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Guillemont Road Cemetery

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Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Guillemont Road Cemetery
Address:
D64, Guillemont, France

The Battle of Guillemont was an attack by the Fourth Army on the village of Guillemont. The village is on the D 20 running east to Combles and the D 64 south-west to Montauban. Longueval and Delville Wood lie to the north-west and Ginchy to the north-east. The village was on the right flank of the British sector, near the boundary with the French Sixth Army. The Fourth Army had advanced close to Guillemont during the Battle of Bazentin Ridge and the capture of the village was the culmination of British attacks which began on 22/23 July. The attacks were intended to advance the right flank of the Fourth Army and eliminate a salient further north at Delville Wood. German defences ringed the wood and had observation over the French Sixth Army area to the south, towards the Somme river. Preparatory to a general attack intended for mid-September, from the Somme north to Courcelette , the French Sixth Army, the Fourth Army and Reserve Army conducted numerous attacks, to capture the rest of the German second line and to gain observation over the German third line. The German defences around Guillemont were based on the remaining parts of the second line and numerous fortified villages and farms northwards from Hem, Maurepas and Combles, to Falfemont Farm, Guillemont, Ginchy, Delville Wood and High Wood, which commanded the ground in between.Numerous attempts were made by Joseph Joffre, Sir Douglas Haig, Ferdinand Foch and the army commanders Henry Rawlinson and Émile Fayolle to co-ordinate joint attacks, which failed due to the recovery of the German 2nd Army from the disorganisation caused by the defeats in early July, disagreements over tactics by Haig and Joffre in July and August and organisational constraints, caused by congestion behind the front, roads and tracks obliterated by Anglo-French artillery-fire becoming swamps when it rained and increasing German artillery-fire on targets behind the front line. Inexperience, unreliable machinery, guns, ammunition and an unpredictable flow of supplies from Britain, reduced the effectiveness of the British armies. Difficulty in co-ordinating attacks by the Allied armies and the large number of piecemeal attacks resorted to by the British, have been criticised as costly failures and evidence of muddle and incompetence by Haig and Rawlinson. The French Sixth and Tenth armies had similar difficulties and severe strain had been put on the German 2nd and 1st armies, forcing them into a similar piecemeal defence. Wilfrid Miles noted in the History of the Great War , that the defence of Guillemont was judged by some observers to be the best performance of the war by the German army on the Western Front. A pause at the end of August in Anglo-French attacks, to organise bigger combined attacks and postponements for bad weather, coincided with the largest counter-attack yet by the German army in the battle. Joffre, Foch and Haig abandoned attempts to organise large combined attacks, in favour of sequenced army attacks and the capture of the German defences from Cléry north of the Somme to Guillemont from 3–6 September, brought the French Sixth and British Fourth armies onto ground which overlooked the German third position. Rain, congestion and relief of tired divisions, then forced a pause in French attacks until 12 September. In the Battle of Ginchy the Fourth Army captured the village, ready to begin the Battle of Flers–Courcelette, .
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