Thiepval And Beaumont Hamel Fall

Written by Mike
Dead German soldiers in a front line trench. Dead German soldiers in a front line trench.

Almost three months of constant fighting during the Battle of the Somme were to elapse before the German stronghold of Thiepval fell on September 27. 

By October 1 the Allies had taken nearly 27,000 German prisoners, but during the next month the Allied casualties were over 60,000. 

On November 13 the German positions at Beaumont Hamel fell.  

After the success at Beaumont Hamel fighting became impossible in the waist deep mud swept by icy winds and snow squalls of the approaching winter. 

Many of the memorials list men as ‘missing’.  They are missing because their remains were never found.  Often, nothing remained of them to be found. 

Tens of thousands of soldiers were blown to pieces by high explosive shells.  The mud swallowed up others, sometimes alive.

Mike

Mike

Mike McCormac has been a photographer since about ten years old.  He's a Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society, and lives in a village in the hills near Paphos in Cyprus.

Read his full Bio

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