Reserve Army 23–26 September The preliminary bombardment began on 23 September in poor visibility and mist rose morning and evening for the next few days. II Corps fired artillery and artillery rounds. On the afternoon of 24 September a detachment of the Special Brigade fired (gas) shells into Thiepval, which silenced German trench mortars by A preliminary operation to capture Mouquet Farm began on the evening of 24 September, when a company from the 11th Division reached the farm, before a German bombardment and a bombing attack covered by accurate machine-gun fire, forced the British back. The creeping barrage began prompt at on 26 September and the infantry began their advance. On the right flank, the Canadian Corps attacked with the
6th Canadian Brigade of the
2nd Canadian Division on the right, as flank guard and the
1st Canadian Division on the left. At the 6th Canadian Brigade advanced behind a creeping barrage with three battalions and two attached tanks, though a German counter-barrage kept the right-hand battalion in its trenches. Both tanks were lost early but the
29th Canadian Battalion in the centre reached the German front line in ten minutes, while the left battalion was stopped by machine-gun fire from ahead and the left flank, except for a few troops on the right. At the objective was captured from Twenty Road, westwards to the east end of Miraumont Road and held against two counter-attacks during the night. The 1st Canadian Division attacked with two brigades. The right brigade with two battalions advanced to Sudbury Trench and resumed the advance at reaching Kenora Trench on the right which ran north-west back to Regina/Stuff Trench by The battalion on the left had been delayed; German bombers counter-attacked the flank and were repulsed. The left battalion had formed up in no man's land to escape the German counter-barrage but had a harder fight to reach their objectives, taking until mid-afternoon to reach the second objective, which was just short of the ridge crest, linking with the left brigade later. The left brigade advanced with two reinforced battalions, which received machine-gun fire from the left flank but reached Trench, taking the western part after a delay. At the advance resumed towards Hessian Trench, which was taken easily. Touch was gained with the right brigade but contact with the 11th Division on the left was not gained. The Canadians bombed down Trench and built a barricade, as machine-gun fire forced a slight withdrawal from the left part of Hessian Trench, a defensive flank being thrown back from Hessian to Trench and dug in by West of the Canadian Corps, II Corps attacked with the 11th and 18th (Eastern) divisions. The 11th Division advanced with two brigades. The 34th Brigade on the right attacked with two battalions; a bombing party attacking Mouquet Farm just before zero and then guarding the dugout exits. Both battalions got to the German support trench (first objective) although one of the supporting battalions was caught by the German counter-barrage at the British front-line. The right-hand battalion became bogged down fighting through Redoubt and most of the moppers-up were killed. About dug in on the right facing Trench, while others sheltered to the west of the redoubt. The left battalion was caught by machine-gun fire from Redoubt and Midway Line, which ran from Mouquet Farm to Redoubt, north of Thiepval. A few troops reached Trench and the remnants of the support battalion advanced to reinforce them. The battle for Mouquet Farm continued; two attached tanks ditched nearby and the machine-guns from one tank were removed and the crew carried on as infantry. Reinforcements were sent forward (including a pioneer battalion) and at the last surrendered, after being attacked with smoke bombs. The 33rd Brigade on the left attacked from Nab Valley with two battalions, reached Joseph Trench at and advanced to Trench between Mouquet Farm and the east end of Thiepval where they dug in. Trench was reached by and Hessian Trench by except for the on the right. Touch was gained on the left with the 18th (Eastern) Division at Trench and Midway Line was mopped up by a reserve battalion which also reinforced Hessian Trench, repelling a German counter-attack on the right. The 18th (Eastern) Division attacked with two battalions of the 53rd Brigade on the right from Nab Valley with a battalion following-on. The plan to avoid the German counter-barrage worked and the first objective, at Trench on the right and the Pozières–St Pierre Divion road on the left, was reached in Two tanks advanced in support but quickly ditched as the battalions advanced again, reaching Trench by against slight resistance. The advance was stopped by German machine-gun fire after another and the troops fell back to Trench at dark and then tried to bomb forward. The 54th Brigade attacked on a narrow front, with one battalion going through the village, a company advancing along the original German front line, with the other two battalions in support and reserve following on. The advanced troops moved forward before zero hour to avoid the German artillery and two tanks advanced from Caterpillar Copse. The advance through Thiepval went slowly, being held up by machine-gun fire from the château ruins, until a tank came up and suppressed the German machine-guns, before ditching a short time later. The infantry lost the barrage but fought on through the village until by all but the north-west corner was captured.
27–30 September After a German artillery bombardment on the 6th Brigade, 2nd Canadian Division all night and the morning of 27 September, patrols found that the Germans had withdrawn and the brigade advanced to the German practice trenches up Dyke Road, running north-east from Courcelette and occupied the rest of the first objective. The 1st Canadian Division was counter-attacked at Kenora Trench in the early hours and was forced back until an attack re-occupied the trench. Around a German bombing attack nearly retook the trench, until repulsed at the last moment; later the Canadians withdrew to the support trench and then made a counter-attack at which failed. In the II Corps area, the 11th Division found the Redoubt empty. Trench was occupied westwards to the junction with Midway Line and eastwards to link with the Canadians. An advance due at was stopped by machine-gun fire from Stuff Redoubt and Hessian Trench. The 32nd Brigade in reserve was ordered to continue the attack at The attack was postponed but one of the two battalions attacked and reached the south side of Stuff Redoubt. An hour later Hessian Trench to the west was captured and at a battalion began bombing forward from Redoubt to the north-west. The left brigade attacked eastwards during the morning, linked with the 34th Brigade and at the rest of Hessian Trench was occupied. The 53rd Brigade on the right of the 18th (Eastern) Division consolidated Trench, then took part of Trench behind a Stokes mortar barrage. Unit reliefs were completed quickly in the 54th Brigade on the left and the attack through Thiepval resumed at in company with a 146th Brigade battalion of the 49th (West Riding) Division, in the original British front line west of Thiepval. All of Thiepval had been captured by and touch gained with the 53rd Brigade, 146th Brigade being relieved by a 25th Division brigade overnight. On 28 September, a cavalry patrol moved forward on the right of the 6th Brigade, 2nd Canadian Division at dawn but was quickly stopped by machine-gun fire. The brigade dug in facing north-east beyond the German practice trenches and a battalion advanced north up Courcelette Trench, meeting much German machine-gun fire from Regina Trench. Two more attempts were made in the afternoon and another in the evening at which failed. During the night, the four Canadian brigades engaged were relieved by the 4th and 8th brigades. In II Corps the 32nd Brigade took over on the right of the 11th Division, ready to take Stuff Redoubt and Hessian Trench at but the attack was delayed. A bombing attack into the rest of Stuff Redoubt gained ground but this was later abandoned. The 18th (Eastern) Division was to attack Redoubt at , the right brigade along Trench to Midway Line, while an extra battalion attacked the redoubt and a battalion from the 54th Brigade attacked on the left, down to the original front line. Bulgar Trench was taken quickly but the Germans in Midway Line held out longer. By the east end of Redoubt was approached and touch was gained on the right with the 11th Division. Troops later reached the south-west corner of the redoubt and by the south side of the redoubt had been captured and linked with the troops in Midway Line to the right, as the left gained touch with mixed groups from the 54th Brigade. The west of the redoubt was taken by and patrols from the 49th (West Riding) Division occupied parts of the German front line, then met the troops on the left of the 54th Brigade. Grenade skirmishes occurred intermittently during the night and a battalion from the 55th Brigade took over the front of the 54th Brigade. On 29 September, the 8th Brigade from the
3rd Canadian Division attacked at noon with the 11th Division on the left and reached Hessian Trench in places, which were lost and then regained during German shelling and counter-attacks. In the II Corps area, the 11th Division attacked Stuff Redoubt and Hessian Trench to the right, most of which were captured and touch gained with the Canadians, while the attack on the redoubt failed. After battalion reliefs in the 18th (Eastern) Division, a bombing fight began around along the western edge of Redoubt, which lasted all day; the ground gained could not be held and the battalion later relieved troops in the captured German front system. On 30 September, the 11th Division resumed the attack on Stuff Redoubt at with bombing parties advancing west along Hessian Trench and along Trench, which by nightfall had taken the southern half of the redoubt. Canadian bombers assisted the capture of Hessian Trench and the division was relieved by the 25th Division overnight. A dawn counter-attack drove the 18th (Eastern) Division from the south and west sides of Redoubt; the south side was recaptured and the north side of the redoubt was taken at Another German attack at retook the north face, up to the entrance to Stuff Trench on the right.
Air operations 4 Squadron and
7 Squadron made a number of low reconnaissance flights to observe the condition of the German wire and trenches before the attack. GHQ
Wing and Corps squadron air observers on contact patrol, watched the infantry advance behind the creeping barrage and enter Thiepval with two tanks, which prompted some German soldiers to run away. At British troops were photographed in Hessian Trench and air observers were able to report the capture of Thiepval, save for the north-west corner. Artillery observers in aircraft and observation balloons reported German batteries in the first and identified the positions of . Ground observers were able to engage six German batteries, while air observation allowed another be bombarded. South of Miraumont a 4 Squadron air observer reported German troops on the road, who were scattered by British heavy artillery. The squadrons of
IV and V Brigades dropped a hundred and thirty-five 20-pound bombs on trenches, artillery and billets as III Brigade bombed Lagnicourt aerodrome despite poor visibility and attacked German kite balloons,
60 Squadron Nieuports shooting down two with
Le Prieur rockets and bombing grounded balloons with phosphorus bombs.
19 Squadron attacked a German divisional headquarters at Barastre with bombs. Two German aircraft were shot down and four damaged for the loss of one British aircraft over Bapaume but the faster German machines were able to avoid contact at will. Next day British offensive patrols met numerous German formations in the morning, before heavy rain interrupted flying. Six aircraft of
27 Squadron were attacked by five
Albatros D.I of () led by
Oswald Boelcke, which shot down three and damaged one of the
Martinsydes. Another British aircraft was lost on an early morning railway reconnaissance by
70 Squadron. On 28 September V Brigade aircraft reported the British advances at Redoubt and directed artillery fire on pits and blew up nine ammunition stores. Few German aircraft appeared but two were shot down and two damaged, one of the aircraft being shot down by a new
Spad S.VII, flown by a pilot of 60 Squadron. Poor weather grounded most aircraft on 29 September but next day was clear, photographs were obtained and low reconnaissance observed the state of German trenches and wire. With the capture of Stuff Redoubt and most of Redoubt, the denial of air observation to the Germans became more important and eleven aircraft raided Lagnicourt aerodrome again, escorted by 11 Squadron and 60 Squadron. Many German aircraft were able to take off and attack the British aircraft as they returned, three German aircraft being shot down and one damaged for a loss of one
F.E. 2b.
German 1st Army The 7th Division near Courcelette had all three regiments forward, with a battalion each in the front, support and reserve lines. The front trenches next to the Albert–Bapaume road were lost quickly, while Infantry Regiment 72 (IR 72) in the centre held its ground and the right-hand regiment was pushed back slowly, having managed to ambush the Canadians by occupying (Fabeck Trench) in no man's land, which the British artillery planners had ignored, thinking that it was derelict. The Germans were quickly outflanked and the fifty survivors surrendered at The Canadians pressed forward on both flanks and quickly overran (Zollern Trench). By IR 72 had both flanks in the air, when reinforcements from the support battalion made a defensive flank along the sunken part of the Courcelette–Miraumont road, south of (Stuff Trench) and the rest joined Reserve Infantry Regiment 393 on the left flank. At dusk the British artillery turned into a moonscape, while British aircraft machine-gunned the trench from . A Canadian attack was repulsed and a second attempt at midnight was stopped with the help of reinforcements. The Canadians had pressed forward on both flanks and got round either side of and the east end of , (Hessian Trench) which fell when the front and support battalions of IR 26 were annihilated. Few soldiers made it back to , to hold the of the trench that the regiment was responsible for but they managed to stop the Canadian advance all afternoon, except for the loss of of the trench near the Courcelette–Grandcourt road. After dark the 7th Division withdrew south to and east to cover Pys in the (Below Fortification). Infantry Regiment 93 of the 8th Division, held the defences from Redoubt and part of to the east edge of Thiepval, with supports in and . Infantry Regiment 165 continued the line west along (Mouquet Trench) to the Thiepval–Pozières road, with a company in Mouquet Farm and the support battalions in (Green Redoubt), (Midway Line) and and Infantry Regiment 153 (IR 153) held from the Pozières road to the east edge of Thiepval with the supports in and . The defence of IR 153 on the outskirts of Thiepval collapsed when three tanks appeared, proving to be immune to machine-gun fire and hand-grenades. All battalions of German troops in the area of (Big Trench) and (Swabian Trench), were overrun by British infantry, hardly any escaping. Dust and smoke from the artillery hung in the air during the afternoon and shrouded the British infantry advance to , where two reserve companies held them up. The German defence on either side was outflanked, on the left Mouquet Farm was surrounded (holding out until ). was captured, IR 165 to the left being forced back along (Green Fortification). The Germans in Redoubt held on, helped by an accurate counter-barrage falling beyond. A British artillery battery which tried to un-limber to the south-west, was knocked out with machine-gun fire. After another bombardment, the British resumed the attack at and were repulsed. Canadian troops advancing to the left began to threaten the left flank, as British troops got past on the right and then caused the survivors to withdraw to . During the night was made the first line and ground still occupied in front of it was to be held by advanced posts. By early morning the new divisional front line had been established between and , touch on the left being gained at the Grandcourt–Courcelette road with the right of the 7th Division and the right being extended to the . Infantry Regiment 180 (IR 180) of the 26th Reserve Division held Thiepval with part of Reserve Infantry Regiment 77; Redoubt and the old front line north-west to St Pierre Divion were held by Infantry Regiment 66. The support and reserve battalions were in , and . The digging of British assembly trenches was seen before the attack, alerting the defenders and the first two waves of British infantry were shot down. A tank appeared from Authuille Wood leading a third wave, which collected survivors of the first two and came close to the German position, just as IR 180 companies, on the south and west sides of the Thiepval defences, were attacked from behind by British bombers moving west. Some British troops reached (Bulgar Trench) behind Thiepval, where the support companies managed to stop the British moving further west. In the British had also reached and probed beyond . At a carrier pigeon arrived at the 26th Reserve Division headquarters, with a message that eighteen men were left in the I Battalion dug-out. The Thiepval garrison suffered about casualties and the survivors rallied astride the Thiepval–Grandcourt road, from and to the .
French operations Careful planning for the combined attack at Morval was necessary, due to the French Sixth Army advance diverging east and north-east. The new attack northwards, to keep touch with the British, needed reinforcements of troops and artillery, which were taken from the Tenth Army further south. Artillery and aircraft were brought from Verdun and XXXII Corps took over on the right of I Corps. The Sixth Army was to advance close to the line Moislains–Le Transloy. Foch intervened on 25 September, to ensure that I Corps and XXXII Corps attacked north to Sailly-Saillisel, with V Corps as right flank guard. The big attacks on the afternoons of September took little ground in the face of very heavy German artillery fire. Fayolle concluded that an extensive artillery preparation would be needed before resuming the attack. ==Aftermath==