Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt | |||||||
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Part of the Battle of the Somme, First World War | |||||||
Trench Map showing Hawthorn ridge and crater at top left |
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Belligerents | |||||||
German Empire | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Douglas Haig | Erich von Falkenhayn | ||||||
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Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt was a German front-line fortification, west of the village of Beaumont Hamel on the Somme. The redoubt was built after the end of the Battle of Albert (25–29 September 1914), and as French and later British attacks on the Western Front became more formidable, the Germans added fortifications and trench positions near the original lines around Hawthorn Ridge.
At 7:20 a.m. on 1 July 1916, the British fired a huge mine beneath the Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt. Sprung ten minutes before zero hour, it was one of 19 Mines on the first day of the Somme and was filmed by Geoffrey Malins. The attack on the redoubt by part of the 29th Division of VIII Corps was a costly failure. The corps commander had ordered the mine to be sprung early, to protect the advancing infantry from falling debris but this also gave the Germans time to occupy the rear lip of the mine crater. When British parties crossed no man's land to occupy the crater, they met German machine-gun and rifle fire. A few British soldiers reached the crater but were forced out at noon by a German counter-attack. The success of the German defence of the Hawthorn Ridge Redoubt crater contributed to the failure of the British attack on the rest of the VIII Corps front.
The British reopened the tunnel beneath the Hawthorn Ridge crater three days later and reloaded the mine with explosives for the Battle of the Ancre (13–18 November). The new mine was fired on 13 November in support of an attack on Beaumont-Hamel by the 51st (Highland) Division of V corps. The Scottish infantry advanced from a trench 250 yd (230 m) from the German lines, half the width of no man's land on 1 July, supported by tanks, an accurate creeping barrage and machine-guns firing over the heads of the infantry. Beaumont-Hamel was captured and 2,000 German prisoners taken.