An aerial view the Somme battlefield with village of Becourt surrounded by trees in the ...

Accession Number G01534BG
Collection type Photograph
Object type Black & white - Glass original whole-plate negative
Maker Unknown
Place made France: Picardie, Somme, Albert Bapaume Area, Pozieres Area, Pozieres
Date made c 1916
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

An aerial view the Somme battlefield with village of Becourt surrounded by trees in the foreground. The village of Pozieres, astride the Albert to Bapaume road, is marked by the arrow. This region was in the centre of the British area of the Somme battlefield and was heavily contested with great loss of life on both sides. The attack on Pozieres in July 1916 was largely undertaken by the men of I Anzac Corps, who had recently moved from the Armentieres sector, and was their first action in the Battle of the Somme. At this point the British strategy focused on the seizure of the ridge east of Pozières village from where an attack could be mounted on German strongholds further north at Thiepval, which had not fallen to British attack on the opening day of the battle on 1 July 1916. By the time the Australians entered the Somme battle the operation had become a series of attacks aimed not so much at a break-through of the German lines as the capture of key positions and the wearing down of the enemy. Between 23 July and 5 August 1916, the Australian 1st and 2nd Divisions captured Pozières village and Pozières heights, a ridge 500 metres east of the village. The initial attack began at 12.30 am on Sunday 23 July when the 1st Division seized the German front line and in the following hour reached the main road through Pozières. At dawn the Germans counter-attacked but the Australians held on. The rest of Pozières fell on the night of 23–24 July and further gains were made on the night of 24–25 July. The Germans reacted to the seizure of Pozières by concentrating the bulk of their artillery on the Australians. Constant barrages were directed onto the village and the narrow approaches creating a nightmarish situation for troops forming up and attacking in the dark. By 27 July, the 2nd Division had taken over in Pozières and was ordered to take Pozières heights. The attack commenced at 12.15 am on 29 July but the Germans were ready and the attack failed at a cost of 3,500 Australian casualties. The Australian commander of the 2nd Division asked that his men might attack again rather than be withdrawn after failure. Following an intense bombardment on 4 August 1916, the Australian seized Pozières heights. The exhausted 2nd Division was now rested and the 4th Division took up positions on the Pozières Heights. Attacking north along the ridge, the Australians in ten days of continuous action reached the outskirts of Mouquet Farm. The 4th Division was now relieved. The farm resisted capture until 26 September 1916. In less than seven weeks of fighting at Pozières and Mouquet Farm the three Australian divisions suffered 23,000 casualties. Of these, 6,800 men were killed or died of wounds. It was a loss comparable with all the casualties sustained by the Australians over eight months at Gallipoli in 1915. The cost had been very large for both sides and in the words of Australian official historian C E W Bean, Pozières ridge "is more densely sown with Australian sacrifice than any other place on earth." This photograph carries a British reference number of KB21. One of a series of 62 photographs acquired by C.E.W. Bean from a number of sources in the 1920s. None were taken by Bean, but acquired to augment his own photographs. All were registered in his personal (C.B.) series and carry a C.B. number. All were subsequently registered in the AWM G Series under one accession number, G01534, and use a series of alphabetic extensions, commencing with G01534A, to accommodate the 62 items.

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