Mobilisation On the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, the Welsh Division's units mobilised at their headquarters and had concentrated at their war stations by 11 August. On that date TF units were invited to volunteer for Overseas Service and on 15 August the
War Office issued instructions to separate those men who had signed up for Home Service only, and form these into reserve units. On 31 August, the formation of a reserve or 2nd Line unit was authorised for each 1st Line unit where 60 per cent or more of the men had volunteered for Overseas Service. The titles of these 2nd Line units would be the same as the original, but distinguished by a '2/' prefix. In this way duplicate battalions, brigades and divisions were created, mirroring those TF formations being sent overseas. Later 3rd Line units were formed to train drafts for the 1st and 2nd Line.
1/6th Cheshires The 6th Cheshires was one of the first TF battalions to volunteer for overseas service. Its 1st Line left the Welsh Division at
Northampton and joined the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF) in France on 10 November 1914 to act as GHQ Troops, doing various duties in the rear areas. On 11 December it was attached to
15th Brigade in
5th Division. All the Regular divisions on the
Western Front were desperately weak following earlier fighting and required any help they could get simply to hold the line during the winter months. On 1 March 1915 the battalion returned to its role as GHQ Troops, and for the rest of the year carried out guard and other duties at
Rouen,
Abbeville, and
Dieppe. In early 1916 the War Office was preparing to send out to France the last of the new
Kitchener's Army divisions, including the
39th Division formed from so-called '
Pals battalions' raised by local initiatives. However, 39th Division's
118th Brigade was deemed unready for overseas service, so the brigade staff crossed to France and on 29 February at
Renescure took command of five varied TF battalions already serving with the BEF, including 1/6th Cheshires. The rest of the division followed from England and it concentrated at
Blaringhem on 17 March. 1/6th Cheshires were not involved in the division's first offensive action, at the
Battle of the Boar's Head on 30 June when the
South Downs battalions of
116th Bde suffered appalling casualties in a diversionary attack before the
Somme Offensive began next day. .
Somme 39th Division moved to the Somme sector in late August, and on 3 September it attacked along the
River Ancre at
Beaumont-Hamel, but again most of 118th Bde was not directly involved. For the next three weeks the division held a long section of the front line, carrying out active
Trench warfare without attacking. It cooperated with the divisions that successfully attacked
Thiepval on 26 September and the Schwaben Redoubt on 28 September during the
Battle of Thiepval Ridge. On 14 October, as part of the
Battle of the Ancre Heights, the 39th Division made its own set-piece attack to complete the
Capture of Schwaben Redoubt. The attack went in at 14.45, with two battalions of 118th Bde advancing over open ground towards the redoubt while 1/6th Cheshires extended the line on the left. By 23.00 the enemy had been thrown out of the last of the position and over 150 prisoners taken. Next day the Germans made three serious counter-attacks, two using
Flamethrowers, but these were repulsed. On 21 October the division also completed the capture of the troublesome 'Stuff Trench'. . 39th Division had been understrength even when it moved to the Somme; by 10 November half of the officers and two-thirds of the other ranks in the average battalion in the division were reinforcements who had joined since 3 September. However, it took part in the last phase of the Somme Offensive, the
Battle of the Ancre, on 13 November. Its purpose was to clear the Germans from the slope above the Ancre. 118th Brigade formed up in the dark and morning fog, clear of the Schwaben Reboubt behind jumping-off tapes laid by the
Royal Engineers. But once the advance began the battalions found it difficult to keep up with the
Creeping barrage through the litter of shattered trenches and lost direction in the fog. The
adjutant of the 1/6th Cheshires had to go forward from battalion HQ to reorganise the battalion, and although it reached its objective, the Strasbourg Line, confused fighting went on against German machine gunners and snipers in the line. But 118th Brigade's attack had forced so many Germans out of their positions down into the Ancre Valley below St Pierre Divion that by 09.00 the neighbouring
117th Bde had more prisoners to deal with than it had men attacking. 1/6th Cheshires worked their way down Mill Trench to St Pierre Divion, which the battalion then put into a state of defence against the inevitable German counter-attacks. With assistance from the Royal Engineers and divisional
pioneers the battalion established strongpoints in the river valley, with outposts at the mill and at
Beaucourt Station. Although the German artillery barrage was heavy, the counter-attacks were feeble and the captured ground was successfully held. Shortly afterwards the onset of winter weather brought an end to the fighting on the Somme.
Ypres In mid-November 1916 39th Division was relieved and marched north to the
Ypres Salient, where after rest it took its turns in the front line, with its continuous trench warfare and raiding. This increased in intensity in April and May 1917 as preparations were made for a new attack (the
Third Ypres Offensive). The first phase of the offensive (the
Battle of Pilckem Ridge) was launched at 03.50 on 31 July, with 118th Bde acting as divisional reserve. 39th Division took its first two objectives successfully, then 118th Bde went through at 10.10. Immediately after crossing the
Zonnebeke–
Langemarck road 1/6th Cheshires came under heavy machine gun fire from their right rear, where a neighbouring brigade had been delayed. Despite heavy losses, the battalion pressed on to the German Third Line west of
Aviatik Farm on the Gravenstafel Ridge where a large number of Germans behind a mass of uncut
barbed wire were holding up their hands in surrender. However, a major German counter-attack soon came in and the rest of 118th Bde could not hold their positions, leaving the left of 1/6th Cheshires exposed. Many of the surrendered Germans took the opportunity to pick up their weapons again, but the German
artillery barrage fell on friend and foe alike. Losing heavily, the Cheshires gradually withdrew from the Third Line through drenching rain. At 22.00 that night 118th Bde was ordered back through the rest of the division to regroup in the original British starting line; its battalions had lost roughly 70 per cent of their attacking strength. The troops had to hold their positions as the rain turned the battlefield into a swamp. 39th Division was finally relieved on 6 August. '' by
Paul Nash depicts the devastated battlefield round the Tower Hamlets
pillboxes on the Bassevillebeek Spur. The division was back for the
Battle of the Menin Road Ridge on 20 September when 117th Bde attacked, and the
Battle of Polygon Wood on 26 September. This time the division had sidestepped northwards to make an attempt on the troublesome Tower Hamlets Ridge, but 118th Bde got stuck in the Bassevillebeek valley, where men had to pull each other out of the deep mud. The brigade lost its creeping barrage and was stopped short of its objective by machine guns and counter-attacks. 39th Division was pulled out for rest in mid-October.
Spring Offensive 39th Division was in reserve when the
German spring offensive broke on 21 March 1918. The forward positions of
16th (Irish) Division were quickly overrun in the morning mist and the division forced to retreat. 39th Division came up in support and next day the two divisions held off no fewer than five mass attacks. On 23 March the mist helped the 16th and 39th Divisions slip away, as the 'Great Retreat' gathered pace. The divisions contested the crossings of the
River Somme, 24–25 March, and fought in the
Battle of Rosières on 26–27 March. As 118th Brigade retreated from the Rosières pocket south-east of
Villers-Bretonneux the brigade commander was captured while supervising the rearguards. But the German offensive on this front had run out of impetus, and the retreat ended on 28 March. On 29 March the division took up position along the
River Avre, where they held off the last enemy attacks. 39th Division's infantry were relieved on 30 March and transferred to the quiet Ypres sector. By now 39th Division was so weak that on 10 April it was temporarily reduced to a single composite brigade in which 118th Bde formed No 4 Battalion and part of No 5 Battalion. When the Germans launched the next phase of their Spring Offensive against the Ypres front the composite brigade took part in the
fighting on the Wytschaete Ridge on 16 April, the
First and
Second Battles of Kemmel Ridge on 17–19 and 25–26 April, and finally the
Battle of the Scherpenberg on 29 April. 6th Cheshires joined 25th Division while it was engaged in the
Third Battle of the Aisne under French Command. The division had fought through most of the Spring Offensive so far, and had been sent to hold the previously quiet
Chemin des Dames ridge for a rest. Unfortunately, this was the sector chosen by the Germans for the next phase of their offensive, which opened with a massive artillery bombardment on 27 May. 25th Division had been sent forward from Army reserve and had been immediately outflanked and forced back; when 6th Cheshires officially joined next day, the British line had already gone back , and the retreat continued. The German thrust finally ran out near
Reims after the French had been reinforced by US troops. On 17 June the 11th (Service) Battalion, Cheshire Regiment, in 75th Bde was reduced to a training cadre and 6th Cheshires absorbed 16 officers and 492 other ranks from it. Thus reinforced, the 6th Cheshires formed No 3 Battalion in 25th Division Composite Brigade, which on 22 June was sent to reinforce
50th (Northumbrian) Division while the training cadres of 25th Division returned to England. Next day 6th Cheshires joined
21st Bde in
30th Division, which was being reconstituted after its own losses in the Spring Offensive. This ended the battalion's wanderings: it would serve in 21st Bde until the end of the war.
Hundred Days Offensive The Allied
Hundred Days Offensive began in August 1918. The rebuilt 30th Division took part in the capture of
Wulverghem 2 September. All the Allied armies carried out a coordinated series of offensives at the end of September. 30th Division's role in
Second Army's attack in the Ypres sector on 28 September (the
Fifth Battle of Ypres) was to watch out for the enemy to weaken on its front and follow up any opportunities. However, it was dark before it could effectively exploit the German retirement. The advance continued next day in some confusion to
Warneton and the
Comines Canal, 21st Bde moving up in reserve. Second Army launched the
Battle of Courtrai on 14 October. 30th Division advanced towards
Bousbecque and 21st Bde had seized its objectives by 07.30 and sent patrols into
Wervicq. Next day Second Army began crossing the
River Lys and in the afternoon two companies of 6th Cheshires forced a passage over the river south of Wervicq. By 20.30 they were just short of the crest of the hills beyond. 21st Brigade was relieved on 16 October. The advance continued, and by 20 October 30th Division was advancing on a broad front with 21st Bde back in the line. The brigade ran into resistance on the
Ruddervoorde Spur, and though it pushed in the outposts there was a strongly-wired position behind on the St Genois Spur (part of the Courtrai Switch trench line). The ground between the spurs was swept by German artillery fire and 21st Bde was halted, which stopped the whole divisional advance. However, 21st Bde gained some ground by making a charge after dark. Next day 30th Division was ordered to clear the enemy from the west bank of the
River Scheldt, and 21st Bde reached the top of the St Genois Spur by 11.00. After halting along the railway line, the brigade then pushed on to its objective along the Helchin–Bossuyt road parallel with and close to the Scheldt.. However, without artillery it was unable to take Bossuyt with its outlying chateau and park. , 9 November 1918. The Germans resisted all attempts to cross the Scheldt until 8 November when they began to withdraw; patrols went across during the night and the advance guards made rapid progress on 9 November. 30th Division continued to advance until it confronted the German rearguards at
Flobecq on 10 November. Next day the Allied cavalry passed through its lines in pursuit and hostilities ended when the
Armistice with Germany came into force at 11.00. After the Armistice 30th Division was moved back into France where it was detailed for duty at the base ports. From the beginning of 1919 it was working at
Dunkirk,
Calais,
Boulogne and
Étaples.
Demobilisation gathered pace and units began to return to the UK in May. The division ceased to exist on 1 September 1919 and 6th Cheshires was disembodied on 15 November 1919 Not all the TF county regiments were equally successful in raising recruits: in November the strength of a 2nd Line battalion was reduced to 660 (any surplus being transferred to the draft-finding 3rd Line), but on 22 November 1915 the 2/6th Cheshires absorbed the less successful 2/5th Bn
Welsh Regiment. The division was assigned to
First Army (Home Forces) of
Central Force in November 1915 and then by September 1916 to General Reserve, Home Forces. At this time 204th Bde was quartered round
Old Warden in
Bedfordshire and
Lowestoft in
Suffolk. Next year the division moved to
Northern Army (Home Forces) with 204th Bde scattered around Suffolk. It was now obvious that 68th (2nd W) Division was never going to be ready for overseas service, and the 2nd Line TF infantry battalions began to be replaced by training units. The 2/6th Cheshires disbanded on 11 September 1917 at
Southwold.
3/6th Cheshires The 3/6th Battalion Cheshire Regiment was formed at Stockport on 11 March 1915 and moved to
Oswestry. It became the 6th Reserve Bn, Cheshire Regiment, on 8 April 1916 and was absorbed into the 4th Reserve Bn on 1 September 1916. ==Postwar==