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General Head Quarters,
British Armies in France,
21st March, 1919
Sir,
I have the honour to submit the following final Despatch in which
is described the advance of the British Forces into Germany and
the occupation of the bridgehead East of the Rhine at Cologne. I
include in this Despatch a brief review of the chief features of
military interest which stand out among the operations of the British
Armies on the Western front during the time I have been in command
of them. I take this last opportunity also to refer by name to some
few of the many able and gallant officers who have assisted me in
my task, and to thank them personally.
PART
I.
THE ADVANCE INTO GERMANY.
(11th Nov., 1918—31st Dec., 1918.)
Arrangements for the Advance.
At
11.00 on the 11th November, 1918, at which hour and date the armistice
granted to Germany by the Allies took effect, the British front
extended over a distance of about 60 miles from the neighbourhood
of Montbliart, East of Avesnes, to just North of Grammont. This
front from South to North was held by troops of the Fourth, Third,
First, Fifth and Second British Armies, all of whom were in hot
pursuit of the enemy at the moment when the armistice came into
operation.
The
provisions of the armistice had settled in general terms the course
to be followed subsequently by the belligerent groups of Armies.
To co-ordinate the action of the Allied Armies, instructions of
a more detailed character were issued by Marshal Foch to all concerned,
and these formed the basis of the orders given by me during the
period covered by this Despatch.
Troops
were at once directed not to advance East of the line reached by
them at the time when hostilities ceased, and certain parties of
Germans taken prisoner after that hour were returned to the enemy.
Outposts were established along this line both for the sake of military
security and in order to prevent all possibility of fraternisation.
Behind these outposts the remainder of our forces were grouped and
concentrated. It was arranged that the forward movement of the different
Allied Armies should be carried out by certain definite stages,
through separate zones of action. The zone allotted to the British
Armies extended from the front then held by us in an easterly direction
as far as the German frontier, whence it continued in a North-easterly
direction to the Cologne Bridgehead. The boundaries of this zone
and the stages of the advance are shown on the attached map.*
In order to permit the enemy to withdraw 'his troops from the area
immediately in front of us, our positions were maintained unchanged
until the morning of the 17th November. Thereafter, to avoid all
possibility of collision between the opposing forces, the movement
of
troops towards the frontier was regulated so as to preserve a safety
zone of 10 kilometres in depth between our advanced detachments
and the enemy's rearguards. The general advance into Germany was
directed to begin on the 1st December. On the 12th December, French,
American and British forces would cross the Rhine at Mayence [Mainz],
Coblentz [Koblenz] and Cologne [Koeln], and commence the occupation
of bridgeheads having a radius of 30 kilometres from the crossings
at those towns. By that date, the enemy was bound by the terms of
the armistice to have withdrawn his military forces a distance of
10 kilometres from the right bank of the Rhine and from the perimeter
of the Rhine bridgeheads.
Re-adjustment of the British Forces.
As
we progressed eastwards, the front held by the British Armies, already
short, would automatically be decreased. On the other hand, the
maintenance of supply across and beyond the battle areas presented
difficulties which would grow rapidly as our communications
lengthened. These two considerations made it both feasible and necessary
to effect a redistribution of troops, so that the extent of
the forces advancing into Germany should be no more than was absolutely
necessary to meet military requirements.
I decided that the opening stages of our advance should be carried
out by the Second and Fourth Armies, under command of the two
senior Army Commanders General
Plumer and General
Rawlinson, and that each Army should consist of four Corps each
of four divisions. To ensure rapidity of movement and to facilitate
supply, the artillery and auxiliary arms and services accompanying
these Armies were cut down to a minimum, and all surplus units then
attached to them were transferred to the First, Third and Fifth
Armies. Arrangements were made for reorganising these last mentioned
Armies and for withdrawing them to areas farther West.
The Advance to the German Frontier.
At
05.00 on the morning of the 17th November the 2nd
Cavalry Division covering the front of the Fourth Army, and
the 1st and
3rd Cavalry Divisions
covering the front of the Second Army crossed the line reached on
the 11th November and commenced the march to the German Frontier.
The leading infantry divisions moved forward on the following day.
The advance was carried out under active service conditions, cavalry
leading and all military precautions being taken. Among all .arms,
the general bearing, smartness and march discipline of the troops
were of a high order, reflecting credit on the Army and the nation.
All traces of the desperate fighting and forced
marches of the previous months had been removed, and men, horses,
guns and vehicles appeared as though turned out for parade. Throughout
the advance, despite long distances covered under difficult conditions,
indifferent billets and the absence of tlhe usual opportunities
for bathing or renewing clothes, the same general standard of excellence
was maintained in a remarkable degree.
The first troops to complete the portion of our advance which lay
through Belgium were patrols of the 2nd Cavalry Division, who arrived
on the German frontier in the neighbourhood of Beho on the night
of the 28/29th November. Next day the frontier was reached by the
1st Cavalry Division along the whole front of our advance. The infantry,
who had been marching steadily in rear of the cavalry, closed up
behind them in readiness for the advance into Germany. During this
part of our march the various stages above referred to were strictly
observed, except that in front of our general advance detachments
of cavalry had been sent forward to keep order in Charleroi and
Namur in response to requests received from the local authorities.
Everywhere our troops were received with the utmost enthusiasm by
the population of the liberated districts. In every town and village
streets were festooned with flags and spanned by triumphal arches
bearing messages of welcome. Men, women and children thronged to
meet our troops and exchange greetings in French and English. Nor
was their gratitude confined to demonstrations such as these. Wherever
our men were billeted during their advance everything possible was
done for their comfort. In many cases refreshment was pressed upon
them without payment and on all sides despite the shortage of food
from which the occupied districts of Belgium had long suffered;
the generosity of the civil population found means to supplement
the rations of our troops.
During this period large numbers of released prisoners of war, French
and British, came through our lines and were passed back to collecting
stations. The enemy seems to have liberated the majority of the
Allied prisoners west of the Rhine without making any provision
for their feeding and conveyance. The result was that much unnecessary
suffering was caused to these unfortunate individuals, while a not
inconsiderable additional burden was placed upon our own transport
and supplies.
Supply Difficulties.
Throughout
the whole of the advance, and especially in the stage which followed
the crossing of the German frontier, very great, but unavoidable,
difficulties were encountered in connection with supply. At the
time of the armistice railheads were on the general line Le Cateau,
Valenciennes, Lille, Courtrai, and for many miles in front of them
bridges had been broken and track torn up or destroyed by mines.
Even after the cessation of hostilities delay action mines, which
the enemy had laid in the course of his retreat without preserving
exact record of their location, went up from time to time, causing
serious interruption to traffic. The clearing of these mines was
a work of considerable risk, and the fact that comparatively so
few mines exploded after trains had begun to run is entirely due
to the great courage and skill with which officers, non-commissioned
officers and men of the Tunnelling
Companies performed the difficult and dangerous task of detecting
them and rendering them harmless. The work of reconstruction, therefore,
was most arduous, continuing day and night. The speed with which
it was completed reflects great credit upon all ranks of the British
Railway Companies and the Canadian Railway Troops Corps, as well
as on the Railway Construction Engineers who controlled their work.
Credit is due also to the personnel of the Railway
Operating Division, who were called upon to keep traffic open
with scarcely any of the ordinary traffic facilities.
Though roads had been pushed farther ahead, the same general conditions
applied to them, while the extraordinary amount of traffic which
it was necessary to direct along them made maintenance very difficult.
Up to the night of the 25/26th November, on which date the railway
was carried across the gap between Valenciennes and Mons, the Corps
of the Second Army were still based on the railheads
west of the River Scheldt, and supplies had to be brought forward
by double and treble echelons of lorries. At the close of this period
divisions were being fed by means of narrow one-way roads at distances
of from 80 to 100 miles from their railheads. This imposed a
great strain on the personnel of the Motor Transport Units and Mobile
Repair Shops, who were compelled to work long hours under
very trying and, anxious conditions. I am glad to express my deep
appreciation of the devoted service rendered by all ranks.
Until roads and railways could be got through to tihe areas which
the enemy had not damaged the progress of our troops was necessarily
limited by our ability to supply them. Only by the greatest effort
on the part of the departments concerned with reconstruction and
supply, and at the expense of considerable hardship to the leading
troops of the Fourth and Second Armies, and in particular the cavalry,
could the programme of our advance be maintained. Troops were denied
frequently and for long periods comforts which they had been accustomed
to obtain even under battle conditions. Nothing beyond bare necessities
could be got forward to them. Even these were at times short in
some units, and on more than one occasion the only available supplies
of food were the current day's issues carried on the man.
Many other causes conspired to render the problem of supply one
of serious difficulty throughout our advance. At the date of the
armistice the amount of available rolling stock had been no more
than sufficient to meet the requirements of our Armies. The advance
to
the Rhine added over 200 miles to the distances to be covered, and
greatly reduced the amount of rolling stock available by largely
increasing the time required for each train to complete its journey.
The necessity for supplying the civil population of the territories
through which the Allied Armies were advancing and the resumption
of French civilian traffic put an additional strain upon our pooled
resources. This strain was not met by rolling stock taken over from
the enemy, which came in very slowly, and was much of it unfit for
immediate service. In this connection it is not out of place to
refer to the work done by the British Army in providing food and
medical attendance for the civil population of the liberated districts
through which we passed, a population which in France alone amounted
to nearly 800,000 persons. This duty, though very willingly accepted
by us, none the less made no small demands upon both rail and road
transport. In France it entailed the supply and distribution of
more than 5,000,000 rations during a period exceeding six weeks,
until the French were able to complete their arrangements for relieving
us of the task. The service we were able to render in the name of
humanity has been most generously acknowledged by the French Authorities.
The fulfilment of our programme under such conditions would have
been impossible without the exercise of great patience and wholehearted
co-operation on the part of the troops. Nor was it less dependent
upon the untiring energy and efficiency displayed by commanders
and staffs in the methodical arrangement of the details of our advance
and the concentration of our resources. I desire to place on record
my appreciation of the careful forethought of the Staff and of the
excellent conduct of all ranks under very trying conditions. It
will readily be understood from the foregoing that had our advance
been conducted against active opposition, even from a beaten and
demoralised enemy, our progress must have been greatly delayed.
The difficulties of supply would have been enormously increased
in many ways, among which would have been the necessity of bringing
forward large quantities of ammunition. Bridges, railways and roads
would have been destroyed in front of us or blown up after we had
passed, by delay action mines. Immense loss would have been caused
to property of all descriptions and incalculable suffering inflicted
upon the inhabitants of the invaded districts of Belgium, France
and Luxembourg.
Further Re-adjustment of Troops.
Towards
the close of the advance to the German frontier, a further re-adjustment
was effected in the disposition of my troops. The sector allotted
to the British Forces in the general scheme for the occupation of
the Rhine Provinces was too narrow to admit of the employment of
more than a single Army Command. I therefore directed that the German
territory to be occupied by us should be held by General Plumer's
Second Army, which for this purpose should be composed as follows:—
The II Corps (9th,
29th and New Zealand Divisions);
the VI Corps (Guards,
2nd and
3rd Divisions);
the IX Corps (1st, 6th
and 62nd Divisions);
the Canadian Corps (1st and 2nd
Canadian Divisions), and the 1st Cavalry Division.
The various changes and transfers necessary to give effect to this
arrangement involved the taking over by the Second Army of the whole
of the British front of advance, and the gradual withdrawal of the
troops of the Fourth Army to the area west of the frontier and about
Namur.
The Advance into Germany.
On
the morning of the 1st December, a date for ever memorable as witnessing
the consummation of the hopes and efforts of 4 years of heroic fighting,
the 1st Cavalry Division crossed the frontier between Belgium and
Germany. On the same day the 2nd and 1st Canadian Divisions of the
Canadian Corps and the 29th and 9th Divisions of the II Corps resumed
their march towards the frontier. On this date, however, the supply
situation became critical, trains due on the 30th November failing
to arrive until the night of the 1st/2nd December. In consequence
for two days the Army remained practically stationary, and it was
not until the 4th December that progress was resumed. In this stage
of our march the line of our advance traversed the northern portion
of the Ardennes, and, particularly on the right in the Canadian
Corps area, the country through which our troops were passing was
of a most difficult character. Practicable roads were few, villages
were far apart, and facilities for billeting very limited. Our way
lay across a country of great hills rising to over 2,000 feet, covered
by wide stretches of forest, and cut by deep and narrow valleys,
along the steep sides of which the roads wound in countless sudden
curves. Marches were long, while the surface of the roads which
had already borne the traffic of the retreating German Armies suffered
anew under the passage of our columns. Even under conditions approximating
to those of peace, severe demands were made upon the spirit and
endurance of the troops.
British Troops in Cologne.
On
the 6th December, in response to a request previously made by the
German authorities, and in order that the town might not be left
without troops after the withdrawal of the enemy's military forces,
the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Cavalry Division was sent forward,
to Cologne. A detachment of armoured cars of the 17th (A.C.) Battalion,
Tank Corps, escorted
the General Officer Commanding 1st Cavalry Division into Cologne,
and thereafter picketed the bridges, being the first British troops
to cross the Rhine. A great concourse of people thronged the streets
of the city to watch the arrival of our troops. Next day, the 28th
Infantry Brigade of the 9th Division arrived at Cologne by rail,
and on the 8th December the 1st Cavalry Division reached the Rhine
on the whole British front, securing the crossings of the river.
While during the following days our infantry continued their movement,
on the 11th December the Military Governor, Lieut.-General Sir Charles
Fergusson, arrived by train at Cologne. Accompanied by an escort
of the 9th Lancers, he proceeded through crowded streets to the
Hotel Monopol, where he took up the duties of his office. As the
Military Governor reached the entrance to the hotel, the Union Jack
was hoisted above the building and floated out for the first time
over the roof-tops of the city.
The Occupation of the Cologne Bridgehead.
On
the 12th December, the day fixed for that event, by the general
scheme of advance, the 1st Cavalry Division crossed the Rhine and
commenced the occupation of the Cologne Bridgehead, the perimeter
of which they reached on the following day. On the 13thDecember
the 2nd and 1st Canadian Divisions and the 29th and 9th Divisions
of the Canadian and II Corps passed across the Rhine at Cologne
and Bonn respectively in four columns, each of the strength of a
division. During the following three days they pushed forward to
the bridgehead perimeter, gradually relieving the cavalry, and by
the evening of the 16th December had completed the occupation of
the bridgehead.
Before
Christmas Day the troops of the Second Army had reached their final
areas in the occupied territories of Germany. The military organisation
of the bridgehead, so as to secure the crossing of the Rhine and
render possible the rapid deployment of troops for action east of
it, had been commenced, and was proceeded with steadily during the
remainder of the year. In the course of this work, on the 28th December
the perimeter of the bridgehead was slightly amended, so as to accord
with the boundaries of the German Communal Districts and thus simplify
the work of administration.
Conduct
of the Troops.
In
concluding this part of my Despatch, I desire to acknowledge with
gratitude and pride the exemplary conduct of the troops, both throughout
the different stages of their arduous advance and since its successful
completion. Among all services and in all Armies, both those which
took part in the advance and those which remained behind, the period
following the armistice has indeed been one of no little difficulty.
For those that went forward, the real hardships of the long marches,
poor billets, and indifferent food constituted a strange contrast
to ideas which had been formed of victory. For all, the sudden relaxation
of the enduring tension of battle, and the natural desire of the
great majority for an early return to civil life, could not but
lead at times to a certain impatience with delays, and with the
continuance, under conditions of apparent peace, of restrictions
and routine duties gladly borne while the future of their country
was at stake. Despite these disturbing factors, and the novelty
of finding themselves masters in a conquered country, instances
of misbehaviour have been remarkably few, and chiefly of a minor
character. The inborn courtesy and good temper of the British soldier
have guided them in their attitude towards the inhabitants of the
Occupied districts. The spreading of a better understanding of the
causes of the. temporary shortage of supplies, of the difficulties
of demobilisation and of the continued necessity for keeping a strong
Army in the field, has generally dispelled any incipient feelings
of discontent. The discipline, self-respect and strong sense of
responsibility which carried our men through to victory, have in
general been fully maintained amid changed conditions and new surroundings.
Continue
to Part 2 of Haig's final Despatch, a retrospective overview of
the war.
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