Hamel : Somme
Hamel : Somme
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Author(s): Pedersen, Peter
Pederson, Peter
ISBN No.: 9780850529388
Pages: 176
Year: 200303
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

On 4 July 1918, the Australian Corps captured the village of Hamel and the ridge overlooking it, which had blocked any advance eastward on the south bank of the Somme. It was not a big battle: the equivalent of one Australian division and one battalion of newly arrived Americans were the only infantry involved. It was not a long battle: the ridge fell in ninety-three minutes. Nor is the battle particularly well known - Hamel is not a name that stands comfortably alongside the Somme or Passchendaele. Yet it was more sophisticated tactically than either. Whereas they were attritional battles, predictable and bloody, at Hamel machines went a long way towards relieving the infantry of the obligation to fight its way forward. After the battle, Haig's Headquarters promulgated its lessons for other commanders. Among the senior officers who visited Monash's Headquarters was a Brigadier-General named Bernard Montgomery.


The military thinker and former Tank Corps officer, Major-General J.F.C. Fuller, thought Hamel more important in making the reputation of the Tank Corps than the battle of Cambrai. As an outstanding demonstration of how four independent arms could be co-ordinated on the battlefield, Hamel served as the blueprint for the bigger battles to come. The offensive before Amiens on August 8, which General Ludendorff, the German commander, famously called 'the black day of the German Army', was essentially Hamel on a much larger scale. Key Selling Points * A sophisicated and tactical batle using machines rather than infantry. About the Author Dr Pedersen was born in England but grew up in Sydney, Australia.


He is a graduate of the Royal Military College of Australia, the Australian Command and Staff College and the University of New South Wales. After commanding a rifle company in Malaysia, Dr Pedersen was seconded to the Australian Prime Minister's Department as a political/strategic analyst in 1987-88. He is the author of Monash as Military Commander, and Images of Gallipoli, an illustrated account of the Gallipoli Campaign. He has also contributed to many other books and writes regularly on military history and battlefields for British and American journals. Not confining himself to the pen, he has appeared in military history programmes on Australian television and radio and lectured in the US, Australia and Europe.


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