The First Battle of the Marne produced the so-called Miracle of
the Marne, when French and British forces stopped the initial
German drive on Paris in 1914. Hundreds of thousands of casualties
later, with opposing forces still dug into trench lines, the
Germans tried again to push their way to Paris and to victory. The
Second Battle of the Marne (July 15 to August 9, 1918) marks the
point at which the Allied armies stopped the massive German
Ludendorff Offensives and turned to offensive operations
themselves. The Germans never again came as close to Paris nor
resumed the offensive. The battle was one of the first large
multinational battles fought by the Allies since the assumption of
supreme command by French general Ferdinand Foch. It marks the only
time the French, American, and British forces fought together in
one battle. A superb account of the bloody events of those fateful
days, this book sheds new light on a critically important
20th-century battle.
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