Battle of the Somme: The Deadliest Battle of WW1

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  • Опубліковано 2 чер 2022
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 545

  • @mikebreaton7910
    @mikebreaton7910 2 роки тому +132

    "If you ever drive the motorways from Paris to Calais
    and you're not in any rush to move along
    just take a little side-trip through the green and the rolling hills
    down through Vimy, Passchendaele, and to the Somme.
    Stop your car and stand a while and listen to the wind
    and you just might hear it sing the soldier's song.
    A distant roll like thunder, and the muffled march of feet,
    and a ghostly army singing this old song..."

    • @PerfectSense77
      @PerfectSense77 Рік тому +8

      "First Day On The Somme", written by Will Millar, frontman (at the time the song was written) of The Irish Rovers.

    • @tlou2cinematicgameplay636
      @tlou2cinematicgameplay636 5 місяців тому

      Rather the cry’s and their moaning. This stupid romanticism….

    • @NikHuhr
      @NikHuhr 4 місяці тому +2

      @@PerfectSense77*that's gorgeous my man thank you for sharing* ❤

  • @francispitts9440
    @francispitts9440 2 роки тому +215

    My Paternal Grandfather served in the Marine Corps during WW I. He saw a decent amount of action especially in Belleau Wood in June of 1918. I was fortunate enough to grow up with him and his account of history from the early 1900 through WW II and his return to service as a DI. I was always impressed by what Americans and European people went through during the war. Very difficult times.

    • @davidburns1781
      @davidburns1781 2 роки тому +10

      @Hazen Machia his father's dad. Paternal is father, Maternal is mothers side

    • @plushman3685
      @plushman3685 2 роки тому +1

      outstanding

    • @theawesomeman9821
      @theawesomeman9821 2 роки тому +1

      cool

    • @mattweir9674
      @mattweir9674 2 роки тому +17

      @Hazen Machia bit of a bell-end aren't ya bud?

    • @epozach8970
      @epozach8970 2 роки тому +14

      Nice comment buddy. My great grandfather Edward Stone was taken prisoner outside of Belleau Wood after he was laying in no man’s land playing dead for four days. Coordinated artillery decimated his entire platoon and his favorite officer bled out slowly dispite edwards best efforts while waiting to be rescued. Obviously this didn’t happened he ended up in PoW camp and his mother was informed he was dead and they had a funeral in Ohio for him. He ate grass soup and occasionally a turnip or radish they could find in the field the Germans led them to for food. He quickly learned a hybrid German English language to speak to his guards. He was a devout baptist and dead from his bible to the guard Hans who became his friend and even allowed Edward to write a letter to his mother informing her that was in fact alive and in prison. After the war he walked and hopped trains from near the German border to the coast where he got a ride on a British ship to the uk and finally 10 months s after released making it to Boston then home to Ohio where he lived til the 1970s. I still have his bible. A most valuable heirloom in my family. Thanks for you post hope others hear these stories. Much love. Zachary Stone

  • @PL8901
    @PL8901 2 роки тому +297

    The first day of the Somme was devastating for Newfoundland. The (Royal) Newfoundland Regiment was fighting in Beaumont-Hamel. When they climbed out of the trenches, the German machine guns picked them off. Of the 780 who went to battle, only 68 answered the roll call the next day. They were essentially wiped out.
    This is why Newfoundland observes Memorial Day on July 1st, the same day as Canada Day. The battle site is now a Canadian national historic site, one of only two sites outside Canada (the other being the Vimy Memorial).

    • @cleverusername9369
      @cleverusername9369 Рік тому +13

      It's haunting, looking at the Beaumont-Hamel battlefield on Google Earth, there are still trenches and craters visible, along with graveyard after graveyard after graveyard.

    • @KeyWestGlenn
      @KeyWestGlenn Рік тому +5

      They’re polite for our safety

    • @church6882
      @church6882 Рік тому +3

      Yup, the Canadian flag still flies above every other on that site

    • @BlueBirdsProductions
      @BlueBirdsProductions Рік тому +3

      bro its not "The (royal) Newfoundland Regiment" It was "The Royal Newfoundland Regiment". Don't put that important part in brackets, that's pretty disrespectful.

    • @andreschavez9671
      @andreschavez9671 Рік тому +2

      I was fortunate enough to visit the site right before Covid. It’s a great historic site. You can see how they would get picked off so easily there

  • @Parnell07
    @Parnell07 Рік тому +27

    My Great Grandad went over the top 3 times at he the Somme and survived til the end of the war. Came back a changed man although he was still a good father to his 7 kids the light had gone from his eyes. He despised Churchill too, blamed him from getting his best friend killed at Gallipoli. Staunch Labour man too.

    • @user-ij1yf3qb9o
      @user-ij1yf3qb9o 5 місяців тому +1

      He was a very lucky man to survive 3 trips into hell and come out the other side, even if only physically. Thousands of young men only lasted a few feet past the mouth of the trench.

  • @comradesionnach
    @comradesionnach 2 роки тому +93

    On the first day of the Somme, of the 800 men of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment who went forward, only 110 survived. Their losses were so great that in WWII Newfoundland couldn't field their own regiment.

    • @alicialuxxx6088
      @alicialuxxx6088 2 роки тому +12

      My great great uncle was one of 110 men who survived! But sadly died a year later in another battle

    • @leahbray1862
      @leahbray1862 2 роки тому +2

      Great Big Sea wrote a song about them. It is a brilliant song.

    • @karljonasson8429
      @karljonasson8429 2 роки тому +2

      recruiting Sergaent I believe it is called.

    • @troystaunton254
      @troystaunton254 2 роки тому +4

      I’ve been there and it was emotional being there. I’m Australian so it’s not even personal for me.

    • @maximilianodelrio
      @maximilianodelrio Рік тому

      That's just a battalion though, but damn

  • @moritamikamikara3879
    @moritamikamikara3879 2 роки тому +67

    My current town of residence, Salford (suburb of Manchester) was decimated by this battle.
    A bunch of guys from Salford fought in the "Salford Pals" in the battle of the Somme, they were some of the first to go over the top.
    There's a legend that two days after the battle started, a train pulled up in the station and a guy from the train called out "Is this Salford!?" and someone on the platform calls back "Yeah it is!" and train guy calls back "Your guys are all dead!" and then the train pulls out of the station and leaves.
    Salford Pals had been almost entirely destroyed in the first few hours, and that was most of the young male population.
    There aren't many Salforders left anymore, the suburb leans almost entirely on immigrants, that is to say usually University students like myself or entrepreneurs looking to make or work in businesses supporting the university.

    • @mcoshea83
      @mcoshea83 Рік тому +4

      Most working class parts of the UK were decimated, liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow, East London etc, hundreds of thousands young lives lost

  • @LennoxMatt1
    @LennoxMatt1 2 роки тому +169

    As a Canadian I'd love a video on Vimy Ridge, which is generally seen as the moment Canada distinguished itself from the British command. The monument there is considered Canadian sovereign land, and even Hitler ordered that the monument be preserved in WWII, himself laying a wreath at its base

    • @rayross997
      @rayross997 2 роки тому +5

      Great suggestion and The Newfoundland Regiment at Beaumont Hamel would make an excellent video.

    • @troystaunton254
      @troystaunton254 2 роки тому +5

      Vimy ridge and meseans ridge for Canada I’d also love frommels and hamal for Australia and the 100 days offensive for both.

    • @jeffjeffrets3253
      @jeffjeffrets3253 Рік тому +3

      @Kalimata101 I was just telling a friend today that Canada wasn't to be trifled with lol

    • @amikokkoniemi3427
      @amikokkoniemi3427 Рік тому

      Eiii

    • @richardloach610
      @richardloach610 Рік тому

      damn

  • @Gearparadummies
    @Gearparadummies Рік тому +26

    I visited WWI's most prominent battlefields in 2017. The most humbling and horrifying things you can still see today in places like Verdun and Passchendaele is absence. What once stood there vanished not to ever return. Trees growing out of still visible craters where entire villages once stood and were all but wiped out by artillery barrages. Enormous graveyards filled with thousands of fallen soldiers. The Lochnagar Crater is pretty impressive even today. I recommend everyone interested in WWI to drive across those field. It is extremely educational as well as eye opening.

  • @andyyang3029
    @andyyang3029 2 роки тому +556

    We should all be glad we were born after the world wars. What a horrible period of history

  • @kingpin7666
    @kingpin7666 2 роки тому +17

    The British Army fired over a million shells a day for 3 days at the beginning of the Somme. The Germans responded by cutting entire corps when the charge came. It was a meat grinder.

    • @68dgmitch
      @68dgmitch Рік тому

      Previous been told a large % of shells didn’t work

    • @Combatchronicles1793
      @Combatchronicles1793 Рік тому

      The biggest cannon of the war, MLE 400mm, played a huge part on this battle ---> find the story here:ua-cam.com/video/leqoJy5WujU/v-deo.html

  • @paul8467
    @paul8467 11 місяців тому +4

    The first 7 minutes of this video spent talking about the 1st day perfectly set up the rest of the video. The emphasis on lost life, the failures, and the successes set up the truly grand scale of this battle. This is one of my favorite history youtube channels right now for sure.

  • @hollieBlu303
    @hollieBlu303 2 роки тому +5

    I'll be honest... every WW1 documentary I have watched in the last 25 years just brings me immediately back to Blackadder Goes Fourth....that series finale...heart wrenching.

    • @hollieBlu303
      @hollieBlu303 2 роки тому

      ....and another excellent channel! Thanks for owning UA-cam Mr.Whistler!

    • @hollieBlu303
      @hollieBlu303 2 роки тому

      ...and there's the Blackadder reference.

  • @ChristopherNFP
    @ChristopherNFP 2 роки тому +12

    Thank you for identifying Pozieres. A ferocious battle for the Australian 1st Division. Extraordinary bravery under heavy shelling.
    The village and the adjoining Mouquet Farm deserves a full episode on their own.

  • @adamd5849
    @adamd5849 2 роки тому +16

    Honestly, I would love a video on Belleau Wood. With it happening during the Spring Offensive, it would be very interesting in seeing how important it may have been for both sides

    • @kiwi_comanche
      @kiwi_comanche Рік тому +2

      Teufelhunden for the win. Semper Fi.

  • @acarmory
    @acarmory 2 роки тому +13

    Another excellent video! Would love to see more videos about WW1.

  • @shellshell942
    @shellshell942 2 роки тому +87

    The leader of the Australian army, General Sir John Monash, came up with a lot of battle strategies that were used for the first time in WW1. Scary thing is that he almost got pushed out of his job because he was Jewish and born to German parents. He even had to ask his family to write to him only in English because they were checking all his letters...imagine what a difference it could have made 🤔

    • @jamieholtsclaw2305
      @jamieholtsclaw2305 2 роки тому +11

      Sir John got his moment in the sun but that was during the 1918 Allied counteroffensive.

    • @michaelsinger4638
      @michaelsinger4638 2 роки тому +12

      Also he has A LOT of stuff in Australia named after him as well.

    • @frenzalrhomb6919
      @frenzalrhomb6919 2 роки тому +8

      @@michaelsinger4638 To bloody right he has mate, and so he should!! You should have a look at the channel "The People's Profiles," it gives you the entire biography of the Man's life, and in great detail.
      It even goes as far as to call him the "Father of Modern Warfare," as it was his very original idea of what became known as "Combined Arm's Warfare"

    • @thenextbondvillainklaussch3266
      @thenextbondvillainklaussch3266 Рік тому +1

      @@frenzalrhomb6919 As someone who has studied WW1 and WW2 for over 30 years , and has read about Monash off and on for most that time , the claim of " the Father of Modern Warfare. As it was his very original idea of what became known as Combined Arm's Warfare" - is not over stated , not even a little. The man single handedly changed how people looked at a battle field , and he undoubtedly saved many many men's lives serving under him, thanks to his idea's and especially his insistence on extensive preparation before a battle. He also turned his Aussie troops into feared and respected adversaries, a respect which probably carried over into WW2. He's the WW1 Goat , that many people forget.....

    • @aSSGoblin1488
      @aSSGoblin1488 Рік тому

      JM

  • @mitchellneu
    @mitchellneu 2 роки тому +3

    Thanks so much for this, Simon, been wondering what a vid on this would be like!

  • @Iris_and_or_George
    @Iris_and_or_George 2 роки тому +7

    Over 1m dead in 140 days.... over 7,5k a day.... 5 every minute. Of all the wars ever, this is the one I'm glad i wasn't around for the most.

    • @scottbivins4758
      @scottbivins4758 5 місяців тому

      I wonder if Soldiers from World War 1 would have preferred to be in World war 2.

    • @DNoll-dx4ju
      @DNoll-dx4ju 5 місяців тому

      @@scottbivins4758 if one considers how experimental alot of the doctrines and equipment were, not to mention how much more meleecombat was present. I'd say probably yes.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 3 місяці тому

      ​@@scottbivins4758WW2 was worse in every way than WW1.

    • @vjbd2757
      @vjbd2757 3 місяці тому

      1 million casualties on both sides. Not dead.

  • @Shadooe
    @Shadooe 2 роки тому +7

    7:20 Royal Newfoundland Regiment. On July 1st, 801 went over the top, 68 answered roll the next day The advance on Beaumont-Hamel was the one time in the entire war that the RNFLDR was assigned an objective and failed to reach it

    • @scottbivins4758
      @scottbivins4758 5 місяців тому

      That's pretty understandable why they didn't reach it. World War 1 was a different beast. Out with the old ways of war in with the new ways of way. Not only that but the new technology like machine guns. Fucking hell on earth thats for damn sure

  • @Kieran_Martin
    @Kieran_Martin 2 роки тому +1

    Yay another Warographics video! Just in time for dinner! And yes I watched all of the others XD
    Very good content keep up the spectacular work Simon and Team!

  • @babscabs1987
    @babscabs1987 2 роки тому +13

    Siegfried Sassoon - Memoirs of an Infantry Officer.
    He could hear the Welsh fighting in Mametz wood.
    P.s. Please do the Third Battle of Ypres next!

  • @captintinsmith3774
    @captintinsmith3774 2 роки тому +14

    Both my great grand fathers and both my great grand uncles fought in the Great War (French Army)
    My great grand Uncle Camille was killed between the 2nd and 3rd Battle of Artois (while digging lateral trenches with his men - he was a Sargent - , preparing for the 3rd assault) ...
    My great grand Uncle Adrian was at the Battle of Verdun, and survived....
    Both my great grand fathers we're not sent to the front, due to their age, and served in the auxillary regiments....
    Would be great if Simon could do a video of the Battle of Verdun, where the German Empire's aim was to "Bleed France White", which miserably failed, and bled itself instead....

  • @HarryWHill-GA
    @HarryWHill-GA 2 роки тому +4

    While an American, my maternal grandfather spent 2 1/2 years on the Somme as a doctor in the Royal Army Medical Corps. We have a commendation for his hospital signed by King George V. He never would talk about his time other than the fine people he served with.

  • @hanjitomoe-kiryuin2593
    @hanjitomoe-kiryuin2593 2 роки тому +9

    After going to Belgium and seeing these places, as well as all the mass graveyards and memorials, I can never watch these kinds of videos without getting emotional.
    Thank you Simon, and the whole Warographics crew for being so honest and frank about the massacre that was the Somme, and the impact it had

    • @ChristinaMaterna
      @ChristinaMaterna 2 роки тому

      Same. I've visited all the Australian sights in both France and Belgium (and where our families fought)and it still makes me tear.

  • @robertbruce1887
    @robertbruce1887 5 місяців тому

    Excellent Simon! So much information packed into a relatively short time. As for the battle, such a horrible waste of young men's lives on both sides.

  • @end8316
    @end8316 10 місяців тому +1

    My Great Uncle fought in the Welsh division in the Battle of the Somme. He was 20 years old from the village of Penygroes. He died in 1916.
    My grandmother still has the letters he sent home, my dad has read them and he doesn’t let me read them since they are so depressing. I will one day soon though
    I would love to have them properly documented in a museum and make copies. Rest In Peace Huwi

  • @paulceglinski3087
    @paulceglinski3087 2 роки тому

    Just popped across the channel. Done subscribed and browsed vids. This looks fun. Cheers.

  • @eonunderworld7814
    @eonunderworld7814 2 роки тому +20

    Vimy Ridge needs to be a video. The battle that effectively birthed a nation and proved commonwealth troops were far better than given credit for. Please add in the failures of other nations to take the ridge before the Canadians and the British failure to exploit the victory by being to drunk to fight assuming the Canadians wouldn’t make any progress.

  • @kiwi_comanche
    @kiwi_comanche Рік тому +3

    My Great Grandfather was with C Company, 12th Battalion, 27th Regiment Inniskilling Fusiliers, 36th Ulster Division. Joined up in 1912, demobbed in 1919. Survived the entire war. Shot twice and gassed once. The 36th Ulster Division was the only unit to achieve it's objectives on the first day of the Battle, only to be called back by Generals so far behind the lines they had no idea what was going on. So many lives wasted, and for nothing. We Will Remember Them.

    • @Didyeaye404
      @Didyeaye404 Рік тому +1

      Those loyal ulstermen done us all proud. Long live the 36th

  • @joeywheelerii9136
    @joeywheelerii9136 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for covering more than just the first day.

  • @matthewcasey5059
    @matthewcasey5059 Рік тому +5

    I love the quote from Black Adder when General Melchett said the Tommy’s need something to boost their morale and Black Adder responded with, “General Haig’s resignation and suicide would be in order.”
    More I’ve learned about his planning behind the Somme operation and planning, or lack there of, and insipid classism makes me realize just how true and accurate that statement really should have been.

    • @NapoleonicWargaming
      @NapoleonicWargaming 11 місяців тому +1

      Keep reading. That's a high school level take.

    • @gchampi2
      @gchampi2 9 місяців тому +2

      To be fair to Haig, he never wanted to have his men fight the battle at The Somme. He intended to launch an attack some 30 miles west of The Somme, where the German lines were much less heavily defended, and much later in the year (August IIRC), so that his men could have several months of extra training. The Battle of The Somme was forced upon him by the French, who were obsessed with saving Verdun. That the French plan basically threw several hundred thousand inexperienced British volunteers into one of the most heavily defended parts of the German lines was irrelevant to them, as long as Verdun was saved...

  • @nigelmceachern505
    @nigelmceachern505 2 роки тому +6

    I watch this channel like it’s prime time television

    • @JacobGen
      @JacobGen 2 роки тому +2

      It's alot better than what's on television currently lol

  • @TheEvilCommenter
    @TheEvilCommenter 2 роки тому +3

    Good video 👍

  • @damiensadventure
    @damiensadventure 2 роки тому

    Finally. I've been waiting for this video.

  • @darrylbutt2570
    @darrylbutt2570 2 роки тому +5

    As a South African, I made it a point of respect to go to Delville Wood to the cemetery to honour our dead. What a senseless waste of brave young men.

  • @duncancurtis1758
    @duncancurtis1758 2 роки тому +13

    So, Darling how we doing?
    We've advanced this far, general.
    Oh splendid.
    On a scale of one to one, sir.
    Bittersweet comedy.

    • @werewolfmoney6602
      @werewolfmoney6602 2 роки тому +1

      "No Black Adder! I'm as English as queen Victoria!"
      "So your father was a German, you're half German, and you married a German?"

    • @technovelo
      @technovelo 2 роки тому

      Baldrick's coffee. Thankfully I was not drinking any when I watched that as I take mine with extra cream and sugar.

  • @The_Republic_of_Ireland
    @The_Republic_of_Ireland Рік тому +6

    Simon could you cover the role of a few irish regiments during the Somme, the best known is the 36th Ulster Division who were one of the first to successfully reach a German trench

  • @KendlickLama
    @KendlickLama 2 роки тому +3

    back in the day i went on joint operation too with my friends
    we went in to the woods and smoked a joint

  • @loke6664
    @loke6664 2 роки тому +6

    Germany's worst loss was not really that tiny bit of land but the loss of Oswald Boelcke near the end of the battle. That dude wrote the book on air war but you loose some and you gain some, Somme was really the start of another rising star, Manfred von Richthofen or as you might know him: "The red Baron".
    The battle was really a draw, both sides lost about the same amount of men, learned about the same tactical lessons and the land won was rather tiny.
    You could argue that the British and French won be default since they had an easier time replacing their losses but Germany did learn how to make far superior air planes which lead to "Black April" 1917 where RFC (RAFs predecessor) lost 245 of 360 air planes.
    Of course the British did learn from that and so on...
    But I honestly see no winner in this battle, it competes with Stalingrad for the most miserable battle ever fought.
    It was poor planning, The idea that you could surprise the enemy when you spent a week firing the heaviest artillery barrage over the area so far seen is just ridiculous. Instead of collecting the right kind of ammunition they stockpiled all kinds they could get their hands on and they assumed neither barbed wire nor humans and their defenses would survive the barrage.
    And walking straight into machine gun fire works as well as you would think. Sure, now and then there were new ideas and tactics popping up like the tank but if those tactics had been used the first day the battle might have ended differently. Germany also screwed up with constant counter attacks that were far costlier then either side could afford. If the Germans would have slowly backed a bit while the British losses ticked up they would have won but everyone was fighting for a tiny bit of worthless land.
    One would have thought humanity learned from this and we never had a trench war again but then Korea happened and while people rarely talks about it, it is bloody hard to see the difference between photographs from the Western front and from the trenches of Korea.

    • @randalpumpkin2788
      @randalpumpkin2788 2 роки тому +1

      Interesting, I know nothing about trenches in Korea. hopefully Simon will cover that soon

    • @loke6664
      @loke6664 2 роки тому +1

      @@randalpumpkin2788 I kinda doubt it, when people talk about the Korean war they focus on the early part and Mig alley. The trench fighting were extremely static just like WW1, slightly more advanced weapons but otherwise pretty much the same.
      It was a rather odd war and never got a winner which is why there still is so much tension in the region to this day.
      It is however rather interesting but it had the misfortune of happening so close after WW2 that it never got the same recognition as for instance Vietnam did.
      It is more or less a forgotten war even if it still impacts the modern world, and it officially never ended, there was never a peace declared or signed.

  • @kennyle8640
    @kennyle8640 2 роки тому +5

    "Two and a half million people is a little more than the entire population of Houston, Texas; all with a helmet and a rifle...". In other words, not all that different than Houston, Texas sans the helmet...

  • @coitze8704
    @coitze8704 2 роки тому +7

    I would recommend a future video to be on the Hunt for the Bismarck, when Churchill ordered the Royal Navy's finest to track down and destroy that ONE german ship.

  • @caleblarsen5490
    @caleblarsen5490 2 роки тому +44

    Man, this must have been Somme battle to be talking about it over 100 yrs later. . .
    I'll see myself out.

  • @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle
    @Whatisthisstupidfinghandle 2 роки тому +16

    2:20 Lord Kitchener. Ontario Canada renamed the southern Ontario city Berlin to Kitchener in 1916. This was done by a referendum vote and passed by a narrow margin as there were a large amount of local people of German heritage. Also for interest the neighboring city is named Waterloo. While German heritage has decreased in the last 100 years the area still hosts the largest annual Octoberfest in North America

    • @SKa-tt9nm
      @SKa-tt9nm 2 роки тому

      He’s also the inventor of the concentration camp and a first ballot hall of fame war criminal

  • @randalpumpkin2788
    @randalpumpkin2788 2 роки тому +1

    this was very good. a bit dark, which we always like :D

  • @starbreeze7249
    @starbreeze7249 2 роки тому +19

    Kind of sad that this is the loss it took for the higher ups to take the lives they threw away more seriously. It's also a big part in what made the Canadian divisions so effective in WW1, their training and competent leadership

  • @hydencp
    @hydencp Рік тому +4

    As a veteran, WWI is scary as fuck

  • @justinjenkins2682
    @justinjenkins2682 2 роки тому +4

    Gotta say as well, the updated music on the title screens is so epic, really sets the gloomy mood. Maybe amp it up in future videos?

  • @J.E.POUCCOUI
    @J.E.POUCCOUI 2 роки тому +3

    Fun Fact: My Great Great Granddad Fought In The Battle Of The Somme. He Was One Of The Survivors Of The French Army. Around 10 Years After The Battle, 1926, He Moved To Canada, Met My Great Great Grandmom, & Had My Great Grandmom.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 3 місяці тому

      Did you know that 74 percent of all British and Dominion troops who fought at the Somme survived without a scratch as it were. The Somme was not the worst battle of WW1 . Verdun was far worse than the Somme.

  • @vitorpereira9515
    @vitorpereira9515 2 роки тому +8

    Battle of Somme aka the birth of the modern warfare and the moment things got real for both sides.

    • @b1646717
      @b1646717 2 роки тому +3

      "Wait a minute. I see no glory here, only death."

    • @duncancurtis1758
      @duncancurtis1758 2 роки тому +3

      The Trench with Daniel Craig.

    • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
      @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 2 роки тому +2

      Kinda disagree. There were wars earlier that could be descirbed as the birth of modern warfare. Even that is debateable as we don't fight WW1 style battles anymore (in the west)
      The American Civil war had trench warfare for example. They also had machine guns (Gatling guns vs Cavalry charges)
      The American Civil might now have tanks, they did have armor (on ships, the battle between The USS Monitor vs the CSS Virginia)
      War has changed.

  • @YaakovEzraAmiChi
    @YaakovEzraAmiChi 2 роки тому +2

    Haha now I can understand what they ment in Peaky Blinders when mentioning being "at the Somme"

  • @mandalor45
    @mandalor45 2 роки тому +2

    Please do battle of Beaumont Hamel. a significant ww1 battle for the people where im from, Newfoundland

  • @uruuphiil8335
    @uruuphiil8335 2 роки тому +3

    Ok Simon I did not know which was the best channel for this, I -guessed- this was it. Anyways, would a video about the Berlin Airlift be something that would interest you to learn about and share? I'd like that, if you would please. a good starting point is a book by Edwin Gere called The Unheralded. :) my grandfather Bill is at the bottom of page 232, but Id love to learn more in that compact and concise way you and your writing and editing team do so well. :)

  • @theadder2243
    @theadder2243 Рік тому +1

    Thank you very much. Great video about this battle, which was ultimately the downfall of the only German General that the British feared (Erich von Falkenhayn). I just wonder - as a German and descendant of WW1 veterans - why Falkenhayn was forced to stray away from the very succesful tactics of the beginning of the counterattack to Verdun (leaving the first trenches with only a small number of soldiers, having most soldiers securely sheltered during the barrages and having them rush into the trenches as soon as possible after the barrage). I know that he ordered this, and that he ordered about one months into the Somme battle that front line trenches had to be manned fully (meaning sooo many deaths). I always attribute that to an order of the Kaiser Wilhelm II. to him, but I couldn't find anything definitive on that. Maybe Ludendorf (who is the most overrated commander of WW1 ever, much worse than Haig) had his stinky fingers in it, though...

  • @nigeldeforrest-pearce8084
    @nigeldeforrest-pearce8084 Рік тому

    Well Done!!!

  • @mattday8208
    @mattday8208 Рік тому +3

    I found out no long ago that my great, great uncle went over the top on the first day as part of the 1/2 Battalion the London Regiment. Not long after he was shot and died of his wounds some weeks later.

  • @brotherjim3051
    @brotherjim3051 2 роки тому +1

    Tsingtao, Tannenberg, Sinai, Kilamenjaro, and Gallipoli would be cool to cover as well.

  • @TheRealWarHistory
    @TheRealWarHistory Рік тому +1

    The Battle of the Somme reminds us of the fragility of life and the importance of preserving peace. May their sacrifice inspire us to build a better future.

  • @Yamikaiba123
    @Yamikaiba123 2 роки тому +1

    I'd like you to cover the Anarchist take-over of Canaan in the late 2nd Millenium B.C.E, described in the Amarna Letters.

  • @jphughes6868
    @jphughes6868 2 роки тому

    Hey I have just watched your side projects video about Oliver plunketts head in Drogheda(my home town). You should do a warographics video on the siege of Drogheda, it use to be a large walled city until Oliver Cromwell came and massacred the town, to the extent that one of our streets ran red with blood and is now called scarlet street

  • @ChristinaMaterna
    @ChristinaMaterna 2 роки тому +1

    Anyone visiting the Somme should go see the Anzac memorial and esp the town of Villers Bretonneux
    (The place recaptured by the Aussies and held. They still fly the satisfied flag and sing that national anthem!)

  • @MrStretchification
    @MrStretchification 2 роки тому

    Can we get a video of Belleau Wood? That would be great. Thanks

  • @StefanMedici
    @StefanMedici 2 роки тому +1

    Another great video on this channel or another would be of the tunnel rats battles. While others were fighting above ground, mainly minners, were digging and fighting underground. Battle of Messines would be a good start but there was plenty of others.

  • @jamiewren9055
    @jamiewren9055 2 роки тому

    Would love to see a video on Vimy Ridge

  • @Frank074
    @Frank074 Рік тому

    Would love a video on the battle of Tannenberg

  • @Zmanath00
    @Zmanath00 2 роки тому +1

    Should do Vimy Ridge. I believe it's one of the most successful applications of the creeping barrage.

  • @davidpeniel7168
    @davidpeniel7168 2 роки тому

    Please do more videos on WW1.

  • @gablp7257
    @gablp7257 Рік тому

    Could you do a video on Vimy Ridge please

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples 2 роки тому +2

    Rest In Peace to those that passed away.

  • @nocturne7371
    @nocturne7371 Рік тому

    My birthday is on the 1st of July and as a kid I got a book about natable events that happened in history that event. On the cover was a picture from the first day of the battle of Somme.

  • @hanglee5586
    @hanglee5586 2 роки тому +2

    No combat training. Grand.

  • @hansolowe19
    @hansolowe19 Рік тому

    Maps! Needs more maps to go with the talking about locations 👍

  • @aaronjohnson718
    @aaronjohnson718 Рік тому +1

    Looking at all the empty shell around 4 minutes 19 seconds in is more than I can comprehend or imagine it is unbelievable yet it did happen and then other pictures of piles of shells really makes me wonder how could we do that to each other this is insanity

    • @flexinclouds
      @flexinclouds Рік тому

      You should watch 'the king's man' from 2021. Its based in ww1 and has the most realistic, chilling, epic battle scenes ive ever seen. (And good story-line) And they also depicted piles of spent shells like that at the Somme, beyond comprehension. Just the historical accuracy on the events leading to the start of the war, makes it an awesome movie for any ww1/ww2 buff.

  • @Nopski
    @Nopski 2 роки тому

    Would love to see an episode on The Battle on the Plains of Abraham

  • @cdburner5911
    @cdburner5911 Рік тому +2

    What I can't ever grasp is...how did 2 million soldiers stay fed? how did they go to the bathroom, how was their cloths washed (even were they?), how could they even truck the required amount of stuff to the front. Like being an outsider, I feel like I have a small clue into the logistics of modern wars, but 100 years ago, when trucks were substantially less capable than they are today, and horses were still in heavy use...how did it all work?

    • @davidharman7245
      @davidharman7245 Рік тому

      UA-cam doesn't have all the answers. I recommend reading books by people who lived during world events that interest you. Their accounts have more significance than biased "scholars" living generations later. Although it is nice to have decades of research to learn both sides of a conflict.
      I am aware that Argentina provided a large amount of corned beef to the allied armies. But, I am curious how was it transported from ports to the front lines, and paid for.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 3 місяці тому

      @cdbutner. You have touched on a facet that is very rarely mentioned, LOGISTICS.
      The British Army Service Corps provided all that was needed for the British allied battles in WW1. They are the unsung heroes of the war. No battle or war is ever won without good logistics.
      Amateurs talk tactics professionals talk logistics.
      Or as one American Cibil War general said
      Get there the firstest with the mostest.

  • @ashleykachuba2210
    @ashleykachuba2210 2 роки тому

    Have you done a video about Vimy Ridge?

  • @Zocktan
    @Zocktan 2 роки тому +2

    Do one on the battle of Rzhev

  • @fal9538
    @fal9538 2 роки тому

    You should make a video about the battle of long tan

  • @foilhats840
    @foilhats840 2 роки тому +2

    The newfoundland regiment was wiped out in that battle.

  • @robcunliffe3252
    @robcunliffe3252 Рік тому

    Of the Accrington Pals, that battalion of 1,000 untried and unprepared men, 234 were killed and 350 wounded. Almost every family in Accrington hod lost somebody. At first the Town Hall hid the truth, but as news filtered through via letters home from field hospitals and returned casualties, it gradually dawned that something terrible had happened. The people laid siege to the Town Hall, dragged the Mayor out and forced the news out of him. It has often been said, and I can believe it, that the little town of Accrington never recovered from that ‘brilliant advance of July the First’.
    This has been taken for a website about the Accrington Pals, one of the smallest towns to raise a Pals battalion.

  • @ValensBellator
    @ValensBellator Рік тому +1

    So until the tank did it just ultimately make more sense to be defensive? Attacking such entrenched positions seems genuinely insane and so wasteful.

  • @TheTrainspotterFromTauranga
    @TheTrainspotterFromTauranga 2 роки тому +1

    There's a preserved New Zealand steam locomotive (AB 608) that was named 'Passchendaele' in either 1915 or 1916. She's a memorial locomotive for NZ soldiers who served in WW1, especially the Battle of the Somme.
    I know this'll sound dumb, but every time I hear Simon say 'no man's land' it reminds me of Blackadder.

    • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
      @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 2 роки тому

      It's not dumb. Don't sell yourself short. Blackadder had a WW1 series and "no man's land" was how it was called.

  • @xessenceofinsanityx
    @xessenceofinsanityx Рік тому +1

    My great-great uncle is 'buried' at Pozieres. I say that, but they never found his body. He was also only a couple weeks shy of 18, as he was one of the many who lied about their age to enlist.

  • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
    @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 2 роки тому +1

    My great great-grandfather died in Flanders fields. About 2 weeks before the armistice :(

  • @troystaunton254
    @troystaunton254 2 роки тому +1

    13:54 that was my great grandfather’s 1st action of ww1

  • @scottkrater2131
    @scottkrater2131 2 роки тому +3

    How'd those Second World War German infantrymen get there at about 10:17 lol.

  • @iowa_lot_to_travel9471
    @iowa_lot_to_travel9471 2 роки тому +2

    WW1 in a nutshell: see how many men volunteer to be in front of a firing squad

  • @rezarfar
    @rezarfar 2 роки тому +8

    WW1 was the last war that honour and compassion among both sides existed. Allowing the gathering of the dead and wounded, the willingness to fight for ones country but still display compassion to your enemy. Even laying down your arms to kick a ball around on a shared holiday.
    Every war after was different, ideologies had jaded people and modern warfare, with long range rockets, aerial combat and eventually nukes, made it so you didn't have to look at your enemy anymore, it took the honour and compassion away from war.
    War was always ugly and grim, but at least there was a sense of honour before, now it's just ugly and grim, the honour is gone.

    • @Nooinator
      @Nooinator 2 роки тому +2

      Not really, there is always tales of compassion for the enemy during war, ww1 just tends to be more romanticised

    • @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan
      @Josep_Hernandez_Lujan 2 роки тому +1

      That's an overly romantic view. Many, many massacres were carried out. WW1 Germany wasn't Nazi-Germany, but they weren't that much worse.

    • @TheKlamminator
      @TheKlamminator 9 місяців тому

      My grandfather (american) got his leg blown off in WWII by a land mine and was rescued by two German soldiers. There can be compassion in any war, it's usually just confused, scared young men on both sides that don't really want to fight.

  • @kevindalton2981
    @kevindalton2981 2 роки тому

    Can you do a video on the spartacist uprising 1919

  • @joshbunton6424
    @joshbunton6424 2 роки тому

    I would like to suggest a video on Verdun

  • @buninparadise9476
    @buninparadise9476 2 роки тому +1

    Not precisely a war, but You might have a suitable channel: The 1979 siege of Mecca

  • @mattstakeontheancients7594
    @mattstakeontheancients7594 11 місяців тому +2

    They did call Haig the butcher for his lack of caring about his men , but after the war he dedicated much of his life to help ex solders. Think he’s a complex figure who besides getting pressured from above I don’t think realized the sheer amount of death his decisions made. Casualties are just numbers on a page until you see the people those numbers represent. We treat those that suffer from PTSD back then they were shot for cowardice.

  • @SRFriso94
    @SRFriso94 Рік тому

    I've been to the Thiepval monument, 50.000 names of men that went missing during the Battle of the Somme. And that's just the missing ones, not even the ones that were killed. Absolute madness.

  • @Heisenberg882
    @Heisenberg882 2 роки тому +7

    do verdun

    • @duncancurtis1758
      @duncancurtis1758 2 роки тому +2

      The meat grinder that won for France but at appalling cost, leading to the poilus discontent in 1917.

    • @Heisenberg882
      @Heisenberg882 2 роки тому +1

      @@duncancurtis1758 Yeah ww1 was almost a phyrric victory for France as they had won and beaten Germany but at such a high cost that they wouldn't recover for many years

    • @vandeheyeric
      @vandeheyeric 2 роки тому +1

      @@duncancurtis1758 Verdun didn't help but it was the 1917 Chemin de Dames offensive that led to the French Mutinies of 1917 (which themselves were rather overblown).

  • @LogieT2K
    @LogieT2K 2 роки тому

    You shouldncover the newzeland musket wars at some point. Its a pretty interesting part of newzealand and britains military history

  • @richardwhitfill5253
    @richardwhitfill5253 Рік тому

    I’m glad I missed all these wars.

  • @Deimonik1
    @Deimonik1 2 роки тому

    Please make an episode about Osowiec Fort.

  • @chumbucket1313
    @chumbucket1313 Рік тому

    Holy crap Simon hosts this channel also? Don't get me wrong I love Simon but where does he find time to host all of these channels?

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 16 днів тому +1

    RIP
    To the 95,675 British troops, 50,729 French troops, and 164,055 Imperial German troops who were killed in the Battle of the Somme

  • @hollypixie4285
    @hollypixie4285 2 роки тому

    Listening to this just makes me think of "The Wipers Times" and how one of their satirical pieces was a fictional "expert" on the war stating "So, as you can see, all we need is one final big push to the finish! Or two. Maybe three. Four, at the very most!"

  • @alicialuxxx6088
    @alicialuxxx6088 2 роки тому +6

    Beaumont Hammel, the deadliest day of the battle of the Somme was so hard on the boys who went to war from my home province of Newfoundland. That's why we have so many monuments over there for that. My great great uncle was wounded but survived that battle just to die the year after in another battle. He was only 25.

    • @rayross997
      @rayross997 2 роки тому +1

      I just watched several videos on The Newfoundland Regiment, they displayed great valour and suffered terrible losses. Some 6200 Newfoundlanders served in WW1 with 1300 being killed in that 4 year period.

    • @Shadooe
      @Shadooe 2 роки тому

      801 July 1st. 68 July 2nd
      The advance on Beaumont-Hamel was the one time in the entire war that the RNFLDR was assigned an objective and failed to reach it. "Better Than the Best"