. The British Expeditionary Force was practically
wiped out as was the French army, which lost 40,000 men in just four
days - 27,000 on August 23, alone.
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HELLES
LANDINGS, GALLIPOLI, APRIL 1915
The Royal Dublin Fusiliers suffered in the slaughter
of the Helles Landings at Gallipoli. Most of the regular army battalions
had already been sent to France and Flanders and the new recruits
were still in training. Of the regular army, the 29th Division, including
the 1st Battalions of the Royal Dublin, Munster and Inniskilling Fusiliers,
was selected for the offensive. Cape Helles was an appalling choice
of landing site, being the perfect defensive location with gun emplacements
housed on steep slopes. The naval bombardment failed to neutralize
the Turkish defences. The Dublins and Munsters were the first to disembark
from the S.S. River Clyde and of the first 200 men, 149 were
killed and 30 wounded immediately. A Sergeant McColgan wrote: |
S.S. River Clyde run aground at "V" Beach on
25th April, 1915.
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"One
fellow's brains were shot into my mouth as I was shouting to them
to jump for it."
Many
men drowned because their backpacks weighed 60 lbs when dry. It
took 36 hours for the RDF to get ashore. The battalion strength
at the outset was 25 officers and 987 other ranks, one (young) officer
and 374 other ranks made it ashore - casualties in that 36 hours
mounted to 637 men.
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ST. JULIEN, SECOND BATTLE OF YPRES, MAY 1915
Near St. Julien, at the second battle of Ypres, the
2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers suffered near annihilation a month after
the Helles Landings. On May 24th, 1915, around 2.45am, the Germans
launched a poison gas attack. The Battalion strength was 666 men.
By 9.30 pm, only one officer and 20 other ranks 'retired' to headquarters
- 645 men were shelled, gassed, or driven insane by the poison. Many
of the 'survivors' died slowly in the following years.
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SUVLA
BAY, GALLIPOLI, AUGUST 1915
The Allies
decided to launch a fresh attack against the Turks and chose Suvla
Bay, 25 miles north of Cape Helles. The first Irish volunteer unit
into the war was the 10th (Irish) Division. This included the new
6th and 7th Battalions of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. Many of these
men saw their friends and families for the last time in April 1915.
Following further training, they set sail for Gallipoli aboard the
H.M.T. Alaunia, a ship commanded by Captain Rostron, who was
in charge of the Carpathia when she rescued Titanic
survivors. Administrative incompetance meant that the 10th (Irish)
Division's artillery was sent to France, not Gallipoli and that the
men arrived without either maps or orders. There was a chronic water
shortage and the soldiers ran out of ammunition and had to resort
to throwing stones at the enemy. Having not gained any ground, the
Allies withdrew from Gallipoli in January 1916, with 250,000 casualties.
3,411 of the dead, wounded or missing were from the 10th (Irish) Division,
569 from the 1st Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers.
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SALONIKA
OCTOBER 1915
September
29, 1915, saw Lieutenant General Sir Bryan Mahon prepare to move the
10th (Irish) from Gallipoli. 91 officers and 2,363 other ranks, including
the 6th and 7th Dublins, set sail for Salonika. They were reinforced
by men drafted from other regiments. Frostbite, exposure, malaria
and dysentry caused many casualties. On October 3, the 6th and 7th
Dublins and Munsters were at the front line and were ordered to take
the village of Jenikoj. They were successful and advanced, then being
caught between their own artillery and the Bulgarians' counterattack.
Confused orders meant that some men were withdrawn, others remained
and the exhausted soldiers were again sent to retake the village.
385 men were killed, wounded or missing; 131 were 6th Dublins and
128 were 7th Dublins. In September 1917, the 6th and 7th Dublins were
sent to Alexandria and in May 1918 were dispatched to France for disbandment
and drafting to the 1st and 2nd Dublins at the Western Front.
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HULLUCH, APRIL 1916
The 16th (Irish) Division comprised of different battalions
from various Irish regiments, including the 8th and 9th Royal Dublin
Fusiliers. By 1916, commanders had realized the folly of sending raw
men to the front and unlike the 10th (Irish) Division, the 16th (Irish)
Division were somewhat prepared for trench warfare. The Irish Brigades
of the 16th (Irish) were in the trenches at Hulluch when the Germans
launched a gas attack on April 27th, 1916. Of the 2,128 casualties,
about 538 were killed and many of the wounded died slowly from respiratory
diseases. Lieutenant Lyon of the 7th Leinsters, described gathering
the dead, "some of them holding hands like children in the
dark."
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THE
SOMME, JUNE 1916
Attempting to break the deadlock of trench warfare,
British commanders launched an offensive along a 14 mile front. The
Battle of the Somme began on June 24, 1916, bombarding the Germans
with 1.7 million shells. The 36th (Ulster) Division, largely Pals,
was assigned a target which included a huge concrete bunker where
German troops sheltered. The bombardment of German lines, supposed
to annihilate the enemy, stopped on July 1st and the 36th (Ulster)
advanced across no-man's land and were met by machine-gunfire. The
1st Royal Dublin Fusiliers, many veterans of Gallipoli, were in a
sector neighbouring the 36th (Ulster), as reserve to the 2nd Royal
Fusiliers. |

Men of
the 36th (Ulster) Division, shortly before going into battle.
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Three
2nd RDF companies participated in the second wave of the attack,
going to battle with 23 officers and 480 other ranks: 14 officers
and 311 other ranks were casualties. British casualties for the
first day, reached 60,695 - 19,240 were dead. After two days, 5,500
Ulstermen were dead, wounded or missing and the 36th (Ulster) was
practically wiped out. The 47th Irish Brigade taking Guillemont
was described as, 'one of the most astonishing feats of the war.'
The Dublins were involved at Ginchy in September and the following
month, the 2nd Dubs fought hand-to-hand in German trenches to win
their objective. Hamel saw the last major engagement of this phase
of the Somme battles, with the 10th Royal Dublin Fusiliers attached
to the 2nd Royal Marines, suffering 51% losses.
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MESSINES
RIDGE, JUNE 1917
Taking the Messines Ridge was strategically important
to straighten the line south of Ypres. The 16th (Irish) and 36th (Ulster)
were to fight together to take the Belgian village of Wytschaete.
General Plumer had a scaled model of the Ridge made so troops could
see what lay ahead. He had mines dug for explosives beneath German
defences. About 3 million shells bombarded Messines for over a week.
The barrage eased just before Plumer detonated 9,500 tons of explosives
under the Germans. The 47th and 49th Brigades led the attack, the
48th (with the 9th Royal Dublin Fusiliers) in reserve. An Ulsterman
of the 12th Irish Rifles said, "there wasn't a human body
intact lying around the place
just bits and pieces."
The battle lasted two days. Willie Redmond, M.P. and brother of John,
leader of the Irish Party, died of his wounds at Messines. Another
casualty was Henry Gallaugher of the 11th Inniskilling Fusiliers and
the 36th (Ulster), who distinguished himself, but was not decorated.
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The Battle of Messines Ridge, 1917.
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PASSCHENDAELE, THE 3RD BATTLE OF YPRES, JULY 1917
The 16th (Irish) and 36th (Ulster) Divisions were transferred
to General Gough's 5th Army in July 1917. Rain made conditions impossible
- there was no escape from mud, no trenches or shelters. Exhausted
and ill, the 48th and 49th Irish Brigades, (the 47th in reserve),
launched their attack at 4.45am, August 16th. 65% of the leading units
(7th Royal Irish Rifles and 9th Dublin Fusiliers, with the 2nd Dublins
in reserve) were lost before the attack due to heavy German shelling.
Machine guns cut down the 48th Brigade. Only five soldiers of B Company,
2nd RDF, survived. C Company of the 2nd Dublins moved in to support
the 9th Dublins. All of the battalion, except 2 officers and 10 other
ranks, were killed, wounded or missing. Mid-August saw the Irish Brigades
devastated: the 36th (Ulster) had 3,585 casualties and the 16th (Irish)
4,231. On October 24th, the 8th and 9th Dublins were amalgamated.
The 16th (Irish) Division did have some further success before 1917
ended at Tunnel Trench. The Allied gains over four months were lost
in three days during March 1918.
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Passchendaele,
Autumn 1917.

Trench Life.
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THE
SOMME 1918 - THE LAST 100 DAYS
In 1918, Army reorganization disbanded and reassigned
the 8th, 9th and 10th Royal Dublin Fusiliers. Continuous trenchlines
were abandoned in favour of 'defence in depth', a three zone
system of manned posts. Early on March 21st, the 1st and 2nd Dublins
were at the front. Eight-mile deep German bombardment caused 1,062
1st and 2nd Dublins casualties within ten hours. In 10 days, the
16th was reduced to the strength of a single infantry battalion
and Ulster regiments also suffered badly. The 1st and 2nd Royal
Dublin Fusiliers were amalgamated in mid-April. Near Hamel, the
16th (Irish), 500 Americans and 400 Canadians, dug in and successfully
stopped the German advance. The 5th Royal Irish Fusiliers was the
only Irish regiment remaining in the 16th Division. The 1st Dublins
were sent to the 29th Division, the 2nd and later the 7th RDF joined
the 31st Division. The 2nd Dublins went into battle near Le Cateau
on October 16th, suffering 44% casualties within two days. The Great
War ended within a month.
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