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More than eighty years after the end of the First World War
only a handful of survivors remain, yet there is more interest now than at any previous time since the Armistice.
What
is the reason for this? Why do so many people without any specific link to this event in history still experience such
deep emotions when they visit the battlefields and memorials to those who died?
There may be no definitive answers to these questions, but
it would seem likely that what happened on the fields of Belgium and France so many years ago has touched something deeper
than just a desire to learn about battles and military strategies of past ages.
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We will remember them
Like many others, the aim of this website is to promote interest
in The Great War, not for any sense of glory or nationalism, but to remember the sacrifice of so many brave men who fought
and died - many in horrific situations and circumstances - and to hand on to the next generation the accounts of battles and
individual bravery, so that those who died will never be forgotten.
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The British Army during the Great War
On 1st August 1914 the Army numbered almost one million men although
the greater proportion were only partially trained, and many were over-age or unfit.
The Army comprised the following units:
All Ranks
Regular Army
247,432
Army Reserve
145,347
Special Reserve
63,933
Territorial Force
268,777
Territorial Force Reserve 2,082
Militia and Volunteers
5,943
National Reserve 215,451
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948,965
________________
In 1914 the British Expeditionary Force consisted of one Cavalry Division and six Infantry Divisions
(approximately 120,000 men). By the end of the year 1¼ million men had voluntarily
enlisted.
At the end of the war, November 1918, total recruits into the British Army were:
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GREAT BRITAIN |
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TOTALS |
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England |
4,006,158 |
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Wales |
272,924 |
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Scotland |
557,618 |
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Ireland |
134,202 |
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4,970,902
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EMPIRE & DOMINIONS |
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Canada |
458,218 |
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Australia |
331,814 |
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New Zealand |
112,223 |
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South Africa |
76,184 |
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Newfoundland |
6,173 |
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West Indies |
15,601 |
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1,000213
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TOTAL FOR GREAT BRITAIN +
EMPIRE & DOMINIONS |
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5,971,11 |
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These figures do not include Indian Army contingents.
By 1917 the British Expeditionary Force comprised 5 Armies under the command of Field Marshal
Sir Douglas Haig.
1st
Army commanded by Lt. General Sir Henry Horne
2nd
Army commanded by General Sir Herbert Plumer
3rd
Army commanded by General Sir Edmund Allenby
(After April 1917 – General the Hon. Julian Byng)
4th
Army commanded by General Sir Henry Rawlinson
5th
Army commanded by General Sir Hubert Gough
(After April 1918 General Sir William Birdwood)
An Army was the largest unit under the command of a General and each Army comprised the following
sub-divisions:
CORPS - Each
Army had 4 infantry corps, each of 3 divisions.
DIVISION -
The ration strength was about 18000 men commanded by a Major General. Each
division had 3 brigades, each of 4 battalions (12000 men) added to which was 4000 artillerymen and 2000 signallers, sappers, Royal
Army Medical Corps (RAMC), doctors and orderlies, wagon drivers and transport staff, farriers, clerks and storemen. Cavalry divisions were smaller and comprised about 9000 men including transport and Royal Horse Artillery
elements.
BATTALION -
This contained 1000 men and 36 officers, and was commanded by a Lt. Colonel.
This number included administrators, cooks, transport etc. The attack
strength of a battalion was about 800.
COMPANY - 240 men and 5 officers commanded by a
Captain.
PLATOON -
50 men commanded by a Lieutenant.
SECTION -
18 men commanded by a Lance Corporal.
Casualties Reliable casualty figures are notoriously
hard to find. JFC Fuller, in his book ‘The Army in my Life’ written
in 1933, suggests total British casualties on the Western Front reported up to March 1920 were 128,205 officers and 2,632,592
other ranks. It seems there were five casualties for every nine men sent out,
and about one third of casualties were men killed.
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Shipping and Supply
The Royal Navy managed an effective blockade of German ports permitting safe passage of men and
supplies across the English Channel. The following totals of men and horses
were carried safely to France from August 1914 to November 1918:
757,206 Officers
9,986,504 Other ranks
41,416 Nurses
804,231 Horses
By November 1918 on the Western Front there were, in total 2,260,054 men and women and 404,176
animals.
At the war’s end the following dead weight (imperial) tonnage of stores shipped to France
was:
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Oats & hay |
5,438,602 |
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Ammunition |
5,253,338 |
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Royal Engineer Stores |
3,962,497 |
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Coal |
3,922,391 |
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Food |
3,240,948 |
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Ordnance Stores |
1,761,777 |
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Petrol |
758,614 |
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Miscellaneous |
539,398 |
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Canteen Stores |
269,317 |
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Mechanical Transport Stores |
158,482 |
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Royal Air Force Stores |
123,570 |
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Tanks & Stores |
68,167 |
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Total
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25,497,351 |
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Financial Cost
By the last few months of the War, the financial cost each day was about £7.5m. Yearly, the costs have been estimated as follows:
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YEAR |
COST
(in £000,000) |
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1914 – 1915 |
362 |
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1915 – 1916 |
1,420 |
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1916 – 1917 |
2.010 |
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1917 – 1918 |
2,450 |
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1918 – 1919 |
2,500 |
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Total
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8,742 |
All facts and figures have been
culled from various Internet sites and, due to the vagaries of such figures, may not be truly consistent.
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The Battle of Cambrai
The Battle of the Somme
The Battle for Ypres
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