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Belleau Wood and Vaux - 1 to 26 June & July 1918 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R432
Discovery Miles 4 320
You Save: R41
(9%)
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Belleau Wood and Vaux - 1 to 26 June & July 1918 (Paperback)
Series: Battleground Books: WWI
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List price R473
Loot Price R432
Discovery Miles 4 320
You Save R41 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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BELLEAU WOOD The Battle of Belleau Wood has a prominent place in
the history of the United States Marine Corps; it took place
between 6 and 27 June 1918 (sometimes considered to be 1-26 June).
However, when on 6 June 1918 the marines launched their attack on
the wood, the biggest German threat here was nearly over. Its
significance to the Corps is underlined by the presence not only of
a monument to the 4th (Marine) Brigade of the US 2nd Division but
also by a preserved part of the wood, which is situated to the rear
of the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery. The fighting here marks the
first major battle by the USMC in Europe. The battle came -
although the participants were unaware of this - at the end of the
the third great German offensive of Spring 1918, the Blucher-York
Offensive, also known as the 3rd Battle of the Aisne, which was
launched on 27 May and officially ended on 4 June. Like its
predecessors that Spring, an offensive which had started with
startling territorial gains had almost ground to a halt by the time
that the 2nd Division, and thus the marines, were called in to
assist the French Sixth Army in holding the line and in retaking,
where possible, crucial positions. What started out as preventing
the Germans from breaking through the French lines and pushing on
to Paris ended in a three-weeks long slogging match in and around
Belleau Wood. It was on French General Duch ne's instigation that
the woods were attacked; but in reality the marines could have just
held the line and been satisfied with that. As it was, they were
flung into action with little time to prepare. The fighting in
Belleau Wood was extremely brutal and involved several attacks and
counter-attacks; neither side was willing to yield an inch of the
terrain of a feature that had local strategic significance,
particularly to the Germans. Although the offensive locally here
came to an end and the initial German threat in the area was nearly
overcome, the focal point of the fighting moved to Villers Cotter
ts, twenty-five kilometres north-east of Belleau. The Americans
were not quite finished when Belleau Wood was finally captured, as
the nearby village of Vaux was taken by an army brigade of the 2nd
Division in a text book attack on 1 July. The USMC has always had a
good publicity machine' and Belleau Wood was certainly well known
to the wider American public in the war years, particularly as it
was an early action by a formation of the AEF. Although largely
forgotten since the Second World War - the memory perhaps kept
alive by the unusual preserved remnant of the battlefield, Belleau
Wood's reputation has been enhanced by increased interest in the
war since the turn of the century. Nowadays, the battle is
sometimes called a pivotal event in the First World War and an
iconic battle in US Marine Corps history' by several American
authors, which some of their European counterparts might regard as
somewhat exaggerated. Although there have been several guide books
on Belleau Wood published in recent years (a clear indication of
American interest in the battle today), what differs in this book
is the number of points to visit as well as the clear narrative
that precedes the tours section. Not only are many new points of
interest explored in Belleau itself, but the surrounding
countryside is not forgotten. Headquarters, temporary burial sites
and other features are included. The book is profusely illustrated
by contemporary photographs and numerous maps, the narrative
supplemented by a number of first hand accounts; the whole is
supported by several walking and car tours. This is the latest in a
series of Battleground books by Maarten Otte on the American
Expeditionary Forces, with several more in preparation. The AEF's
performance in the war is relatively little known, not least in the
USA; Belleau Wood is one of the few engagements that still carries
some resonance. It is fortunate that so many of the AEF's actions
took place in parts of France that have seen little development and
are in agricultural or wooded country, which means that traces of
their fighting are relatively plentiful.
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