Sheffield Memorial Park at Serre on The Somme. WW1 Battlefield Tour

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  • Опубліковано 4 вер 2024
  • Today we look at the place where 1000s of the Pals Battalion Volunteers went into action at The Somme
    Vlogging Through History's Accrington Pals Video:
    • The Pals Battalions - ...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 59

  • @LeonardCooperman
    @LeonardCooperman 4 місяці тому +8

    Thank you for taking me on this journey with you. What a tragic waste of men, generations wiped out in minutes.

  • @wesb2823
    @wesb2823 4 місяці тому +12

    Great video. As an American; I am fascinated with the British PALS Battalions. I find them comparable to our own Civil War volunteer regiments as men were recruited from the same towns and served together. Such a travesty that so many towns literally lost a generation of young men in the war.

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you - yes I've read comparisons between the Civil War volunteers and pals battalions before

    • @jamesross1799
      @jamesross1799 4 місяці тому +3

      Yes the legacy of those battalions is etched into our national memory especially in the North of England. My local church has a window dedicated to our local battalion .

    • @jamesross1799
      @jamesross1799 4 місяці тому +1

      Sorry I should say had it was unfortunately lost when the church was closed and turned into homes. But in the early 80s I remember the stained glass window. Plus our next door neighbour had been on the somme with the Royal artillery.

    • @tomcarl8021
      @tomcarl8021 3 місяці тому

      It's not comparable. Britain's war college had fifty years to study the disastrous effects of that policy in the American Civil War. And I'm sure they had that policy for who know how long, before it.

    • @neilawuk
      @neilawuk 2 місяці тому +1

      My great uncle died on the 1st day July 1916 aged 35, 1st Barnsley pals. These were men of all ages that clubbed together and unfortunately died together, utterly tragic

  • @la_old_salt2241
    @la_old_salt2241 21 годину тому

    Thanks Rob, sobering. God bless, Robert

  • @loafersheffield
    @loafersheffield 2 місяці тому +1

    Thank you. The Accrington pals memorial actually looks as though it is made out of Accrington bricks. They are rock hard. Many houses fit for heroes were built using those. My Grandad eventually got one.

  • @markharris7260
    @markharris7260 4 місяці тому +2

    I went to Serre with my Dad and uncle on the morning of 1st July 2016. Something l'll cherish.The eerie sound of the whistles blew along the front line and the knowing the hell our boys were going into brought lump to your throat. We went to Beaumont Hamel later that day as that was where my great grandad went over top on the 1st day with 2nd Battalion South Wales Boaders. The Somme is apart of my family history like many families throughout the Commonwealth Apart from my Great Grandad, an great uncle was killed in area of Highwood Aug 1916 and other great uncle who fought at the Somme from mid July to November 1916. He would be later killed in Nov at Camberi 1917.

  • @skippygatten8572
    @skippygatten8572 4 місяці тому +2

    Good video. I visited the Western Front in 2018. I rented a car in Brussels and spent 2 weeks driving from the English Channel to Switzerland. I visited all the major battlefields. I was at Thiepval on November 11 and was one of the only Americans i believe. I made non-WWI pit stops in the Ardennes and Waterloo. I went alone as my wife dislikes mud and anything that is interesting. Needless to say it was the greatest vacation ever for me😅

  • @neilawuk
    @neilawuk 2 місяці тому +2

    My great uncle was 1st Barnsley pals, 13th yorks and lancs regiment. I visited the site last weekend 22nd June and laid a wreath, made it all very real. I have his victory medal and letter, he died 1st July 1916 12/1763 TW Hancock

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  2 місяці тому +1

      Thank you sharing that. I looked him up, I see he's one of the many, many missing on Thiepval Memorial. We Will Remember Him.

    • @neilawuk
      @neilawuk 2 місяці тому +1

      @@historyinyourhand1787 yep I visited Thiepval and wandered the cemeteries wondering if he was one of the soldiers known unto god……

    • @neilawuk
      @neilawuk 2 місяці тому +2

      @@historyinyourhand1787 and yes definitely not forgotten, I see him every morning passing his medal when I’m making a brew ;-)

  • @Jeffybonbon
    @Jeffybonbon 4 місяці тому +2

    Words are not enough Thank you guys

  • @OldFrontLine
    @OldFrontLine 4 місяці тому +5

    Got to say this is one of the best videos you’ve made, mate. Really good account of the Pals at Serre.

  • @UrbanHermit50
    @UrbanHermit50 3 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for this. My great-uncle was one of the first intake into the Leeds Pals. By 1916 he was a sergeant, and was killed on 1July. His body was never found - his name is on the Thiepval Memorial. I have never visited the battlefield, and at my age probably never will, so your video was the next best thing.

  • @thehistoryexplorer
    @thehistoryexplorer 4 місяці тому +2

    Really enjoyed that. Cracking video; very tastefully and respectfully done 👍

  • @richardzellers
    @richardzellers 4 місяці тому +2

    I just finished reading Covenant with Death yesterday. Great novel directly related to this part of the battle and PALS

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +1

      That's actually one I haven't read yet

    • @loafersheffield
      @loafersheffield 2 місяці тому

      @@historyinyourhand1787
      One of the five best novels about warfare - Christopher Hitchens.
      Read it. You'll be better person for having done so. - Peter Hitchens.
      My paternal grandfather was in a Lancastrian pals battalion. Had he not been so fortunate to have survived, I wouldn't be tapping away right now.
      As a metalhead, I am biased. Sabaton's 1916 video cholks me up every time.

  • @adriaanvankammen8375
    @adriaanvankammen8375 4 місяці тому +3

    I think I have been there 5 times. Last trip was with my son Sander. And we met the 'Mad rolling eyes Farmer'. Did you? Strange man. It is and stays a very impressive area. There is also a very small cementary outer on the right side. Left if you look at the climbing slopes. Only two rows of headstones. The idea of pals batallions was a disaster. Complete communities lost all there men. Pardon my bad Englisch.

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому

      Your English is great don't worry. I did meet the farmer actually, he was very pleasant with me but I guess everyone has a different experience

    • @la_old_salt2241
      @la_old_salt2241 21 годину тому

      ​@@historyinyourhand1787 Probably depends on his mood at the moment.

  • @drewtatt6487
    @drewtatt6487 4 місяці тому +1

    From Accrington,thanks for the video😢

  • @darrenhay2332
    @darrenhay2332 4 місяці тому +1

    Rob, this a great video. You really take the time to explain what is there. As an American, I would want to visit Meuse Argonne where my family members fought. WW1 fascinates me & want to learn as much as I can.

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +1

      Thank you. This past Autumn was my first visit to the Meuse Argonne Battlefields. Really found it interesting

  • @samdown1914
    @samdown1914 Місяць тому

    Wow fantastic videos, I've ended up here from sandervk history channel so pleased I am, fascinating videos! Thanks for your efforts

  • @999markas
    @999markas 4 місяці тому +1

    Rob, thank you. A brilliant video, and an area that I know very well. You just have to walk in the field in front of Queens to see the amount of iron fragments, brass and bullets to realise the difficulties that the Pals faced. Just 1/2 a mile away is Frankfurt trench - where there was a last stand involving the 51st Highland and 63rd Naval divisions. They were marooned in the German frontlines at the end of the Somme battle in November 1916 and survived for many days before being captured or killed despite heroic efforts to rescue them. This would be a brilliant future video. Just near to where you were is the quadrangle or ‘Heidenkopf’ was situated. It was the subject of the excellent TV show ‘Ancestors’ where the bodies of 3 soldiers were found in 2003. It was presented by the incredible Andy Robertshaw who knows this area better than anyone I know. Please keep the videos coming. They’re brilliant!

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you I appreciate that. Frankfurt Trench was actually on my list for this trip but I didn't make it there this time. I will soon I'm sure. Thanks for taking the time to comment with some great additional info

  • @johnsometimesoffandsometim8933
    @johnsometimesoffandsometim8933 4 місяці тому

    Good stuff, visiting soon with younger family members to see where their great great great Grand father spent his youth. In the immortal words of Ian Dury, What a waste

  • @MarkDenson-ld8bf
    @MarkDenson-ld8bf 4 місяці тому

    Thank you for sharing this with us
    Total respect
    RIP

  • @ahelle2
    @ahelle2 4 місяці тому

    Great video. Thank you for your full explanation of the Serre battle during the Somme offensive. 😊😊

  • @scifiwriter9541
    @scifiwriter9541 4 місяці тому

    Superb explanation. The best I've ever seen. Your knowledge is incredible. Thank you so much.

  • @alex4833
    @alex4833 4 місяці тому

    Hey, Rob. How are you? Superb documentary. What I enjoy most about your tours is how you show the battlefields. I think I told you this before, but it really helps me visualize it well. It's great learning about the Pals Battalions too. I heard of them, but learned some more from this video also :).
    I saw a Battle Guide video about the Battle of the Somme recently, so this is a great complement to that video.
    "The men here have been told this was going to be very much a casual walk across no man's land." Yikes :(. Sad how wrong that was.
    Wow. That was very powerful seeing how they didn't advance far. It's one thing to see it on a map or to read it in a book, but to see it via this video was powerful and sad.
    It's also sad how many couldn't be identified - and how many are buried in the cemetery.
    I'd like to visit the Sheffield Memorial Park.
    Powerful memorials. I agree, the map is helpful and great.
    I really like how the map labeled the different regiments.
    My heart sank when I heard that most of the Accrington Pals were killed.
    I need to see Chris' video.
    The shell hole that you shared is huge. It amazes me to see the footage each time of the damage to the ground. I know that there was a lot of bombardment, trench digging, and attacks overall, but it's incredible to see the shell holes and other damage to the ground a little over a century later.
    Great information about the cemetery shown at about the 16 minute mark. I wonder how long Cpl. A. Hart was in No Man's Land (I know, as you said, it must've been a while), This reminds me of a podcast I recently listened to that discussed the missing and how sometimes, when troops dug up trenches, they'd see bodies (especially since the front lines were fluid and how many were buried in the areas they fought in).
    The casualty figures for the Accrington Pals and Bradford Pals are staggering. I can't imagine the heartbreak for the surviving troops (both the wounded and uninjured troops) and the families of the troops.
    It was windy, but the sound turned out well. The audio is good.
    Thanks so much for the tips and recommendations. I want to visit each of the cemeteries and battlefields. Did you drive to the cemeteries and battlefields (or take a train there)?
    Sad how many were unidentified in the Ser cemeteries. Also heartbreaking how many families don't have closure.
    I will add your video about Horace Iles to my Watch Later playlist. I can't imagine the impacts on the communities the troops were from.
    Excellent documentary. It's one of your best ones. I appreciate the information that you share in your videos. They're great resources. Take care, Rob. Have a great week.

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому

      Thanks Alex. Glad you enjoyed this one. It's a really fascinating site to explore. I tend to drive around on my trips, it gives a lot more flexibility and the train system is very limited in a lot of these areas

  • @TheJuzi
    @TheJuzi 3 місяці тому

    when the stones are placed together like that it means it is a mass grave...

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  3 місяці тому

      Not always it doesn't. It will sometimes mean that men are known to be buried in that cemetery but exact location not know (Gordon Cemetery is a good example of this) but the war time cemeteries often have gravestones positioned differently

  • @WaterlooExpat
    @WaterlooExpat 4 місяці тому

    22:35 If a gravemarker can only state, "A soldier of the great war," does that suggest that even the allegiance of the deceased could be identified?

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +1

      Great question. In theory yes you're correct. An unknown soldier does mean completely unknown. That said for the grave to have been determined as a CWGC grave then it will be based on any possible information they have, where the casualty was found for example. Almost a 'best guess' situation.

    • @la_old_salt2241
      @la_old_salt2241 21 годину тому

      ​@historyinyourhand1787 Uniform remnants would be a strong clue also, particularly if the units metal insignia were intact.

  • @thenoworriesnomad
    @thenoworriesnomad 4 місяці тому

    As always Rob , do you know what the headstones are placed so close together?, iv only ever seen that normally in a WW2 cemetery for those maybe killed together in a tank or plane etc....

    • @historyinyourhand1787
      @historyinyourhand1787  4 місяці тому +1

      The distance that they're apart in these cemeteries is fairly normal for the western front. I'm sure limited space played a part in that. When you see them spaced out more or in an uneven layout that normally shows it was a wartime cemetery rather than one created after the war when the battlefields were cleared

    • @thenoworriesnomad
      @thenoworriesnomad 4 місяці тому

      @@historyinyourhand1787 ok thanks

  • @Gagra-Adler
    @Gagra-Adler 4 місяці тому +1

    👍👍👍🙏🖐

  • @Beijingbenj
    @Beijingbenj 4 місяці тому +1

    Even the politicians back then were as bad as they are today. Lies lies and more lies.