The
Meuse-Argonne Offensive, also called the
Battle of the Argonne Forest, was a part of the
final
Allied offensive of
World War I that stretched along the
entire western front.
Overview
The whole offensive was planned by Marshall
Ferdinand Foch to breach the
Hindenburg line and ultimately force the
opposing German forces to
capitulate.
The big
September/October Allied breakthroughs (north, centre and south)
across the length of the Hindenburg Line - including the Battle of
the Argonne
Forest
- are now lumped together as part of what is
generally remembered as the Grand
Offensive (also known as the Hundred Days Offensive) by the Allies
on the Western front. The Meuse-Argonne offensive also
involved troops from France, while France, Britain and its dominion
and imperial armies (mainly Canada, Australia and New Zealand), and
Belgium contributed to major battles in other sectors across the
whole front.
The French and British armies' ability to fight unbroken over the
whole four years of the war in what amounted to a bloody stalemate
is credited by some historians with breaking the spirit of the
German Army on the Western Front. The Grand Offensive, including
British, French and Belgian advances in the north along with the
French-American advances around the Argonne forest, is in turn
credited for leading directly to the Armistice on November 11. On
September 26, the Americans began their strike towards Sedan in the
south; British and Belgian divisions drove towards Ghent (Belgium)
on the 27th, and then British and French armies attacked across
northern France on the 28th. The scale of the overall offensive,
bolstered by the fresh and eager but largely untried and
inexperienced U.S. troops, signaled renewed vigor among the Allies
and sharply dimmed German hopes for victory.
The Meuse-Argonne offensive, shared by the U.S. forces with the
French 4th Army on the left (as shown on the accompanying map and
armistice), was the biggest operation and victory of the
American Expeditionary Force
(AEF) in World War I. The bulk of the AEF had not gone into action
until 1918. The Meuse-Argonne battle was the largest frontline
commitment of troops by the U.S. Army in World War I, and also its
deadliest. Command was coordinated, with some U.S. troops (e.g. the
the
Buffalo Soldiers of the
92nd Infantry
Division and the
93rd Infantry
Division ) attached and serving under French command (e.g. XVII
Corps during the second phase).
The main
U.S. effort of the Meuse-Argonne offensive took place in the Verdun
Sector, immediately north and northwest of the town of Verdun
, between 26
September and 11 November 1918. Of the battles that
constituted the Grand Offensive, this is the one best remembered in
the U.S. However, even from a U.S.-centric perspective , another
interesting feature of the Grand Offensive was that in one sector
far to the north, U.S. troops of the 27th and 30th divisions of the
II Corps AEF fought under British command in a spearhead attack on
the Hindenburg Line with 12 British and Australian divisions - and
directly alongside the exhausted veteran divisions of the
Australian Corps of the
First Australian Imperial
Force (1st AIF). With artillery and British tanks, the combined
three-nation force, despite some early setbacks, attacked and
captured their objectives (including Montbrehain village) along a
six-kilometre section of the Line between Bellicourt and
Vendhuille, which was centred around an underground section of the
St Quentin Canal and came to be known as the
Battle of St. Quentin Canal. Of
the two battles involving U.S. troops in the Grand Offensive, this
was the more immediately significant in terms of the overall result
of the offensive and thus the ending of the conflict as the capture
of the heights above the Beaurevoir Line by October 10 marked a
complete breach in the Hindenburg Line. That was precisely the goal
of the overall offensive as masterminded by Marshall Foch. The
victory at the Battle of St. Quentin Canal seems largely forgotten
in the U.S., despite the American input, probably because unlike at
St. Quentin, a distinct part of the Meuse-Argonne frontline (to the
right of the French) was all-American.
Opposing forces (Reims to Argonne)
The American forces consisted initially of fifteen divisions of the
U.S. First Army commanded by General
John J. Pershing until
October 16 and then by Lt. General
Hunter Liggett. The logistics were planned
and directed by Col.
George
Marshall. The French forces next to them consisted of 31
divisions including the
4th
Army (under
Henri Gouraud) and the
5th Army (under
Henri Mathias Berthelot). The U.S.
divisions of the AEF were oversized (16
battalions per division verse the
French/British/German 9 battalions per division), being up to twice
the size of other Allies' battle-depleted divisions upon arrival,
but the French and other Allied divisions had been partly
replenished prior to the Grand Offensive, so both the U.S. and
French contributions in troops were considerable. Most of the heavy
equipment (tanks, artillery, aircraft) was provided by the European
Allies. For the Meuse-Argonne front alone, this represented 2,780
artillery pieces, 380 tanks and 840 planes. As the battle
progressed, both the Americans and the French brought in
reinforcements. Eventually, 22 American divisions would participate
in the battle at one time or another, representing two full field
armies. Other French forces involved included the
2nd Colonial Corps, under
Henri Edouard Claudel,
which had also fought alongside the AEF at the
Battle of Saint-Mihiel earlier in
September 1918.
The opposing forces were wholly German. During this period of the
war, German divisions procured only 50 percent or less of their
initial strength. The 117th Division, which opposed the U.S. 79th
Division during the offensive's first phase, had only 3,300 men in
its ranks. Morale varied among German units. For example, divisions
that served on the Eastern front would have high morale, while
conversely divisions that that were just on the western front had
poor morale. Resistance grew to approximately 200,000 German troops
from the
Fifth Army of
Group Gallwitz commanded by General
Georg von der Marwitz. The Americans
estimated that they opposed parts of 44 German Divisions overall,
though many fewer at any one time.
Objective
The
objective was the capture of the railroad
hub at Sedan
which would
break the rail net supporting the German Army in France and
Flanders.
First phase: September 26 to October 3
The American attack began at 5:30 a.m. on September 26 with mixed
results.
The V and III Corps met most of their
objectives, but the 79th Division failed
to capture Montfaucon, the 28th "Keystone"
Division was virtually ground to a halt by formidable German
resistance, and the 91st
"Wild West" Division was compelled to evacuate the village of
Épinonville
though it advanced eight kilometers.
The green
37th "Buckeye"
Division failed to capture Montfaucon d'Argonne
. The subsequent day, September 27 most of
1st Army failed to make any gains. The 79th Division finally
captured Montfaucon and the
35th
"Sante Fe" Division captured the village of Baulny, Hill 218,
and Charpentry, placing the division forward of adjacent units. On
September 29, six extra German
divisions were deployed to oppose the American attack, with the
5th Guards and
52nd Division
counterattacking the 35th Division, which had run out of food and
ammunition during the attack. The Germans initially made
significant gains but were barely repulsed by the 35th Division's
110th Engineers, 128th Machine Gun Battalion and Harry Truman's
Battery D, 129th Field Artillery. In the words of General Pershing,
"We were no longer engaged in a maneuver for the pinching out of a
salient, but were necessarily committed, generally speaking, to a
direct frontal attack against strong, hostile positions fully
manned by a determined enemy." The German counterattack had
shattered so much of the
35th
Division, a poorly led division (most of its key leaders were
replaced shortly before the attack) made up of National Guard units
from Missouri and Kansas, that it had to be relieved early - though
remnants of the division subsequently reentered the
battle.
Part of the adjacent French attack met
temporary confusion when one of its generals died, however it was
able to advance nine miles, penetrating deeply into the German
lines, especially around Somme-Py (the
Battle of Somme-Py ( )) and northwest of Reims
(the
Battle of Saint-Thierry ( )). The initial
progress of the French forces was thus faster than the two to five
miles gained by the adjacent American units (however, the French
units were fighting in a more open terrain, which is easier to
attack).
Second phase: October 4 to October 28
The second phase of the battle began on 4 October, during which
time all of the original phase one assault divisions of the U.S. I
and V Corps were replaced by divisions from reserve. The Americans
launched a series of costly frontal assaults that finally broke
through the main German defences (the Kriemhilde Stellung of the
Hindenburg Line) between 14-17
October (the
Battle of Montfaucon ( )). By the end
of October, US troops had advanced ten miles and had finally
cleared the Argonne Forest. On their left the French had advanced
twenty miles, reaching the Aisne River.It was during the opening of
this operation, on October 8, that Corporal (later Sergeant)
Alvin York made his famous capture of 132
German prisoners.
Third phase: October 26 to November 10
By October 31 the Americans had advanced fifteen kilometers and had
finally cleared the Argonne Forest.
On their left the French had advanced
thirty kilometers, reaching the River Aisne
. The American forces reorganized into two
armies. The First, led by General Ligett, would continue to move to
the Carignan-Sedan-Mezieres Railroad. The Second Army, led by
Lieutenant General
Robert L.
Bullard, was directed to move eastward
towards Metz
. The
two U.S. armies faced portions of 31 German divisions during this
phase.
The
American troops captured German defenses at Buzancy
, allowing French troops to cross the River Aisne
from whence they rushed forward, capturing Le
Chesne
(the Battle of Chesne ( )).
In the final days, the French forces conquered the immediate
objective, Sedan and its critical railroad hub (the
Advance
to the Meuse ( )), on November 6 and American forces
captured surrounding hills.
The battle's place in history
Although the Meuse-Argonne was "probably the bloodiest single
battle in U.S. history", in the sense that it had the largest
number of U.S. dead in a single battle, it is little remembered
today in the United States. Its battleground memorials are
neglected by most American visitors to Europe, though Europeans pay
more attention to them and other World War I battlegrounds and
memorials. The battle also hailed the debut of the
Browning Automatic Rifle in
combat, with both the US and France using them significantly for
the first time in battle. According to the American view , the
battle's pressure on the Germans was an important factor in their
agreeing to the armistice: "Until the last, this battle had worried
German commanders most; unlike other sectors of the front, here
they had little space short of a vital objective that they could
afford to trade for time." Many historians have since begun to
debate the legitimacy of this claim, with many believing that the
Meuse-Argonne offensive was simply a diversion from greater allied
offensives and successes elsewhere.
See also
References
Further reading
- Ferrell, Robert H."America's Deadliest Battle: The Meuse
Argonne, 1918."Lawrence: University press of Kansas,2007