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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of the Great War, Volume VI (of
+VIII), by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story of the Great War, Volume VI (of VIII)
+ History of the European War from Official Sources
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: Francis J. Reynolds
+ Allen L. Churchill
+ Francis T. Miller
+
+Release Date: July 12, 2009 [EBook #29385]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE GREAT WAR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charlene Taylor, Christine P. Travers and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+[Transcriber's note: Obvious printer's errors have been corrected.
+Hyphenation and accentuation have been standardised, all other
+inconsistencies are as in the original. The author's spelling has been
+maintained.
+
+Page 382: Words are missing in the sentence "The genuine leaders of
+the Socialists should [...] the labor organizations realized
+immediately the policy which the dark forces were initiating." The
+place is marked with [see TN].]
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF THE GREAT WAR
+
+ History of the European War from Official Sources
+
+ Complete Historical Records of Events to Date,
+ Illustrated with Drawings, Maps, and Photographs
+
+ Prefaced by
+
+ What the War Means to America
+ Major General Leonard Wood, U.S.A.
+
+ Naval Lessons of the War
+ Rear Admiral Austin M. Knight, U.S.N.
+
+ The World's War
+ Frederick Palmer
+
+ Theatres of the War's Campaigns
+ Frank H. Simonds
+
+ The War Correspondent
+ Arthur Ruhl
+
+ Edited by
+
+ Francis J. Reynolds
+ Former Reference Librarian of Congress
+
+ Allen L. Churchill
+ Associate Editor, The New International Encyclopedia
+
+ Francis Trevelyan Miller
+ Editor in Chieft, Photographic History of the Civil War
+
+ P. F. Collier & Son Company
+ New York
+
+
+[Illustration: _Major General John J. Pershing, appointed to organize
+and command the American forces in France, is shown landing in France
+on June 12, 1917. French officers and officials of high rank are there
+to welcome him. His arrival is recognized as an epoch-making date in
+the war, for it foreshadows the creation of a great American Army in
+France._]
+
+
+THE STORY OF THE GREAT WAR
+
+ SOMME . RUSSIAN DRIVE
+ FALL OF GORITZ . RUMANIA
+ GERMAN RETREAT . VIMY
+ REVOLUTION IN RUSSIA
+ UNITED STATES AT WAR
+
+
+VOLUME VI
+
+P . F . Collier & Son . New York
+
+ Copyright 1916
+ By P. F. Collier & Son
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+PART I.--WESTERN FRONT--SOMME AND VERDUN
+
+CHAPTER Page
+
+ I. French and British Advances 9
+
+ II. Further Successes--French Capture Maurepas 13
+
+ III. German Counterattacks 16
+
+ IV. Operations at Verdun--British Victories in the Somme 19
+
+ V. The "Tanks"--British Capture Martinpuich 21
+
+ VI. Capture of Combles--Air Raids 25
+
+ VII. British Capture Eaucourt L'Abbaye-Regina Trench 28
+
+ VIII. Continued Allied Advance 31
+
+ IX. French Retake Douaumont 34
+
+ X. Germans Lose Fort Vaux--French Take Saillisel 37
+
+ XI. British Successes in the Ancre 41
+
+ XII. Operations on the French Front--Further Fighting in
+ the Ancre 47
+
+ XIII. Weather Conditions--Movements Around Loos 51
+
+ XIV. French Win at Verdun 53
+
+ XV. Canadians at Arras--Nivelle in Command 55
+
+ XVI. German Attacks at Verdun--Result of Six Months' Fighting 58
+
+ XVII. German Attack on Hill 304--British Surprise Attack 61
+
+
+PART II.--EASTERN FRONT
+
+ XVIII. The New Drive Against Lemberg 70
+
+ XIX. The Battle on the Stokhod River 76
+
+ XX. Renewed Drive Against Lemberg 81
+
+ XXI. The Fighting from Riga to Lutsk 86
+
+ XXII. Fighting in the Carpathians 90
+
+ XXIII. Winter at the Eastern Front 93
+
+
+PART III.--THE BALKANS
+
+ XXIV. Rumania's Military Strength 95
+
+ XXV. Hostilities Begin 96
+
+ XXVI. Bulgaria Attacks 98
+
+ XXVII. The Germans Arrive 103
+
+ XXVIII. The Rumanian Raid Across the Danube 106
+
+ XXIX. Mackensen Pressed Back 111
+
+ XXX. The Rumanians Pressed Back 113
+
+ XXXI. The Battle of the River Argechu 117
+
+ XXXII. Bucharest Falls 119
+
+ XXXIII. Sarrail's Offensive 124
+
+ XXXIV. Unrest in Greece 126
+
+ XXXV. A Greek Army Surrenders to Germany 129
+
+ XXXVI. The Serbians Advance 132
+
+ XXXVII. The Greeks on the Firing Line 134
+
+ XXXVIII. Seizure of the Greek Fleet 136
+
+ XXXIX. The Bulgarians Driven Back 138
+
+ XL. Monastir Falls 140
+
+ XLI. Greek Fights Greek 143
+
+ XLII. Fighting in the Streets of Athens 145
+
+ XLIII. The Serbians Checked 148
+
+
+PART IV.--AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+ XLIV. The Fall of Goritz 149
+
+ XLV. Fall and Winter on the Austro-Italian Front 153
+
+ XLVI. Fighting on Mountain Peaks 159
+
+
+PART V.--WAR IN THE AIR AND ON THE SEA
+
+ XLVII. Aeroplane Warfare 168
+
+ XLVIII. Zeppelin Raids 176
+
+ XLIX. Submarine Warfare 182
+
+
+PART VI.--THE UNITED STATES AND THE BELLIGERENTS
+
+ L. The Old Menace 189
+
+ LI. The U-53's Exploits 194
+
+ LII. Gathering Clouds 200
+
+ LIII. Rupture With Germany 205
+
+ LIV. Nothing Settled 212
+
+
+PART VII.--WESTERN FRONT
+
+ LV. The German Retreat on the Ancre 217
+
+ LVI. The German Retreat Continues--French Recover 120 Towns 227
+
+ LVII. The British Troops Capture Vimy Ridge and Monchy--French
+ Victories on the Aisne 239
+
+ LVIII. French Victories in Champagne--The British Capture
+ Bullecourt 252
+
+ LIX. The Battle of Messines Ridge--British Smash the
+ German Salient South of Ypres 263
+
+ LX. The Germans Defeat British on Belgian Coast--Intense
+ Fighting in the Champagne and at Verdun 276
+
+
+PART VIII.--THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
+
+ LXI. The Interim 291
+
+ LXII. Berlin's Tactics 297
+
+ LXIII. Armed Neutrality 304
+
+ LXIV. Germany's Bid to Mexico 312
+
+ LXV. A State of War 317
+
+ LXVI. Building the War Machine 328
+
+ LXVII. Men and Money in Millions 344
+
+ LXVIII. Envoys from America's Allies 351
+
+ LXIX. In It at Last 356
+
+
+PART IX.--THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
+
+ LXX. Foreshadowing Revolution 363
+
+ LXXI. The Rise of Nihilism 365
+
+ LXXII. Revolutionary Doctrines 367
+
+ LXXIII. Russian War Spirit Aroused 372
+
+ LXXIV. Rasputin, the Evil Spirit of Russia 374
+
+ LXXV. Treachery of the Autocracy 378
+
+ LXXVI. Party Intrigues 380
+
+ LXXVII. The Work of Traitors 383
+
+ LXXVIII. Threatening of the Storm 386
+
+ LXXIX. Revolution 389
+
+ LXXX. The Culmination 392
+
+ LXXXI. The New Government 395
+
+ LXXXII. The Czar Abdicates 400
+
+ LXXXIII. First Acts of the New Regime 404
+
+ LXXXIV. Socialism Supreme 406
+
+ LXXXV. Policies Proclaimed 409
+
+ LXXXVI. Kerensky Saves Russia from Herself 412
+
+ LXXXVII. The American Commissions 416
+
+
+PART X.--EASTERN FRONT
+
+ LXXXVIII. The End of Winter at the Eastern Front 421
+
+ LXXXIX. Effects of the Russian Revolution 424
+
+ XC. The Beginning of Russian Rehabilitation 428
+
+ XCI. The Russian July Offensive 433
+
+ XCII. The Capture of Halicz and Kalusz 436
+
+ XCIII. The Collapse of the Russian Offensive 440
+
+ XCIV. The Russian Rout in Galicia and the Bukowina 445
+
+
+PART XI.--AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+ XCV. Stalemate on the Italian Fronts 452
+
+ XCVI. Spring on the Austro-Italian Front 457
+
+ XCVII. The Italian Drive Against Trieste 462
+
+ XCVIII. The Height of the Italian Offensive 468
+
+
+PART XII.--WAR ON THE SEA
+
+ XCIX. Submarine Warfare 475
+
+ C. Naval Operations 480
+
+
+PART XIII.--WAR IN THE AIR
+
+ CI. Aerial Warfare 485
+
+ CII. Air Raids 492
+
+
+ INDEX 495
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ General Pershing Landing at Boulogne, France _Frontispiece_
+
+ Opposite Page
+
+ Sir Douglas Haig and Marshal Joffre 30
+
+ Notice Posted in French Munitions Works 62
+
+ General von Mackensen in Rumania 110
+
+ British Armored Motor Car, or "Tank" 222
+
+ Curtain or Barrage Fire 286
+
+ Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States 302
+
+ American Naval Gunners Fighting Submarines 350
+
+ A. F. Kerensky Addressing Russian Troops 430
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF MAPS
+
+ Page
+ Battle Lines on All Fronts, August 1, 1917
+ (_Colored Map_) _Front Insert_
+
+ Verdun Front, February 1, 1917 38
+
+ Allies' Gain at the Somme, up to February, 1917 66
+
+ Attack in the Riga Sector 87
+
+ Teutonic Invasion of Rumania 104
+
+ New German Submarine War Zone of February 1, 1917 207
+
+ The Entire Western Front, August 1, 1917 220
+
+ The German Retreat on the Western Front, March 18, 1917 233
+
+ Taking of Vimy Ridge by the Canadians, April 9 and 10, 1917 240
+
+ The French Offensive on the Craonne Plateau, Champagne 257
+
+ The Taking of Messines Ridge, June 7, 1917 266
+
+ The Somme Battle Front, August 1, 1917 283
+
+ The Russian Offensive and Retreat in Galicia 446
+
+ The Entire Eastern Battle Front, August 1, 1917 450
+
+
+
+
+PART I--WESTERN FRONT--SOMME AND VERDUN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+FRENCH AND BRITISH ADVANCES
+
+
+The first month of the Allied offensive on the Somme front closed
+quietly. The British and French forces had every reason to feel
+encouraged over their successes. In the two thrusts since July 1,
+1916, they had won from the Germans nearly twenty-four square miles of
+territory. Considering the extent to which every fraction of a mile
+was fortified and defended, and the thoroughness of the German
+preparations to make the district impregnable, the Allied gains were
+important. As a British officer said at the time, it was like digging
+badgers out of holes--with the proviso that every badger had machine
+guns and rifles at the hole's mouth, while the approach to each was
+swept by the fire from a dozen neighboring earthworks.
+
+It was estimated that in the first month of the Allied offensive on
+the Somme the German casualties amounted to about 200,000 men, while
+the Anglo-French forces lost less than a fourth of that number. The
+Allies claimed to have captured about 13,000 prisoners and between
+sixty and seventy field guns, exclusive of machine guns and the
+smaller artillery.
+
+With the capture of Pozieres it might be said that the second phase of
+the Battle of the Somme was concluded. The Allied forces were well
+established on the line to which the second main "push" which began
+July 14, 1916, was directed.
+
+During the first three days of August, 1916, comparative quiet
+prevailed along the Somme front, and no important offensive was
+attempted by either side. Minor fighting continued, however, every
+day, and during the nights the English positions were heavily
+bombarded by the German guns.
+
+On the night of August 4, 1916, the British assumed the offensive,
+advancing from Pozieres on a front of 2,000 yards. The attack, which
+seems to have taken the Germans by surprise, was entirely successful,
+as the British troops gained 1,000 yards of the German second line and
+captured over 400 prisoners. This second line consisted of two
+strongly fortified trenches running parallel, which were backed by a
+network of supporting and intermediate trenches, all strongly
+constructed, with deep dugouts and cunningly devised machinery of
+defense. When the Australians made the thrust forward from Pozieres
+while the British cooperated on the left over the ground to the east
+of the village, they found when going over the enemy trenches that in
+many places the British guns had wrecked and almost obliterated the
+German second lines. After the British advance the Germans launched
+two spirited counterattacks, which were easily repulsed by the British
+artillery. The British casualties were unimportant, but the troops
+suffered intensely from the heat of the evening and from the gas masks
+that they were forced to wear, as previous to the attack the Germans
+had bombarded with gas shells.
+
+Minor fighting and artillery duels continued intermittently until the
+morning of August 6, 1916, when the Germans delivered two fierce
+attacks on the ground gained by the British east of Pozieres. The
+Germans, employing liquid fire in one attack, forced the British back
+from one of the trenches they had captured on August 4, 1916, but part
+of this was later regained. The following day the Germans continued
+their attacks north and northeast of Pozieres on the new British
+lines. After heavy bombardment of the British positions, the Germans
+penetrated their trenches, but were forced out again, having suffered
+some casualties and leaving a number of prisoners in British hands. In
+front of Souchez the Germans exploded a mine, and here some of their
+troops succeeded in entering the English trenches over the crater,
+but were quickly bombed out again.
+
+On the same date late in the afternoon the French forces to the north
+of the Somme carried out a well-planned attack which resulted in the
+capture of a line of German trenches between the Hem Wood and the
+river. The French took 120 prisoners and a number of machine guns.
+
+On August 8, 1916, the British positions north and east of Pozieres
+were heavily bombarded by German artillery. In the evening of the same
+date British troops pushing forward engaged the enemy near the station
+of Guillemont. A bomb attack made by the Germans on the eastern
+portion of the Leipzig salient south of Thiepval was driven back with
+some casualties. Two British raiding parties about the same time
+succeeded in entering the German lines north of Roclincourt and blew
+up some dugouts. On this date a squadron of ten German aeroplanes
+endeavored to cross the British lines on a bombing expedition, but
+were driven off by four British offensive patrols. Two of the German
+aeroplanes were forced to descend behind their own lines, while the
+others were scattered and did not return to attack. In the evening of
+the same day the Germans made four attacks on the British lines to the
+northwest of Pozieres, and in one were successful in occupying a
+portion of a British trench.
+
+During this day the French north of the Somme, while the British were
+fighting at Guillemont, advanced east of Hill 139, north of
+Hardecourt, and took forty prisoners. The Germans, making two attempts
+to recapture the trenches won from them by the French on the previous
+day, were beaten back, leaving a great number of dead on the field. In
+the evening French troops captured a small wood and a heavily
+fortified trench to the north of the Hem Wood, making their gains for
+the two days, an entire line of German trenches on a front of three
+and three-quarter miles and a depth of from 330 to 350 yards.
+
+In the battered and shell-pitted region to the northwest of Pozieres
+fighting between the British and German troops continued unceasingly.
+The slight gains made by the British troops were won only by the
+greatest risk and daring, for the whole plateau between Thiepval and
+Pozieres (about 3,000 yards) lay open to the German fire from the
+former place. A great part of it could be reached by machine guns,
+while German batteries at Courcelette and Grandcourt commanded the
+ground at close range. A network of German trenches, well planned,
+stretched in almost every direction. Flares and shell fire made the
+region as bright as day during the night, and it was only by rushing a
+trench from saps made within a few feet of the objectives or by
+breaking into a trench and bombing along it that the British were able
+to achieve any small gains. And gains were made on this terrible
+terrain daily, though only a few yards might be won, and a dozen or
+more prisoners captured.
+
+The British attack on the Germans around Guillemont, which took place
+as previously noted on August 8, 1916, was at first successful. A
+section of the troops carried some trenches, and then pushing on
+gained a useful piece of ground south of Guillemont with few
+casualties. Another (the left) section of British troops were unable
+to proceed farther on account of the darkness. Another section, owing
+to miscalculation, swept through the German trenches straight into the
+village of Guillemont, where they lost their direction amid the ruins
+and confusion. Working their way through the shattered streets they
+proceeded to dig themselves in when they had reached the far northeast
+corner of the place. With enemies all around them, and the breadth of
+the ruined village between them and their friends, the adventure could
+have but one conclusion. A few of the men succeeded in getting back to
+the British lines, but the remainder fell into the hands of the
+enemy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FURTHER SUCCESSES--FRENCH CAPTURE MAUREPAS
+
+
+In the morning of August 11, 1916, after the usual preparatory
+bombardment, French troops carried the whole of the third German
+position north of the Somme from the river northeast of
+Hardecourt--that is to say, on a front of about four miles and to an
+average depth of about a mile. This third German position consisted of
+three, and in some places of four, lines of trenches strongly defended
+and with the usual trench blockhouses. The French attacked in force
+along the whole front, and in eighty minutes, according to the
+description given in French newspapers, carried the German position at
+a small cost in casualties compared with results. The Germans fought
+bravely and stubbornly, but the French artillery did such effective
+work before the advance attack that in the hand-to-hand conflicts that
+followed the French troops readily overcame the enemy. A Bavarian
+battalion which garrisoned a blockhouse on Hill 109 offered such a
+determined resistance that when the victorious French finally entered
+the work they found only 200 of the garrison alive.
+
+In the afternoon of the same day, August 11, 1916, French forces north
+of the Somme took several German trenches by assault and established
+their new line on the saddle to the north of Maurepas and along the
+road leading from the village to Hem. A strongly fortified quarry to
+the north of Hem Wood and two small woods were also occupied by the
+French troops. During the course of the action in this district they
+took 150 unwounded prisoners and ten machine guns.
+
+British air squadrons numbering sixty-eight machines on August 12,
+1916, bombed airship sheds at Brussels and Namur, and railway sidings
+and stations at Mons, Namur, Busigny, and Courtrai. Of the British
+machines engaged in these attacks, all but two returned safely. In
+the evening of the same day the British forces attacked the third
+German position which extended from the east of Hardecourt to the
+Somme east of Buscourt. On this front of about four miles the British
+infantry carried the trench and works of the Germans to a depth of
+from 660 to 1,100 yards. To the northwest of Pozieres the British
+gained 300 to 400 yards on a front of a mile, and also captured
+trenches on the plateau northwest of Bazentin-le-Petit.
+
+The French continued to make appreciable gains south of the Somme,
+carrying portions of trenches and taking some prisoners. The new
+British front to the west of Pozieres was repeatedly attacked and
+bombarded by the Germans, and on August 15, 1916, they succeeded in
+recapturing trenches they had lost two days before. But they were
+unable to hold their gains for more than a day, when the British drove
+them out and consolidated the position.
+
+During the afternoon and evening of August 16, 1916, German and French
+to the north and south of the Somme engaged in heavy bombardments. At
+Verdun the German lines were forced back close to Fleury, the French
+taking enemy trenches and smashing a counterattack with their
+artillery.
+
+On the afternoon of August 17, 1916, there was hard fighting along the
+whole Somme front from Pozieres to the river. The British gained
+ground toward Ginchy and Guillemont and took over 200 prisoners,
+including some officers. During the night the Germans delivered
+repeated attacks against the positions the British had captured, but
+only in one instance did they succeed in winning back a little ground.
+
+On August 18, 1916, the British continued to add to their gains,
+advancing on a front of more than two miles for a distance of between
+200 and 600 yards. As a result of these operations carried out along
+the British front from Thiepval to their right, south of Guillemont, a
+distance of eleven miles, was the gain of the ridge southeast of
+Thiepval commanding the village and northern slopes of the high ground
+north of Pozieres. The British also held the edge of High Wood and
+half a mile of captured German trenches to the west of the wood.
+Advances were also made to the outskirts of the village of
+Guillemont, where the British occupied the railroad station and
+quarry, both of some considerable military importance. As a result of
+these operations the British captured sixteen officers and 780 of
+other ranks.
+
+German guns continued to shell the British positions throughout the
+day and evening of August 18, 1916, but no infantry attacks were
+attempted. On the following day after a heavy bombardment the Germans
+made three vigorous bombing attacks on the British positions at High
+Wood, all of which were repulsed, though the Germans succeeded in some
+instances in gaining a foothold for a time in the British trenches. In
+the aggregate the British successes in this region had in a week
+resulted in the capture of trenches which, if put end to end, would
+reach for a number of miles.
+
+On August 24, 1916, the French completed the capture of Maurepas, for
+which they had been battling for nearly two weeks, after seizing the
+trenches to the south of the village. Maurepas was of great military
+importance, for, with Guillemont on the British front, it formed
+advanced works of the stronghold of Combles. The attack was launched
+at five in the evening on a front of a mile and a quarter from north
+of Hardecourt to southeast of Maurepas. The French troops captured the
+German portion of Maurepas at the first dash, and a little later the
+strong intrenchments made by the Germans to cover the Maurepas-Combles
+road were in their possession. The victory was won over some of
+Germany's best troops, the Fifth Bavarian Reserve Division and the
+First Division of the Prussian Guard under Prince Eitel Frederick.
+
+On the same day, August 24, 1916, the British troops on the north of
+the Somme attacked the German positions in the Maurepas region and
+carried with a rush that part of the village still held by the Germans
+and the adjoining trenches, taking 600 prisoners and eighteen guns.
+South of the village the Germans made a violent attack on the British
+position at Hill 121, but owing to the concentrated fire of artillery
+which mowed them down they were unable to reach the British lines at
+any point.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+GERMAN COUNTERATTACKS
+
+
+Throughout the week the Germans attempted repeatedly to retake the
+positions that had been won from them by the French and British
+troops. One of the most desperate attacks made was against the British
+positions between the quarry and Guillemont. After a heavy preparatory
+bombardment the Germans launched an attack that took them to the edge
+of the British trenches, where a desperate hand-to-hand struggle was
+made in which the Germans fought with stubbornness and determination,
+but were finally repulsed with heavy losses.
+
+The new French positions gained at Maurepas were violently attacked on
+August 26, 1916, but the French artillery wrought terrible havoc among
+the German troops, and they withdrew in disorder. In two days the
+French took over 350 prisoners in this sector.
+
+On the evening of August 26, 1916, the British captured several
+hundred yards of German trenches north of Bazentin-le-Petit and pushed
+forward some distance north of Ginchy.
+
+After gaining a trench of 470 yards south of Thiepval and taking over
+200 prisoners, the British on August 24, 1916, joined up with the
+French forces on the right, where important progress was made around
+Maurepas. Continued hard fighting on the eastern and northern edges of
+the Delville Wood advanced the British lines several hundred yards on
+each side of the Longueville-Flers road. These operations resulted in
+the British capturing eight officers and about 200 of other ranks.
+
+West of Ginchy two German companies attacked the British trenches and
+were driven off by machine-gun fire. Bombardment of British positions
+continued during the night. Two aeroplane raids carried out by the
+British airmen damaged trains on the German line of communications.
+Important military points were also bombed with some success, but in
+encounters with German aircraft the British lost one machine.
+
+The importance of the Thiepval sector to the Germans was demonstrated
+in their constant efforts to regain the positions there that had been
+captured by the British. A great number of guns were concentrated by
+the Germans in this sector. The bombardment which preceded the attack
+was of unusual violence, but owing to the intrepid spirit of the men
+from Wiltshire and Worcestershire, who defended the positions, the
+Germans were unable to reach the trenches and withdrew in disorder.
+According to an eyewitness of this attack, the first wave of German
+soldiers advancing to attack was thrown in disorder by the intense
+gunfire from the British positions. A second wave of men
+started--swept a little farther over the shell-torn terrain than the
+others had done, then faltered, broke apart, and fell back, having
+failed to get through the British artillery fire or even to approach
+their trenches.
+
+In the area around Mouquet Farm and in the trenches south of Thiepval
+the British captured during the day one German officer and sixty-six
+of other ranks. British aircraft displayed great activity in this
+sector, dropping five tons of bombs on points of military importance
+behind the enemy lines. One hostile machine was brought down, while
+two British machines failed to return. South of the Ancre the British
+made slight advances, capturing four German officers and fifty-five of
+other ranks.
+
+A great battle developed north of the Somme on September 2, 1916, in
+which the British and French forces took thousands of prisoners and
+captured important territory. After intense artillery preparation the
+French infantry cooperating with British troops attacked the German
+positions on a front of about three and three-quarter miles between
+the region north of Maurepas and the river. The strong German forces
+engaged were unable to resist the onslaught of the Allied troops. The
+villages of Forest, east of Maurepas, and Clery-sur-Somme were
+captured, as well as all the German trenches along the route from
+Forest to Combles as far as the outskirts of the last place. The
+Germans launched with heavy forces a counterattack against the
+conquered positions, but were driven back by the heavy fire of the
+French batteries. The French official reports gave the number of
+unwounded prisoners captured in this battle as exceeding 2,000, and
+the booty taken included twelve guns and fifty machine guns. German
+aircraft which engaged British flyers during the progress of the
+battle were driven off with a loss of three machines destroyed and
+four badly injured. The British lost three.
+
+Fighting on the Somme and Ancre was continued with increased severity
+on September 3, 1916. The Germans stubbornly contested the British
+advance, but were unable to gain any material advantage except at
+Ginchy, occupied by the British, who were driven out of all but a
+small portion of the place. As an offset to this loss the British
+troops captured the strongly fortified village of Guillemont and the
+German defenses on a front of one and two-third miles to an average
+depth of about 800 yards. The British took during this battle over 800
+prisoners.
+
+The new French positions to the north of Combles were violently
+attacked on this same date, but the German effort was broken by the
+machine-gun and artillery barrage. The French captured over 500
+prisoners and ten machine guns.
+
+South of the Somme, on a front of about twelve miles, the French
+troops attacked enemy organizations from Barleux to the region south
+of Chaulnes and were entirely successful in gaining their objectives.
+
+Southwest of Barleux the French infantry in a single push carried
+three successive German lines and advanced over a mile, which brought
+them to the outskirts of Berny and Deniecourt. To the south, by a
+well-planned enveloping movement, the village of Soyecourt was
+carried, and here a whole Prussian battalion was cut off and
+surrendered after a short resistance. South of Vermandovillers, where
+the Germans occupied a portion of the village, the French launched an
+attack on the German front in the afternoon, but it was night before
+they could break through north of Chilly. The French pushed on through
+the breach, forcing the Germans to retire to their second line,
+leaving 1,200 prisoners, guns and machine guns in French hands.
+Desperate attempts were made by the German General von Hein to recover
+the lost ground. Before the French had time to consolidate their
+positions he launched six counterattacks, all of which failed under
+the French barrage of fire. On September 4, 1916, the French made
+2,700 prisoners between Barleux and Chilly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+OPERATIONS AT VERDUN--BRITISH VICTORIES IN THE SOMME
+
+
+The intense activity of the Allied forces in the Somme region in
+August and during the first week in September, 1916, exceeded in
+interest the happenings around Verdun. While only one building in the
+town remained uninjured by the shells which the Germans poured into it
+daily, the French, to whom the initiative had passed, continued to
+harry the enemy daily along the Thiaumont-Vaux front. Their "nibbling"
+process went on unceasingly, seizing some hundred yards of trenches,
+or taking batches of 200 or 300 prisoners with such frequency as to
+produce a decidedly depressing effect on the German commanders and on
+their troops, who in this sector represented the pick of the German
+army.
+
+On September 6, 1916, a signal success was won by the French at Verdun
+when they carried the German line on the Vaux-Chapitre Wood-Le Chenois
+front to a length of 1,000 yards, taking 250 prisoners and ten guns.
+
+In the second week of September, 1916, the French and British forces
+made important gains in the Somme region. On September 9, 1916,
+British forces advancing on a front of 6,000 yards occupied Falfemont
+Farm, Leuze Wood, Guillemont, and Ginchy, the area gained being more
+than four square miles. The bravery displayed by the Irish troops from
+Connaught, Leinster, and Munster in connection with the capture of
+Guillemont was especially commended by headquarters. The same troops
+fought with distinction in the capture of Ginchy, a village only in
+name, for shell fire had reduced it to mere heaps of rubble and dust.
+
+In an assault on the French front September 9, 1916, between
+Belloy-en-Santerre and Barleux the Germans by using jets of flame
+obtained a temporary footing in the French trenches, but were driven
+out by a vigorous counterattack with the loss of four machine guns. On
+the night of September 11, 1916, French forces north of the Somme took
+the offensive and drove a broad wedge right in between the powerfully
+defended German positions of Combles on the north and Peronne to the
+south. Continuing their advance on the following day, in less than
+half an hour they carried the German first line and, taking Hill 145
+by the way, pressed on to the Bapaume road south of Rancourt, and held
+it as far south as Bouchavesnes village which was captured by a
+brilliant dash early in the evening. On September 13, 1916, the French
+again advanced, carrying several positions and occupying in this
+region the German third line. They also captured a trench system south
+of Combles. In the two days' fighting 2,300 German prisoners were
+captured.
+
+On the night of Thursday, September 13, 1916, the British forces won
+German trenches to the southeast of Thiepval and a heavily fortified
+place known as Wunderwerk. This was the prelude to a series of
+brilliant victories won by the British troops which had not been
+surpassed during the entire fighting in the Somme area. At 6 a. m. on
+September 15, 1916, the British attacked on a front of about six
+miles, extending from Bouleaux Wood east of Guillemont to the north of
+the Albert-Bapaume road. A tremendous bombardment of the enemy
+positions continued for twenty minutes before the infantry advanced to
+attack. The Germans were believed to have 1,000 guns concentrated in
+this sector which had been shelling the British positions for several
+days, but during this battle for some reason, perhaps lack of
+ammunition, they played an unimportant part, and were far outclassed
+by the British artillery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE "TANKS"--BRITISH CAPTURE MARTINPUICH
+
+
+It was in this battle that the British for the first time introduced a
+new type of armored cars which proved veritable fortresses on wheels,
+and came to be popularly known as "tanks." These destructive engines
+of warfare were from twenty to forty feet long and were painted a dull
+drab, or some unassuming color calculated to blend with the tones of
+the landscape. In a dim light they suggested the giant slugs of a
+prehistoric age. Sliding along the ground on caterpillar wheels, with
+armored cheeks on each side of the head, above which guns stuck out
+like the stalked eyes of land crabs, their first appearance in this
+sector may well have created consternation among the German troops who
+saw them for the first time. There was something uncanny about these
+steel-scaled monsters that slid over the ground as it were on their
+stomachs, balanced by a flimsy tail supported on two wheels. Weighing
+many tons, when the "tank" came to an obstacle, such as a house or
+wall, it rammed the obstruction with its full weight, and then
+climbing over the debris lumbered on its way. Through vast craters and
+muddy shell holes and over trenches the monsters waddled along,
+scattering death and destruction as they advanced. The German
+soldiers, after the first consternation caused by the appearance of
+these war engines in the field, bravely attacked them; swarming over
+the sides of the "tanks" and seeking to batter in the steel scales and
+armored plates and to silence the guns that spouted fire from the
+head, but the daring efforts were useless and caused many casualties.
+Machine-gun fire was also ineffectual. They could only be disabled by
+a direct hit from a large gun. It is said that the Germans voiced
+their disgust for this kind of warfare, and protested that the British
+were not fighting fair!
+
+At first the Germans thought they could rush a "tank" as they would a
+fort, and lost heavily in such futile attacks; they could make no
+impression on the steel "hide" of the monsters. Once astride a trench,
+the guns of the tank could rake right and left, mowing down the
+defenders whose volleys pattered harmlessly on the steel plates of the
+war engine.
+
+A young Australian who served in one of these new war machines
+described "tanksickness" as being as bad as seasickness until you
+became accustomed to the constant plunges and lurchings as the "tank"
+encountered obstacles on its way. The Australian noted down his
+impressions while cruising around the German lines in a "tank." A few
+quotations from his diary may be of interest:
+
+"Peppering begun at once. Thought old thing was going to be drowned in
+a shower of bullets. Germans dashed up from all sides. We fired at
+them point-blank. The survivors had another try. More of them went
+down.... A rain of bullets resumed. It was like as if hundreds of
+rivets were being hammered into the hide of the 'tank.' We rushed
+through.... Got right across a trench. Made the sparks fly. Went along
+parapet, routing out Germans everywhere. Tried to run, but couldn't
+keep it up under our fire. Threw up the sponge and surrendered in
+batches."
+
+"One can hardly imagine any spectacle more terrifying," said an
+eyewitness, "than these monsters must have presented to German eyes
+when, after a hurricane bombardment, through the smoke and dust of
+bursting shells, the great shapes came lumbering forward in the gray
+light of dawn. The enemy evidently had no hint of what they were. They
+emptied their rifles at them, and the things came rolling on. They
+turned on their machine guns, and the bullets only struck sparks from
+the great beasts' awful sides. In several places they sat themselves
+complacently astride of the trench, and swept it in both directions
+and all the ground beyond with their machine guns. Against strong
+points they were invaluable, because they could thrust themselves,
+secure in the toughness of their hide, in close quarters where
+unprotected infantry could never get. In woods they trampled their way
+through the undergrowth and climbed over or broke down barricades,
+contemptuous of the machine guns and rifle fire which made the
+approach of unarmored men impossible."
+
+During this advance the British penetrated the third German line,
+which was shattered at all points. Three new villages--Flers,
+Martinpuich, and Courcelette--fell into British hands and more than
+twenty miles of German trenches were taken. Over 100 officers and
+4,000 other ranks were captured by the British.
+
+Martinpuich, which was known to be strongly fortified by the Germans,
+was the first trench to be carried by the British troops almost
+without a check. Beyond this was a series of other trenches and
+fortified positions in shell holes and the like. And here the "tanks"
+did effective service, their appearance creating consternation among
+the German troops, whose gunfire was powerless to injure or to impede
+the triumphal progress of these ungainly forts on wheels. In one
+instance a German battalion commander surrendered to a "tank" and was
+taken on board as a passenger. Up to the outskirts of Martinpuich
+there was stiff fighting and the village itself bristled with machine
+guns. The Germans stubbornly and bravely contested the British advance
+through the ruins. The British troops, however, continued to push
+forward almost yard by yard until the whole place was in their hands,
+and they had dug themselves in in a line on the farthest eastern and
+northern sides of the village.
+
+Before the hour set for the advance the British troops who took
+Courcelette were strongly attacked by the Germans on the front just
+north of the Bapaume road. The British front-line trench was broken by
+the attack, and hard fighting was in progress when the hour set for
+the British advance arrived. Then from support lines and other
+positions to the rear of the trench the Germans had entered the
+British troops swept forward. The Germans were overwhelmed as the
+waves of khaki-clad, cheering men rushed forward and over them and out
+beyond the objective points as originally planned. In front of
+Courcelette there were formidable German positions; two trenches in
+particular which had been strongly fortified and against which the
+British troops for a time hurled themselves in vain. Twice the
+British troops were driven back, but the third assault was entirely
+successful, the British troops sweeping over the two trenches and into
+the outskirts of Courcelette. By 8.10 o'clock the British forces had
+worked clear through the village ruins and had carried two especially
+strong positions on the farther side, a quarry on the north and a
+cemetery on the northeast of the village.
+
+In the High Wood area, to the right of the two attacks described, the
+Germans had converted a large mine crater into a fortress of
+formidable strength, for from this position they could sweep the
+entire wood with machine guns so placed that the British were
+powerless to reach them. The "tanks" were of great efficiency in
+reducing this strong point on the eastern angle of the wood. The
+British troops fighting every yard of the way, slowly encircled the
+wood, which was still full of cunningly hidden machine guns, and then
+went steadily through it. This wood, which was described as a horrible
+place, with its heaps of dead and shattered defenses, was effectually
+cleaned out by the British and occupied by them, and a line was
+established due north of the farthest extremity for about 1,000 yards.
+
+Flers was captured by the British by successive pushes in which the
+"tanks" again demonstrated their value. Leading the way, these
+monsters waddled through the village, shattering barricades, crushing
+their way through masonry and creating general alarm among the German
+troops, who saw these formidable war engines for the first time.
+
+In the capture of Courcelette, Flers, and Martinpuich the British air
+service successfully cooperated with the movements of the artillery
+and infantry. During the day, September 15, 1916, thirteen German
+aeroplanes and kite balloons were destroyed, and nine others were
+driven down in a damaged condition. The British reported that four of
+their machines were lost.
+
+On the following day, September 16, 1916, the Germans attacked the
+British positions around Flers and along the Les Boeufs road, and were
+beaten off. The British line which had been held and lived in for a
+day was now little more than a series of shell holes linked by a
+shallow trench. Though "the air was stiff with bullets" as an officer
+described it, the British troops climbed out of their shattered
+position and pushing on took possession of a more satisfactory trench
+ahead, where they consolidated and sat down. This last small advance
+cost the British more casualties than all the other operations during
+the two days' fighting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CAPTURE OF COMBLES--AIR RAIDS
+
+
+Meanwhile the Allied troops--the French on the south, the British on
+the north--made steady progress in hemming in Combles. The French
+increased their gains by storming Le Priez Farm and against severe
+attacks held their gains north and south of Bouchavesnes. In another
+dashing attack they took by assault a group of German trenches south
+of Rancourt, some of their troops pushing forward to the edge of the
+village. South of the Somme they advanced east of Deniecourt and
+northeast of Berny, taking several hundred prisoners and ten machine
+guns. The closing-in process around Combles went steadily forward.
+
+In the evening of September 17, 1916, the British forces in the
+vicinity of Courcelette extended their gains on a front of 1,000
+yards, captured a strong fortification known as the Danube Trench on a
+mile front, and also the strongly defended work at Mouquet Farm which
+had been fought over for several weeks. On the same date the French
+made a spirited attack south of the Somme, wresting from the Germans
+what portions they still held of the villages of Vermandovillers and
+Berny, the ground between the two, and also between Berny and
+Deniecourt, breaking up all counterattacks and taking 700 prisoners.
+
+On September 18, 1916, the British on the Somme front continued to add
+to their gains of the previous days. Northwest of Combles they
+captured a strongly fortified German work and, beating off numerous
+counterattacks north of Flers, took six howitzers, two field guns and
+lighter pieces, as well as some prisoners. South of this the British
+took another section of German trenches, and by a counterattack won
+back trenches to the east beyond Mouquet Farm which they had lost on
+previous days.
+
+On the same date the French took the village of Deniecourt, making the
+third village captured by them in two days. During these operations
+over 1,600 prisoners were taken, including twenty-five officers.
+
+Owing to the weather conditions, little progress was made by the
+Allied forces on September 19, 1916. Raids were successful, however,
+on enemy trenches northeast of Bethune, and the French made some
+advance and took prisoners east of Berny. The Germans made five
+spirited attacks against the French front in Champagne where the
+Russian detachments were posted, all of which were repulsed with heavy
+losses by the guns and machine guns. From 9 in the morning until
+nightfall of the following day the Germans continued their assaults on
+the French lines, but only here and there did they make even temporary
+progress.
+
+On Thursday, September 21, 1916, the British line in the west was
+again advanced. A section of the German front about a mile long was
+attacked between Martinpuich and Flers. Two lines of German trenches
+were captured in this push. Meanwhile the French continued to develop
+their hemming in of Combles, nibbling their way forward, taking
+prisoners and guns, a slow but determined advance that the Germans
+could not restrain.
+
+British guns displayed great activity on Friday, September 22, 1916,
+when they destroyed ten hostile gun pits, damaged severely fourteen
+others, and blew up five ammunition pits. About the same time fifty
+aeroplanes raided an important railroad junction, destroyed several
+ammunition trains, and caused violent explosions and conflagrations.
+
+September 25, 1916, was a notable day in the history of the Allied
+advance in the west, when French and British forces again assumed the
+offensive. The German positions were stormed on a front of about six
+miles between Combles and Martinpuich to a depth of more than a mile.
+The strongly fortified villages of Les Boeufs and Morval with several
+lines of trenches were captured. Morval, standing on a height north of
+Combles, with its subterranean quarries and maze of wire
+entanglements, constituted a formidable citadel of defense. By the
+capture of these villages German communication with Combles was cut
+off. The British took a large number of prisoners and immense
+quantities of war material.
+
+About noon of the same date the French attacked the German positions
+between Combles and Rancourt and the defenses from the latter village
+to the Somme. Rancourt was taken after a sharp struggle, and the
+French lines were advanced to the northeast of Combles as far as the
+southern outskirts of Fregicourt. East of the Bethune road the French
+positions were extended for half a mile, while farther south several
+systems of German trenches were captured in the vicinity of the Cabal
+du Nord.
+
+On the second day of the Allied offensive the French and British
+continued their successful advance. Combles, which the Allied troops
+had been closing in on for some days, was captured. Here an enormous
+quantity of booty, munitions, and supplies which the Germans had
+stored away in the subterranean regions of the place fell to the
+victors.
+
+The subsequent capture of Gueudecourt by the French and British forces
+completed the notable advance of the Allies on September 25, 1916.
+They were now in possession of the ridge that dominates the valley of
+Bapaume, having cleared a stretch of ground on the far side of the
+crest to a distance of half a mile. In the night of September 26,
+1916, the British troops captured Thiepval and the strongly fortified
+ridge east of it, which included an important stronghold, the Zollern
+Redoubt. The British reported the capture of over 1,500 prisoners
+during the two days' fighting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+BRITISH CAPTURE EAUCOURT L'ABBAYE-REGINA TRENCH
+
+
+September 30, 1916, marked the close of the third month of Allied
+fighting in the Somme region. Since September 15, 1916, seven new
+German divisions were brought against the British and five against the
+French. According to reports from British headquarters in France, the
+British troops had engaged thirty-eight German divisions, of which
+twenty-nine had been forced to withdraw in a broken and exhausted
+state. During the three months' campaign the Allied forces captured
+over 60,000 German prisoners, of which number the British claimed to
+have taken 26,735. Besides other war material the Allies recovered
+from the Somme battle fields 29 heavy guns and howitzers, 92 field
+guns and howitzers, 103 trench artillery pieces, and 397 machine guns.
+
+In the afternoon of October 1, 1916, the British troops assaulted the
+double-trench system of the main German third line over a front of
+about 3,000 yards from beyond Le Sars to a point 1,000 yards or so
+east of Eaucourt l'Abbaye. The British troops in the center, directly
+in front of Eaucourt l'Abbaye, were held up by the complicated
+defenses there, but the troops on the right, carrying everything
+before them, swept over the main lines of trench east of the place
+until well beyond it they occupied positions on the north, which they
+held against all German assaults. The center was meanwhile reenforced
+by the arrival of "tanks," which accomplished useful work in clearing
+the trenches; these were then occupied by the British troops. On
+October 2, 1916, German forces succeeded in pressing through a gap in
+the British line, and again occupied trenches before the village,
+while the British continued to hold their positions on the farther
+side, some of which were a thousand yards to the rear of the enemy.
+The following day the British heavily bombarded Eaucourt l'Abbaye and
+drew the cordon tighter around it. October 4, 1916, they assumed the
+offensive, and driving the Germans out of their trenches, filled up
+the gap and entered the town. Eaucourt l'Abbaye, with its old monastic
+buildings furnished with immense cellars, crypts and vaults, offered
+admirable conditions for prolonged defense. More important than the
+occupation of this place was the capture by the British of the
+positions around it with over 3,000 yards of the long-prepared German
+third line. These gains were won by the British troops at considerable
+cost in casualties, while the Germans also lost heavily.
+
+The important part played by the "tanks" in this successful operation
+is worthy of record. One of these machines becoming disabled,
+continued for some time to operate as a stationary fortress. Later the
+"tank" became untenable and the crew were forced to abandon it. While
+this was being done the commanding officer of the "tank" was somewhat
+severely wounded so that he could not proceed. Two unwounded members
+of the crew refused to leave the wounded officer, and for more than
+two days they stayed with him in a shell hole between the lines. While
+hiding in this dangerous position the wounded officer was again struck
+by a bullet, but it was found impossible to get him away until the
+British captured the positions around the town.
+
+There was intermittent shelling of the British front south of the
+Ancre during the night of October 4, 1916. A successful raid was
+carried out by a London territorial battalion in the Vimy area on the
+following day, and an assault on the British trenches east of St. Eloi
+was repulsed. October 6, 1916, was unmarked by any important offensive
+on the part of the belligerents. The Germans continued to shell
+heavily the British front south of the Ancre. Three British raiding
+parties succeeded in penetrating German trenches in the Loos area and
+south of Arras.
+
+An important success was won by the British on the following day,
+October 7, 1916, when Le Sars--their twenty-second village--was
+captured. The Germans evidently anticipated the attack, for they had
+massed a large number of troops on a short front. The town itself was
+held by the Fourth Ersatz Division, and the ground behind Eaucourt
+l'Abbaye by a Bavarian division. The place, though strongly
+fortified, did not offer the resistance that the British troops
+expected. Their first forward sweep carried them to a sunken road that
+ran across the village at about its middle, and a second rush after
+the barrage had lifted brought them through the rest of the place and
+about 500 yards beyond on the Bapaume road. In Le Sars itself six
+officers and between 300 and 400 other ranks were made prisoners by
+the British. The Bavarians between Le Sars and Eaucourt fought with
+stubborn valor and gave the British troops plenty of hard work. Owing
+to the complication of fortified positions, trenches, and sunken
+roads, the ground in this section of the fighting area presented many
+difficulties. To the northeast of Eaucourt the determined pressure of
+the British troops caused the Bavarian resistance to crumble and the
+victors swept on and out along the road to Le Barque. At other points
+the British pierced the German lines and occupied positions midway
+between Eaucourt and the Butte de Warlencourt. To the left, a mile or
+so back, in what was known as the Mouquin Farm region, the British
+troops pushed forward in the direction of Pys and Miraumont, and all
+that part of Regina Trench over which there had been much stiff
+fighting was held by them. German troops had recovered a small portion
+of the front-line trenches they had lost to the north of Les Boeufs.
+In this sector on the night of October 7, 1916, the British guns
+shattered two attempted counterattacks and gathered in three officers,
+170 men, and three machine guns. To the north of the Somme the French
+infantry cooperating with the British army attacked from the front of
+Morval-Bouchavesnes and carried their line over 1,300 yards northeast
+of Morval. During this advance over 400 prisoners, including ten
+officers, were captured, and also fifteen machine guns. Large
+gatherings of German troops reported north of Saillisel were caught by
+the concentrated fire from the French batteries.
+
+In the region of Gueudecourt the British advanced their lines and
+beat off a furious attack made on the Schwaben Redoubt north of
+Thiepval on October 8, 1916. This repulse of the Germans was
+followed by the British troops winning some ground north of the
+Courcelette-Warlencourt road. In two days they took prisoner
+thirteen officers and 866 of other ranks.
+
+[Illustration: General Sir Douglas Haig (left), commanding the
+British armies in France and Belgium, and General Joffre, supreme
+commander of the French armies. In December, 1916, Joffre was made a
+Marshal of France.]
+
+The British continued their daily policy of making raids on the German
+trenches. Several were carried out on October 10, 1916, in the
+Neuville-St. Vaast and Loos regions, where trenches were invaded,
+three machine-gun emplacements destroyed, and a large number of
+prisoners taken. On the same date there was intense artillery activity
+on the Somme between the French and Germans. The French fought six air
+fights and bombed the St. Vaast Wood. To the south of the river the
+French troops took the offensive and attacked on a front of over three
+miles between Berny-en-Santerre and Chaulnes. Here the French infantry
+by vigorous fighting captured the enemy position and certain points
+beyond it. They also captured the town of Bovent, and occupied the
+northern and western outskirts of Ablaincourt and most of the woods of
+Chaulnes. During this offensive more than 1,250 Germans were taken.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONTINUED ALLIED ADVANCE
+
+
+Unceasing activity on the part of the Germans on October 11, 1916,
+showed that the recent successes of the Allies had by no means
+dampened their ardor or impaired their morale. All day long they
+shelled the British front south of the Ancre, especially north of
+Courcelette. Here the Germans attempted an attack, but were caught on
+their own parapets and stopped by the British barrage. Two German
+battery positions were destroyed here by bombing from aeroplanes. Two
+British aircraft engaged seven hostile machines, one of which was
+destroyed and two others were severely damaged. Behind the German
+front British aeroplanes bombed railway stations, trains, and billets,
+losing during these air fights four machines.
+
+In the afternoon of this date, October 11, 1916, the British troops by
+a determined push gained 1,000 yards between Les Boeufs and Le
+Transloy, having gained all the territory they set out to win. The
+advance, which was won at a comparatively small cost, brought the
+British lines within 500 yards of one of the few conspicuous landmarks
+in this desolate region--a cemetery about half a mile from Le
+Transloy.
+
+The English continued to make night raids on the German trenches. Five
+such raids undertaken October 11-12, 1916, in the Messines, Bois
+Grenier, and Haisnes areas were all successful; heavy casualties were
+inflicted on the Germans and a number of prisoners were taken. During
+the day of October 12, 1916, the British attacked the low heights
+between their front trenches and the Bapaume-Peronne road, where they
+gained ground and made captures. On this date the French infantry
+north of the Somme made progress to the west of Sailly-Saillisel.
+South of the Somme French forces took the offensive on October 14,
+1916, delivering an attack west of Belloy-en-Santerre, by which they
+gained possession of the first German line on a front of about a mile
+and a quarter. By another attack they captured the village of
+Genermont and the sugar refinery to the northeast of Ablaincourt. In
+these two attacks nearly 1,000 prisoners were taken, including
+seventeen officers.
+
+On the same date British forces in the neighborhood of the Stuff
+Redoubt and Schwaben Redoubt cleared two lines of German communication
+trenches for a distance of nearly 200 yards. During these operations,
+which were carried out by a single company, the British took two
+officers and 303 of other ranks. In the evening the British advanced
+their lines northeast of Gueudecourt and made further captures of men
+and material.
+
+On Sunday, October 15, 1916, south of the Somme, the Germans made
+desperate attempts to regain the trenches they had lost to the French
+southeast of Belloy-en-Santerre, but the attacks were shattered by the
+French artillery.
+
+French assaults by the German troops were repulsed on the following
+day when the French carried a wood between Genermont and Ablaincourt,
+taking prisoner four officers and 110 of other ranks, as well as a
+number of machine guns. The German aircraft were especially active on
+this day and the French fought seven engagements. In the Lassigny
+sector a German machine hit by French guns fell in flames behind its
+own lines.
+
+The clear weather which prevailed during the day of October 16, 1916,
+tempted British airmen to renewed activity. They bombed successfully
+railway lines, stations, and factories. During the numerous fights in
+the air three German machines were destroyed and one was driven to
+earth, while two kite balloons were forced down in flames. For these
+successful exploits the British paid somewhat heavily. One of their
+machines was brought down by German gunfire and six were missing at
+the end of the day.
+
+Heavy bombardments on both sides, trench raids, and counterattacks,
+which resulted in some successes for the Allied troops, marked the
+following days. On October 21, 1916, the Germans lost heavily in an
+attempt to recover Sailly-Saillisel from the French. Three regiments
+of the Second Bavarian Division recently arrived in this sector were
+shattered one after the other by French curtain and machine-gun fire.
+South of the Somme a brilliant little success was achieved by the
+French north of Chaulnes. Early in the afternoon the French infantry
+after a heavy bombardment of the enemy lines pushed forward and gained
+a foothold in the Bois Etoile which was held by troops of Saxony.
+
+The Chaulnes garrison attempted to come to the support of the Saxons,
+but were driven back by the destructive fire from French batteries.
+Generals Marchand and Ste. Clair Deville, who were wounded in fighting
+in the Somme region, continued to hold their commands and to direct
+the action of the French troops under them.
+
+Early in the morning of October 21, 1916, German troops in
+considerable force attacked the Schwaben Redoubt north of Thiepval
+occupied by the British, and at several points succeeded in entering
+the trenches. But in a short time the British troops by a vigorous
+attack drove them out, capturing five officers and seventy-nine of
+other ranks. A subsequent attack by the British, delivered on a front
+of some 5,000 yards between Schwaben Redoubt and Le Sars, advanced the
+British line from 300 to 500 yards. Sixteen officers and over 1,000
+German prisoners were taken during this operation, while the British
+losses were said to be slight. On this same date British aircraft
+showed great activity, bombing German communications, an important
+railroad junction, and an ammunition depot, while there were several
+air duels in which the British destroyed three machines and drove
+others behind their lines. Two British aeroplanes were not heard from
+again.
+
+In the afternoon of the following day, October 22, 1916, the British
+right wing advanced east of Gueudecourt and Les Boeufs and captured
+1,000 yards of German trenches. On the same day British airmen bombed
+two railway stations behind the enemy's lines, hitting a train and
+working great damage to buildings and rolling stock. The British
+airmen in a series of engagements brought down seven German machines,
+damaging others and forcing them to descend. At the close of the day
+eight British machines were missing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+FRENCH RETAKE DOUAUMONT
+
+
+On October 24, 1916, on the Verdun front a great victory was won by
+the French in the capture of Fort Douaumont. This stronghold, which
+had been termed by the Germans "the main pillar of the Verdun
+defenses," had been captured by the Brandenburgers in the last week of
+February, 1916. The French lost the fort, but they clung desperately
+to the approaches, which for weeks were the scenes of bloody
+struggles. The fort was retaken by the Allied troops on May 22, 1916,
+but after two days of furious bombardment and the attacks of fresh
+German troops they were driven from the place. From that time until
+the French recaptured it on October 24, 1916, it had remained in
+German possession. Shortly before noon of the last date the French
+launched their attack on the right bank of the Meuse after an intense
+artillery preparation. The German line, attacked on a front of about
+four and a half miles, was broken through everywhere to a depth which
+attained at the middle a distance of two miles.
+
+General Nivelle had intrusted the plans for the recapture of Fort
+Douaumont to General Mangin. Artillery preparation began on October
+21, 1916, when the air was clear and favored observation by captive
+balloons and aeroplanes. For two days the fort and its approaches were
+subjected to an almost continuous bombardment of French guns. On
+October 23, 1916, the explosion of a bomb started a fire in Fort
+Douaumont. The shelters covering the quarries of Haudromont were
+destroyed and also the battery at Damloup, while the ravines were
+blown to pieces. Owing to the wide extent of the French attacks the
+Germans seemed to have been in doubt as to the point from which the
+main assault would be launched. Gradually the French "felt out" the
+positions of the 130 German batteries, a great number of which they
+destroyed.
+
+The troops selected by the French for their attack belonged to
+divisions that had been fighting for some time in this sector.
+According to the French official account of the storming of the fort,
+from left to right was the division of General Guyot de Salins,
+reenforced on the left by the Eleventh Infantry. This division was
+made up of Zouaves and Colonial sharpshooters, among them the Moroccan
+regiment which had previously been honored for heroic conduct at
+Dixmude and Fleury, and to whom fell the honor of attacking Fort
+Douaumont. Then came the division commanded by General du Passage,
+consisting of troops from all parts of France. A division commanded by
+General Bardmelle, composed of troops of the line and light infantry,
+came next, and a battalion of Singhalese also took an equal part in
+the attack.
+
+At 11.40 a. m. the attack was launched in a heavy fog. It had been
+planned that the first stroke should take in the quarries of
+Haudromont, the height to the north of the ravine of La Dame, the
+intrenchment north of the farm of Thiaumont, the battery of La
+Fausse-Cote, and the ravine of Bazite. In the second phase, after an
+hour's stop to consolidate the first gains, the French troops were to
+press on to the crest of the heights to the north of the ravine of
+Couleuvre, the village of Douaumont, the fort of Douaumont, the dam
+and pond of Vaux, and on to the battery of Damloup.
+
+The French attack succeeded in carrying out the first phase of the
+plan with insignificant losses, and proceeded almost immediately to
+advance to the second objective. "At 2.30 p. m.," said a French
+eyewitness of the attack, "the fog lifted and the observers could see
+a magic spectacle. It was our soldiers, filing like so many shadows
+along the crest of Douaumont, approaching the fort from all sides.
+Arriving at the fort, they quickly established themselves within, and
+through field glasses could be seen the long column of prisoners as
+they filed out.
+
+"The French Fourth Regiment, charged with taking the quarries of
+Haudromont, went beyond their objective, which was the trench of
+Balfourier. The division under General Guyot de Salins had taken
+Thiaumont and Douaumont, while that of General du Passage had seized
+the wood of Caillette and advanced to the heights of La Fausse-Cote.
+
+"Steadily foot by foot the French infantry pushed on, driving the
+enemy before them and taking 3,500 prisoners on the way, till at last
+after a severe struggle around Fort Douaumont they shot all of its
+defenders who refused to surrender and won it back to France."
+
+In the space of four hours the French had recaptured territory which
+had taken the Germans eight months to conquer at a cost of several
+hundred thousand of their best troops. The Germans explained their
+defeat on the ground that the fog hampered their observation and
+barrage, while the French artillery had set fire to a store of benzine
+in the fort, which forced the garrison to evacuate.
+
+In addition to the fort and village adjoining, the French forces
+captured the Haudromont quarries which had been in possession of the
+Germans since April 18, 1916.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+GERMANS LOSE FORT VAUX--FRENCH TAKE SAILLISEL
+
+
+On the Somme front the operations of the Allied troops were impeded by
+heavy rains, but artillery duels continued daily; the British airmen
+made many raids on enemy positions and were successful in bombing
+depots and railways. October 27, 1916, an aerial combat took place in
+which many machines were engaged. Five aeroplanes fell during the
+fight, two of which were British.
+
+On Saturday morning, October 28, 1916, the British troops carried out
+a successful operation northeast of Les Boeufs, which resulted in the
+capture of enemy trenches. The Germans driven from their position were
+caught by the British rifle fire and lost two officers and 138 of
+other ranks. On the following day the British won another trench from
+the Germans to the northeast of Les Boeufs.
+
+In summing up the gains of the Allies during the month of October,
+1916, it will be noted that they had made steady progress. The British
+forces had won the high ground in the vicinity of the Butte de
+Warlencourt, which brought them nearer to the important military
+position of Bapaume. The French had by ceaseless activity pushed
+forward their lines toward Le Transloy. During four months from July 1
+to November 1, 1916, the Franco-British troops in the course of the
+fighting on the Somme had captured 71,532 German soldiers and 1,449
+officers. The material taken by the Allies during this period included
+173 field guns, 130 heavy guns, 215 trench mortars, and 981 machine
+guns.
+
+[Illustration: Verdun Front, February 1, 1917.]
+
+After the French victory on October 24, 1916, when Fort Douaumont was
+captured from the Germans, it was inevitable that Fort Vaux on the
+same front must also fall, and this took place on November 2, 1916.
+For some days Fort Vaux had been subjected to intense artillery fire
+by the French, and the German commander ordered the evacuation of the
+fortress during the night. It was in defending this stronghold against
+overwhelming odds that the French Major Raynal and his garrison won
+the praise of even their enemies. The German direct attack on the fort
+began March 9, 1916, and for ninety days Major Raynal held it against
+the ceaseless attacks of Germany's finest troops backed not by
+batteries, but by parks of artillery. Only when the fort was in ruins
+and the garrison could fight no longer were the German troops able to
+occupy the work. The French Government marked its appreciation of
+Major Raynal's heroic defense by publishing his name and by conferring
+on him the grade of Commander of the Legion of Honor, a distinction
+usually reserved only for divisional generals. The German Crown Prince
+appreciating Major Raynal's heroic qualities permitted him on his
+surrender to retain his sword.
+
+North of the Somme, despite the persistent bad weather, the French
+troops on November 1 and 2, 1916, captured German trenches northeast
+of Les Boeufs and a strongly organized system of trenches on the
+eastern outskirts of St. Pierre Vaast Wood. By these operations the
+French took 736 prisoners, of whom twenty were officers, and also
+twelve machine guns.
+
+The British forces on the Somme on the night of November 2, 1916, by a
+surprise attack captured a German trench east of Gueudecourt and
+carried out a successful raid on German trenches near Arras. British
+aircraft, which had been actively engaged in bombing German batteries,
+in the course of several combats in the air destroyed two hostile
+machines. On November 4, 1916, the Germans attempted by a
+counterattack to regain the trenches won by the British near
+Gueudecourt, but were driven off with heavy losses, considering the
+number of troops engaged. The Germans left on the field more than a
+hundred dead, and the British captured thirty prisoners and four
+machine guns. British aircraft, which continued to operate despite the
+heavy weather that prevailed, suffered heavily on November 4, 1916.
+One of their machines which had attacked and destroyed a German
+aeroplane was so badly damaged that it fell within German lines and
+four other British aircraft did not return.
+
+German attempts to wrest from the French the trenches they had won on
+November 1, 1916, on the western edge of St. Pierre Vaast Wood were
+unsuccessful, though at some points the German troops succeeded in
+penetrating the lines. But their foothold in the French trenches was
+only temporary, and they were driven out with considerable losses.
+
+On Sunday, November 5, 1916, the French took the offensive south of
+the village of Saillisel, attacking simultaneously on three sides the
+St. Pierre Vaast Wood, which had been strongly organized by the German
+troops. As a result of this spirited attack the French captured in
+succession three trenches defending the northern horn of the wood, and
+the entire line of hostile positions on the southwestern outskirts of
+the wood. At this point the fighting was of the most desperate
+description. The Germans fought with great bravery, making violent
+counterattacks, which the French repulsed with bomb and bayonet, and
+capturing during the operations on this front 522 prisoners, including
+fifteen officers.
+
+The British troops, which had won 1,000 yards of a position on the
+high ground in the neighborhood of the Butte de Warlencourt on
+November 5, 1916, were forced to relinquish a great part of their
+gains when the Germans made a violent attack on the following day.
+
+North of the Somme the French made important advances between Les
+Boeufs and Sailly-Saillisel. To the south on November 6, 1916, in the
+midst of a heavy rain they launched a dashing attack on a front of two
+and a half miles. German positions extending from the Chaulnes Wood to
+the southeast of the Ablaincourt sugar refinery were carried, and the
+whole of the villages of Ablaincourt and Pressoir were occupied by the
+French infantry. Pushing forward their lines they also captured the
+cemetery to the east of Ablaincourt, which had been made into a
+stronghold by the Germans. The French positions were farther carried
+to the south of the sugar refinery as far as the outskirts of
+Gomiecourt. In these successful operations the French captured over
+500 prisoners, including a number of officers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+BRITISH SUCCESSES IN THE ANCRE
+
+
+In the Ancre region the British won some notable victories on November
+12, 1916, when Beaumont-Hamel was taken, which the Germans considered
+an even more impregnable stronghold than Thiepval. The British also
+swept all before them on the south side of the Ancre, capturing the
+lesser village of St. Pierre Divion. The defeats which the British had
+suffered in this region during July of 1916 were amply atoned for by
+these victories. Beaumont-Hamel lies in the fold of a ridge and was
+honeycombed with dugouts and the defenses so cunningly prepared that
+it was extremely difficult for the British artillery to destroy them.
+Under Beaumont-Hamel there is an elaborate system of caves or cellars
+dating from ancient days, and it was the emergence of the German
+troops from the dugouts and these lairs that made the attack of the
+Ulster troops in July unavailing. Attacking simultaneously northward,
+down the nearer slope, and eastward directly against the face of the
+main German line before Beaumont-Hamel, the British troops captured
+the whole position at once.
+
+The entire front on which the British attacked was over 8,000 yards.
+On the right, or east, the advance began from the western end of
+Regina Trench from the British position about 700 yards to the north
+of Stuff Redoubt. From this point a German trench known as the Hansa
+line ran northwestward to the Ancre, directly opposite the village of
+Beaucourt. On the extreme right, north of Stuff Redoubt, to reach that
+trench meant an advance of only a score or so of yards. To the
+westward, above Schwaben Redoubt half a mile, the advance was nearly
+1,000 yards. By St. Pierre Divion, along the valley of the Ancre
+itself, the advance was over 1,500 yards. Everywhere in this sector
+the British troops were successful. They gained in this offensive a
+stretch of 3,000 yards north of the Ancre to an average depth of about
+a mile. The victory of the British troops was especially notable,
+because they had struck frontally at the main German first line with
+tier upon tier of trenches which the Germans had strongly fortified
+and wired for two years past. One English county battalion alone to
+the south of Beaumont-Hamel took 300 prisoners, and in the village
+itself 700 were captured, mostly soldiers from Silesia and East
+Prussia. At the close of the day over 2,000 German prisoners had been
+taken, and the ground won by the British amounted to about four square
+miles. During the night of November 12, 1916, and during the day
+following in the clean-up of the labyrinthian defenses which the
+Germans had skillfully constructed 2,000 more prisoners were added to
+the number already captured in this sector. The British advance had
+brought them to the outskirts of Beaucourt-sur-Ancre, which was taken
+on November 14, 1916. Pushing on through the village to the left of
+it, the British troops advanced over the high ground to the northeast
+of Beaumont-Hamel, on to the road from Serre to Beaucourt, having
+gathered in another thousand prisoners on the way.
+
+During the two days' fighting in this region no British troops won
+greater distinction than the Scots and the Royal Naval Division. In
+all the German lines in France there was no more formidable position
+than the angle immediately above the Ancre, where Beaumont-Hamel lay
+in a hollow of the hill. On the morning of November 13, 1916, the
+Royal Naval Division attacked the stretch from just below the "Y"
+ravine on the south of Beaumont-Hamel to the north side of the Ancre.
+After a preliminary bombardment, which played havoc with the German
+barbed-wire entanglements protecting their front line, the British
+naval troops swept over the line with a rush as if the barriers had
+been made of straw. The British right rested on the Ancre as they
+swept across the valley bottom. Northwest, where there was a rise of
+ground, the center of the line had to attack diagonally along the
+slope of the hill. At the top of the slope there was a German redoubt
+hidden in a curve, and invisible in front, composed of a triangle of
+three deep pits with concrete emplacements for machine guns which
+could sweep the slope in all directions. This formidable redoubt was
+situated immediately behind the German front trench, reaching back to,
+and resting on, the second. At all points the British naval troops
+carried the front trench by storm. On the right they rushed along the
+valley bottom and the lower part of the slope, carrying line after
+line of trench on to the dip where a sunken road ran along their front
+going up from the Ancre to Beaumont-Hamel on the left.
+
+Here for a short space of time the British troops rested while others,
+also of the Naval Division, came up and swept through them on and up
+the slope until they had won a line beyond. After this the first line
+caught up with them again, and they all swept on together in a
+splendid charge that covered a good 1,500 yards and which brought them
+to the very edge of Beaucourt. It was during this operation that a
+British battalion commander was wounded, but continued to lead and
+animate his men during the entire advance.
+
+Meanwhile the British right center was held up by the redoubt. The
+German machine guns, while checking the troops in front of them, also
+swept the ground along the face of the slope to the left.
+
+Here the troops of the Royal Naval Division suffered badly, but they
+continued to advance under the withering fire, winning the first and
+second line trenches, and then, as supports came up on the right,
+braving the machine-gun fire, they pushed on across the dip and sunken
+road up the slope toward Beaucourt. Here all the troops made a
+junction, forming a line on the Beaucourt-Beaumont-Hamel road. Back of
+this line the Germans still held the central parts of the trenches,
+over the two ends of which the British troops had swept. The redoubt
+still remained intact and other important positions were in German
+hands.
+
+On the night of the 13th the British battalion commander who had been
+wounded during the advance gathered together 600 men, all that could
+be spared, from established positions, and with these troops he
+purposed to attempt a farther advance. It was while he was gathering
+these men together that the officer received a second wound, but still
+refused to retire from the field.
+
+At early dawn of November 14, 1916, this officer led his 600 men
+against the village of Beaucourt. In less than a quarter of an hour's
+hand-to-hand fighting the British troops had won the village. When the
+sun shone on the scene of the struggle the British troops were digging
+themselves in on the farther side of Beaucourt. It was only then that
+the brave battalion commander who had successfully led the attack with
+four wounds in his body had to be taken to the rear.
+
+It was on November 14, 1916, in the fighting on the Ancre that the
+Scots won special distinction. Their line in the fighting was just
+above that taken by the Naval Division, and included Beaumont-Hamel
+itself and the famous "Y" ravine. This ravine was such a formidable
+place that it merits a somewhat detailed description. Imagine a great
+gash in the earth some 7,000 or 8,000 yards in total length. In form
+like a great "Y" lying on its side, the prongs at the top projected
+down to the German front line while the stem ran back connecting with
+the road through the dip which goes from Beaumont-Hamel on the north
+to the Ancre. At the forked or western end, projecting down to the
+front, there is a chasm more than thirty feet deep, with walls so
+precipitous that in some parts they overhang. The Germans had burrowed
+into the sides of the earth and established lairs far below the thirty
+feet level of the ravine, where they were practically out of reach of
+shell fire coming from whatever direction. In some instances they had
+hollowed out great caves large enough to contain fully a battalion and
+a half of men. In addition, the thoroughgoing Germans had made a
+tunnel from the forward end of the ravine to their own fourth line in
+the rear. Altogether the position was admirably adapted to sustain a
+long defense and it was owing to the darkness when the British
+attacked, and which took the Germans by surprise, that the stronghold
+was captured. The violent artillery bombardment by the British before
+the attack had battered all the ordinary trenches and positions to
+pieces without effecting any serious damage to the underground
+shelters. Following the bombardment, the Scotch troops broke over the
+German defenses, meeting their only check in the onward rush at the
+ends of the "Y" ravine. On the south of this narrow point, keeping
+step with the Naval Division on their right, they swept across the
+first and second lines to the third. Here there was stiff fighting for
+a time, and when the Scots had struggled forward they left behind a
+trench full of German dead. On the north side every foot of ground was
+contested before the third line was reached, and then from both sides
+the ravine was attacked with bombs. At a point just behind the fork of
+the "Y" the first breach was made, and down the sheer sides of the
+ravine the British troops dropped with bayonet in hand. Then followed
+a stubborn struggle, for the Germans filled both sides of the chasm.
+Bombing, bayoneting, and grappling hand to hand continued for some
+time, the Germans despite their bravery being slowly forced back. At
+this stage of the fighting the British delivered a new frontal attack
+against the narrow bit of the front line still unbroken at the forward
+end of the "Y." As the Germans at that end turned to repel the assault
+the Scotch troops in the ravine rushed forward to be joined presently
+by other British troops that had by this time broken into the ravine,
+when there followed a scene of indescribable confusion. The struggle,
+however, was of short duration, when the Germans, at first singly and
+then in groups, flung down their arms and surrendered. All the Germans
+visible were made prisoners, but it was known that the tunnel and the
+shelters and dugouts contained many men. A shrewd Scotch private who
+had lived in Germany succeeded by strategy in drawing out most of the
+Germans from their hiding places. The canny Scot took a German officer
+who had surrendered, and leading him to suspected dugouts bade him
+order the men inside to come out. This ruse worked happily and at one
+dugout fifty Germans issued forth and surrendered.
+
+While this struggle in the ravine was going on, other Scotch troops
+had swarmed over the German lines higher up, and by noon had taken
+possession of the site--there is no village--of Beaumont-Hamel. The
+place is underlaid with many subterranean hiding places, and it was
+during the process of gathering in the Germans concealed in these
+underground shelters that some extraordinary incidents took place. One
+example of personal bravery at this time must be cited. While the
+fighting was still going on a man of the British Signal Corps was
+running telephone lines up, and had just reached his goal in a
+captured German trench when he was struck down before the mouth of a
+dugout. Just as he collapsed a German officer appeared from the
+depths, and "Signals" could see that there were a number of German
+soldiers behind him. By a supreme effort the wounded man struggled to
+his feet and ordered the officer to surrender. This the German was
+quite ready to do. The Scot then pulled himself together and with his
+remaining strength telephoned an explanation of the situation back
+over the line which he had just laid. Having done this he stood guard
+over the German officer in the opening of the dugout, keeping others
+blocked behind him, until relieved of his charges by the arrival of
+help. As a whole the Scots took over 1,000 prisoners and gathered in
+fifty-four machine guns in the day's fighting.
+
+No doubt the British successes in this area were gained by the
+unexpectedness and dash of their attacks which took the Germans by
+surprise. The foggy weather which prevailed had hampered the Germans
+so that they were unable to observe the movements of British troops.
+
+In the region to the south of the Ancre a relief was going on, so that
+there was double the usual number of Germans in the trenches. The
+relieving division, the Two Hundred and Twenty-third, one of the
+Ludendorff's new formations and going into action for the first time
+as a division, was caught within a few minutes after getting to the
+trenches. Again the "tanks" were found of special service, though
+owing to the heavy mud encountered during the advance they were
+considerably hampered in their movements. At one point north of the
+Ancre a "tank" was useful in clearing the German first-line trench,
+and at another point south of the river one pushed forward and got
+ahead of the British infantry into a position strongly held by the
+Germans who swarmed around it and tried to blow it up with bombs. The
+"tank" stood off the furious assaults until the British infantry came
+up, when it became busy and helped the troops clean up the trenches
+and dugouts in the vicinity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+OPERATIONS ON THE FRENCH FRONT--FURTHER FIGHTING IN THE ANCRE
+
+
+While the British were winning one of their most important victories
+on the Somme on the French front both north and south there was
+continued activity. The whole village of Saillisel, over which there
+had been prolonged fighting, was now in French hands. Heavy attacks by
+the German troops assisted by "flame throwers" were repulsed.
+Southeast of Berny the Germans succeeded in penetrating the French
+trenches, but were thrust out by a keen counterattack.
+
+During the fighting in these sectors the French took 220 prisoners,
+seven officers, and eight machine guns.
+
+North of the Somme the Germans attacked from Les Boeufs to
+Bouchavesnes, evidently with the purpose of forestalling a new French
+offensive beyond Saillisel, which would endanger the left of the
+German line opposed to the British, by the menace of being turned on
+the south. Regiments of the Prussian Guard Infantry Division attacked
+in the forenoon and in the afternoon along the six-mile front. But the
+French forces remained firm and unwavering on both wings, and the
+Germans could gain no headway against their curtain and machine-gun
+fire. Around the St. Pierre Vaast Wood, in the center of the line, the
+fighting reached the greatest intensity. The Germans displayed
+unyielding bravery, and despite very heavy losses succeeded in
+capturing outlying trenches along the western fringe, and in the
+northern corner of the wood. These positions afforded them little
+advantage while Saillisel and the southwest fringe of the wood were
+firmly held by French troops.
+
+South of the Somme from Ablaincourt to Chaulnes Wood, a distance of
+two and a half miles, the Germans pounded the French positions almost
+unceasingly for forty-eight hours. At 6 o'clock in the morning of
+November 15, 1916, the Germans after a final shower of tear shells
+endeavored to drive in their wedge. The main efforts of the attacking
+contingent were concentrated on Ablaincourt and Pressoir. The French
+were quite prepared for the onslaught and the oncoming waves of German
+troops wavered and broke under the fiery storm of French shells.
+Despite their heavy losses the Germans after repeated failures
+succeeded about noonday in rushing the eastern portion of Pressoir.
+Renewing the attack after a short interval, other portions of the
+place were occupied by them. During the night, the small force of
+French troops which had held the village all day against overwhelming
+odds was reenforced, and in the early hours of November 16, 1916, by a
+brilliant counterattack the Germans were swept out of the village and
+the French line was once more solidified. The Germans during two days'
+fighting had displayed conspicuous courage, but the twelve attacks
+they made on Pressoir, where they gained a temporary advantage, cost
+them heavily. Certain regiments, among others the One Hundred and
+Eleventh Prussian, lost 60 per cent. of their effectives.
+
+On November 15 and 16, 1916, the British continued to make gains north
+of the Ancre. One division advanced a mile, and took over 1,000
+prisoners at a cost of about 450 casualties. On November 16, 1916, Sir
+Douglas Haig reported that in twenty-four hours the British had taken
+six German officers and 297 of other ranks. In the afternoon of this
+date the Germans launched a vigorous counterattack, and forced the
+British to relinquish a part of the ground east of the Butte de
+Warlencourt, which had been won on November 14, 1916. During the week
+the British aeroplanes were constantly active and some important
+successes were won over enemy aircraft. On November 16, 1916, two
+junctions on the German lines of communication were bombed, and
+railways and aerodromes were attacked with bombs and machine-gun fire
+by day and night. German aircraft, which had displayed considerable
+activity at this period, fought a number of aerial engagements with
+British flyers with disastrous results to themselves. Three German
+machines were brought down on the British side, and two fell within
+the German lines. The British also drove down five more in a damaged
+condition, while their own losses in these air combats amounted to
+only three machines.
+
+According to the British official report 6,190 Germans had been made
+prisoner during four days' fighting in this sector.
+
+On a front of about a mile and a half the British troops on November
+18, 1916, again forged ahead for an average distance of 500 yards or
+so on the south side of the Ancre. On the north of the river they
+pushed on at daybreak through fast-falling snow until the British line
+was now within three-quarters of a mile to the northeast of Beaucourt
+and 500 yards beyond the Bois d'Holland, which was in British hands.
+The last advance had brought them to the outskirts of Grandcourt and
+here bomb fighting at close range went on throughout the day of
+November 18, 1916.
+
+To the west of this village ran the original main German second line,
+which lower down passed through such famous places as the Stuff and
+Zollern Redoubts. With its parallel lines of trenches and
+complications it was quite as formidable as the main first line
+constructed about the same time two years before. The British had
+already broken through the line up to a point some 600 yards north of
+Stuff Redoubt. On November 18, 1916, their troops again smashed the
+line for a distance of more than 500 yards. The Germans still held
+positions on the line to the south of Grandcourt, but the British had
+penetrated so far to the right and to the left that the line could no
+longer serve as a barrier to the village. The British advance was
+begun about 6 a. m., preceded by a short but fierce bombardment of the
+German line, and which according to the account afterward given by
+prisoners caused the Germans to seek the shelter of their dugouts.
+Troops from the British Isles and Canada who made the advance together
+were among the Germans before the latter could issue from their
+shelters after the withering storm of shells. At different places
+savage hand-to-hand fighting went on in the trenches. On the sides of
+the ravine below Grandcourt, where the slopes were swept by
+machine-gun fire, the British were unable to advance. But for some two
+miles to the right they swept all resistance away. Especially
+important were the British gains on the extreme right, which gave them
+possession of another stage of the descent along the minor spur
+running in a northerly direction. The whole of the south side of the
+Ancre to the edge of Grandcourt was now firmly held by British troops.
+
+In the night of November 21, 1916, after a heavy preparatory
+bombardment by trench mortars, the Germans carried out a successful
+trench raid on British lines south of St. Elie. A considerable part of
+the British front-line trench was demolished by German fire and
+twenty-six British were taken prisoner by the raiders.
+
+The clear weather that prevailed along the Somme front at this time
+encouraged German, French, and British airmen to engage in raiding
+expeditions. On November 24, 1916, British machines attacked and
+routed a formation of twenty German aeroplanes, and held possession of
+the field without losing one machine. At other points the British
+flyers smashed eight German machines and drove several down to earth
+in a damaged condition. In these encounters the British lost three
+aircraft of various types.
+
+In Lorraine three British aeroplanes fought an engagement with a
+considerable number of German machines. The result was that the
+British drove down an enemy machine in the forest of Gremecy,
+remaining masters of the field without incurring any losses
+themselves. On the Somme front there was incessant activity among the
+French airmen, who fought about forty engagements, during which they
+brought down five German machines. Quartermaster Sergeant Flachaire
+destroyed his sixth machine near Manancourt and Lieutenant Doullin his
+tenth south of Vaux Wood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+WEATHER CONDITIONS--MOVEMENTS AROUND LOOS
+
+
+November, 1916, the fifth month of the Battle of the Somme, drew to an
+end with fog and drizzling rain, the whole fighting area a drab
+expanse of mud and pools of water. For two months there had not been
+an interval of more than three or four days of fine weather at a time,
+and the ground had grown steadily more and more water-logged, which
+greatly hampered military operations. Except on the Ancre, where the
+British had taken 7,000 prisoners, no other important victories had
+been won by them, but each day marked some gain, and in the aggregate
+the ground won, the casualties inflicted, and the slow but continuous
+attrition of the enemy were of importance. The British claimed that in
+November alone they had taken prisoner between 9,000 and 10,000
+Germans and had put out of action fully four times as many.
+
+The wastage of the Allies' aircraft in November, 1916, was
+considerably less than in any of the previous four months. In the
+official reports it was definitely stated that 148 British, German,
+and French machines had been brought down. Of this total thirty-two
+British machines were admitted by General Headquarters to have been
+lost or were counted missing. As an offset to these losses the British
+airmen had destroyed twenty-four, captured seven, and brought down
+damaged twenty-six German machines. In addition to these the Royal
+Naval Air Service operating under French military authorities had
+brought down five hostile aeroplanes.
+
+It was claimed by the French that they had destroyed, captured, and
+driven to earth in a wrecked condition fifty German machines.
+Lieutenant Guynemer continued to hold his lead among French airmen,
+having scored in November, 1916, his twenty-third victory. In three
+days of this month he brought down six German aeroplanes. Guynemer's
+victories in the air had inspired other members of the French flying
+corps to fresh deeds of daring, and during November, 1916, Lieutenant
+Nungesser and Adjutant Dorme destroyed their fifteenth and sixteenth
+hostile machines respectively. In the only reports published by the
+Germans during this month it was claimed that they had destroyed or
+put out of action thirty-six hostile machines.
+
+On December 1, 1916, British troops successfully raided German
+trenches south of Armentieres. On the same date the Germans attempted
+a trench raid northeast of Neuve Chapelle which was beaten off by the
+British, who inflicted some losses on the raiders. On the French front
+their airmen were active in bombing enemy positions.
+
+A German attack was made in force on December 3, 1916, after a heavy
+bombardment of the British trenches south of Loos. After a spirited
+struggle the Germans were driven off, having suffered heavy
+casualties. On this same day British aircraft won some important
+successes inside the German lines, when they bombed among other
+objectives a railway station and aerodrome. The British Naval Air
+Squadron also engaged in a number of air combats on this date,
+destroying two German machines and damaging four others.
+
+Heavy bombardments of enemy positions by day and the usual trench
+raids at night continued for more than a week, during which the Allied
+troops registered minor successes, insignificant when considered
+separately, but important in the aggregate. It was not until December
+13, 1916, that any important engagement was fought, when a German
+attack was made on Lassigny, that part of the French front nearest to
+Paris. It was estimated by French headquarters that the Germans had
+brought together for this attack 40,000 troops and had concentrated
+corresponding quantities of artillery. After an intense bombardment of
+the French lines that lasted for some hours the German troops pressed
+forward. If they had hoped to take the French by surprise, they were
+speedily undeceived. The assaulting waves were received by a withering
+fire from the French 3-inch and machine guns that tore great gaps in
+the German close-formed ranks. A barrier of fire thrown to the rear of
+the Germans caught and ravaged the supporting reserves.
+
+The French trenches were reached over a frontage of about 300 yards,
+but an immediate counterattack enabled the French to recapture their
+lines. Only a few survivors of the German attacking column escaped.
+Most of them were killed after a determined resistance. An hour later
+the Germans renewed the assault and again failed. As their reserves
+came up they were easily dispersed by the heavy French artillery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+FRENCH WIN AT VERDUN
+
+
+On December 15, 1916, the French troops won an important victory in
+the region of Verdun, north of Douaumont, when they broke through the
+German lines on a front of six and a quarter miles, extending from the
+Meuse River to the plain of Woevre, penetrating to a depth of nearly
+two miles. In this advance the French troops captured the villages of
+Vacherauville and Louvemont, the fortified farm of Chambrettes, and
+the fortified fieldworks of Hardaumont and Bezonvaux. The results
+gained by the French in this advance compare favorably with General
+Mangin's sensational exploit on October 24, 1916, when Fort Douaumont
+was taken.
+
+The battle began at 10 o'clock in the morning as the church clock near
+by sounded the hour. Immediately every French gun started a storm of
+steel, showering shells immediately behind the German front line.
+While this intense bombardment was at its height, the French infantry
+made a dashing advance and gained the village of Vacherauville, where
+they encountered stubborn resistance. There was hand-to-hand fighting
+from house to house until finally the Germans were driven out,
+resisting every step of the way. Pressing on beyond the village the
+French next attacked an important German trench known as "Bethmann's
+Bowl," which they penetrated after a hard struggle and made the
+defenders prisoners. Next Pepper Hill was attacked, and the two crests
+of this height were won in exactly one hour after a start had been
+made. During this time the Germans on the opposing slope were caught
+in the rear by a French flank movement. Completely taken by surprise
+they attempted to flee when French airmen, dropping their machines to
+within 500 feet of the ground, brought their machine guns to bear on
+the now disorderly crowd of fugitives, and those who escaped the
+devastating fire sweeping down on them at once surrendered.
+
+The French infantry now advanced along the valley behind Pepper Hill,
+and with the aid of a French force that had fought its way through the
+fortified fieldworks of Caurieres Wood took Louvemont by a brilliant
+assault.
+
+In front of Douaumont the French troops made a rapid advance, but in
+Hardaumont Wood their forward movement on the right flank encountered
+stubborn opposition. Fighting continued there until late in the
+afternoon, when the German garrison in Bezonvaux Redoubt, about five
+kilometers beyond the original French line, surrendered.
+
+It was especially encouraging to the Allies that in this impressive
+victory only four French divisions participated, while it was known
+from prisoners taken that the Germans had five divisions in the field.
+
+The French owed much of their success to the daring work performed by
+their aviators. Dozens of airmen dashed here and there, taking
+observations, correcting artillery, and accompanying the infantry's
+advance. At intervals they dashed back to headquarters with detailed
+reports of what was going on, thus keeping the commander in chief in
+close touch with the operations of the troops. The German gunners
+seemed to have become unnerved by the rapidity of the French advance,
+and fired almost at random. They had no assistance from their own
+aviators, who were kept in subjection by the French airmen, of whom
+not one was lost during the day.
+
+The French did not overestimate the magnitude of the victory they had
+won. It compelled the Germans to move back their artillery, which up
+to that time was a source of danger to the French supply depots and
+works on the other side of the Meuse, and also laid open the flanks of
+the French position on Le Mort Homme.
+
+Owing to the swiftness of the advance and the disorganization of the
+German batteries the French losses were comparatively slight. As
+stated in the French official report the total number of prisoners
+taken on December 15, 1916, was 11,387, including 284 officers, and
+115 cannon were captured, with 44 bomb throwers and 107 machine guns.
+This great victory was the last act of General Nivelle before assuming
+the chief command of the French armies on the western front. To this
+officer belongs the credit of drawing up the plan of attack, in which
+he was assisted by General Petain, at that time his superior officer.
+The assault proper was left to General Mangin. The four divisions
+engaged were commanded by such leaders as General de Maud'huy and
+General du Passage.
+
+During the night of December 17, 1916, German troops delivered a
+strong counterattack against the new French positions north of
+Douaumont. By hard fighting they succeeded in forcing the French out
+of the fortified position known as Chambrettes Farm, the farthest
+point which the French attained in their advance on December 15, 1916.
+The Germans were not allowed for long to enjoy their small success,
+for on December 18, 1916, the French returned in force and reoccupied
+the position which they now held intact.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+CANADIANS AT ARRAS--NIVELLE IN COMMAND
+
+
+In the afternoon of December 20, 1916, Canadian troops made an
+important raid on German trenches north of Arras on a front of 400
+yards and succeeded in putting out of action, temporarily at least, an
+entire battalion of German infantry.
+
+The Canadian troops, after the first preparatory fire of the British
+guns had ceased, advanced and occupied the German trenches in less
+than two minutes. The Germans, who had not expected that the raid
+would take place before Christmas Eve, were completely surprised. As
+they hurried for the saps and dugouts leading to the rear trenches,
+the Canadians showered hand grenades among them. Caught entirely
+unprepared, the Germans in the first line offered but a feeble
+resistance, the majority at once surrendering with cries of "Kamerad!"
+Many others were taken as they fled for the second and third lines
+while the Canadians pushed on to the second trenches. About twenty
+dugouts were destroyed, some of them with bombs captured from the
+Germans. In a few of these dugouts the occupants refused to surrender
+and consequently their lairs were blown to pieces. It was estimated
+that 150 Germans were killed during the raid. The Canadians took one
+commissioned officer prisoner and fifty-seven of other ranks.
+
+A British officer engaged in the raid thus describes the struggle
+after the German line was penetrated:
+
+"As we entered the trenches many Germans broke from the dugouts. All
+who did were subsequently well cared for. Each of our men was given
+definite instructions for his precise task and a map of the enemy's
+trenches, which proved absolutely correct.
+
+"Each man knew every detail of the proposed operation. They were
+delighted at this and entered the fight with great cheers. When they
+came out two hours later they were singing and as happy as schoolboys
+on a holiday.
+
+"The neatness and dispatch with which the raid was carried out were
+unique. The artillery cooperation of the British guns was perfection.
+Beautifully placed curtains of fire prepared our advance, and creeping
+forward protected us as they proceeded to demolish absolutely the
+enemy trenches and dugouts. The program had given the men an hour and
+a half for their work, but the clean-up was accomplished in an hour
+and ten minutes, when the raiders signaled that they were ready to
+return to their own trenches."
+
+The Germans did not attempt a counterattack until the following night,
+when they mistakenly bombarded and raided their own first lines,
+believing that the Canadians were still there. As it happened, the
+Canadian troops who had carried out the successful raid were some
+miles away. They were not a part of the fighting line, but on rest,
+and had gone forward for this particular military operation planned
+some weeks before.
+
+During the night of December 19, 1916, British troops made a
+successful raid on German lines in the neighborhood of Gommecourt,
+where after doing considerable damage to the defensive works they
+retired without any casualties. Early in the morning of the following
+day the British made another successful raid on German trenches north
+of Arras, where they captured a number of prisoners.
+
+On the same date, December 19, 1916, a British contingent encountered
+a hostile patrol north of Neuve Chapelle. After a brief, sharp fight
+the leader of the patrol was killed and his men surrendered.
+
+German official reports of this date stated that, west of
+Villers-Carbonnel, Grenadiers of the Guard and East Prussian
+Musketeers forced their way into a strong British position that had
+been destroyed by effective fire, and after blowing up dugouts retired
+to their own lines, bringing away with them four officers and
+twenty-six men as prisoners. The Germans claimed that during various
+air engagements about this time along the Somme they destroyed six
+hostile aircraft.
+
+During the night of December 20, 1916, a strong German raiding party
+attacked the British line opposite Lens, but only a few succeeded in
+penetrating the trenches. After a short struggle these were ejected by
+the British troops and the raiding party was driven off.
+
+Southwest of Armentieres a British raiding party entered German
+trenches and made some prisoners.
+
+On December 21, 1916, the French Government made public the official
+order summoning General Nivelle to the command of the armies of the
+north and northeast and signed by General Joffre. General Castelnau,
+General Joffre's Chief of Staff, having reached the age limit, was
+retained on the active list by a special decree indorsed by the
+President of France, which was preliminary to his appointment to the
+command of an army group.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+GERMAN ATTACKS AT VERDUN--RESULT OF SIX MONTHS' FIGHTING
+
+
+During the night of December 28, 1916, German troops in considerable
+force delivered a spirited attack on a three-kilometer front between
+Hill 304 and Dead Man Hill, northwest of Verdun. The German advance
+was made after an intense artillery preparation. According to the
+official French reports the French infantry and machine-gun fire broke
+the attack, but a trench south of Dead Man Hill was occupied by a few
+German troops. In the account of the attack given out from Berlin it
+was stated that German troops penetrated the third and second lines of
+the French positions, from which 222 prisoners, of whom four were
+officers, together with seven machine guns, were brought back. All
+attempts made by the French troops to regain the captured trenches
+were defeated, the German report stated.
+
+Between the Aisne and the Oise French artillery carried out a
+destructive fire on the German positions in the region of
+Quennevieres. French patrols penetrated the shattered German trenches
+which had been hastily evacuated. All the afternoon of December 28,
+1916, German guns on the left bank of the Meuse bombarded French
+positions between the Meuse and Avocourt. At several points on the
+French front in this sector the Germans made vigorous attacks with
+grenades, but in every instance they were repulsed with considerable
+losses.
+
+During the night of December 28, 1916, a party of British troops made
+a successful raid against German trenches to the east of Le Sars with
+good results.
+
+The closing days of the year were not marked by any important military
+operations on either side. Though no great attacks were attempted, the
+old business of trench warfare being resumed, the opposing forces
+continued to harass and destroy each other at every opportunity. The
+grim object of British, French, and German was to kill wherever shell
+or machine-gun bullet could reach an enemy. This period of "peace" was
+really one of ceaseless activity, and the British distinguished
+themselves in keeping the Germans constantly on the alert. To prevent
+the building of defenses, or smash them when built, to concentrate
+gunfire on communication trenches so as to render them impassable, to
+destroy reliefs coming in or going out, to carry death to the foe in
+ditches and dugouts--in short, to injure him in any way that human
+ingenuity and military science could devise--such were the tactics
+employed by belligerents during the days and nights when in official
+language there was "nothing to report."
+
+Official announcement was made on New Year's Day by the British Prime
+Minister's Department that General Sir Douglas Haig, commander in
+chief of the British armies in France, had been promoted to the rank
+of field marshal. His chief aids on the French front, Lieutenant
+General Sir Henry Rawlinson and Major General Sir Hubert Gough,
+commanding the Fourth and Fifth Armies respectively, were also
+gazetted for promotion.
+
+In reviewing the work of the Allies for the past six months Field
+Marshal Haig made no secret of the fact that he had been forced by
+circumstances to assume the offensive in July somewhat earlier than he
+intended. Had he waited until his munitionment was complete and his
+raw drafts had acquired more experience, the Battle of the Somme might
+not have resulted so favorably to the Allies. The Germans were near
+the outskirts of Verdun and striking hard, and the moral and political
+consequences of the fall of Verdun would have been so serious that it
+was impossible to delay the offensive. Field Marshal Haig stated in
+his summing up that the Battle of the Somme was begun to save Verdun,
+to prevent the transfer of further German reenforcements from the west
+to the Russian or Italian fronts, and to wear down the strength of the
+enemy forces, and that all these purposes were fulfilled.
+
+The brief period of so-called "peace" which had prevailed along the
+Somme during the closing days of 1916 was broken on New Year's Day,
+when a strong German patrol attacked the British trenches north of
+Vermelles. The British troops defending the position having
+foreknowledge of the attack, were quite prepared for a vigorous
+resistance and the Germans were driven off with sanguinary losses,
+leaving a number of dead and wounded on the field. In the evening of
+this date, under cover of a heavy bombardment, a German patrol
+consisting of about forty men made an attempt to reach the British
+lines to the north of Ypres. A few of the German troops succeeded in
+gaining the British trenches, but were ejected after a brief struggle.
+At other points on the front between the Somme and the Ancre the
+British troops started the new year in spirited fashion by carrying
+out effective counterbattery work and heavy bombardment of German
+positions in the neighborhood of Neuve Chapelle and Armentieres.
+
+During the afternoon of January 6, 1917, British troops under cover of
+a heavy bombardment successfully raided German positions southeast of
+Arras, where advancing over a wide front they entered the enemy's
+defenses and penetrated to the third line. Here they succeeded in
+bombing and destroying a number of dugouts and wrought considerable
+damage to the German defensive works. In minor engagements of this
+character the British reported to have taken 240 prisoners since
+Christmas.
+
+French artillery on the Somme front was especially active during the
+first days of the new year. On the night of January 4, 1917, French
+aerial squadrons scattered projectiles on the German aviation field at
+Grisolles and on the railway station and barracks at Guiscard.
+
+A number of explosions and four incendiary fires resulted from these
+attacks by French airmen.
+
+Surprise attacks were attempted by German troops on the French
+advance posts east of Butte du Mesnil in the region of Maisons de
+Champagne. During the day of January 5, 1917, French artillery fire
+dispersed the attackers, who fled from the field, leaving a number of
+prisoners in French hands. The British troops along the Somme
+continued their raids on German positions every night and frequently
+during the day. In the afternoon of January 7, 1917, they attacked a
+German trench south of Armentieres, and after bombing the German
+defenses retired in good order with nineteen prisoners. On the same
+date a German contingent after a preliminary bombardment attempted to
+penetrate British trenches southwest of Wytschaete. The attackers
+evidently expected that their heavy gunfire had demoralized the
+defenders and looked for an easy victory, but they were speedily
+repulsed with considerable losses. Another attempt made under cover of
+a heavy bombardment to seize British advance posts to the north of
+Ypres also met with disaster.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+GERMAN ATTACK ON HILL 304--BRITISH SURPRISE ATTACK
+
+
+Early in the morning of January 10, 1917, small detachments of British
+troops attacked the German lines to the north of Beaumont-Hamel. For
+some days rain and sleet had been falling almost continuously, and the
+battle field in this section of the fighting area largely consisted of
+swamps and miniature lakes. The British troops following the barrage
+fire penetrated the German position on a front of 500 yards. The
+Germans had sought refuge from the withering fire of the British guns
+in their dugouts, which rain and snow and sleet had converted into
+mudholes. The German soldiers were wet and cold and miserable, and
+offered but slight resistance. Three officers, nine non-coms., and 109
+men surrendered to the British--a larger number than the raiding party
+contained.
+
+In the afternoon of January 10, 1917, the British carried out a
+successful raid east of Loos which resulted in the capture of a number
+of prisoners. Throughout the day British guns pounded German positions
+in the neighborhood of Les Boeufs and on both sides of the Ancre
+Valley. Destructive bombardment of German trenches opposite Le Sars,
+and battery positions in the neighborhood of Gommecourt, produced good
+results.
+
+On the following day, January 11, 1917, British troops successfully
+attacked German positions to the north of Beaumont-Hamel. The action
+had some local importance, for the Germans occupied high ground from
+which they had observation of the British trenches.
+
+The British attack was begun shortly before dawn in a dark and heavy
+mist. As the first glimmer of morning light appeared the snow began to
+fall, hiding with a white mantle the miry battle field, in which the
+British troops sank ankle deep as they struggled forward floundering
+here and there in old shell holes. The Germans had not recovered from
+the nerve-shattering bombardment that had preceded the attack when the
+British soldiers were upon them and over their dugouts before they
+could bring their machine guns into play. The majority of the Germans
+did not attempt to fight, but surrendered at once. Some of the German
+officers attempted to rally their men, and, fighting bravely rather
+than surrender, were killed. In the two days' fighting in this sector
+the British captured over 300 prisoners. The German version of this
+attack stated that "an insignificant trench had been abandoned to the
+enemy."
+
+In the night on this date, January 11, 1917, British troops were
+reported to have penetrated German trenches north of Arras, where a
+number of prisoners were taken at the cost of a few casualties.
+
+Early in the morning of January 13, 1917, German troops forced their
+way into a British post northwest of Serre. By a hotly pressed
+counterattack the British drove them out and again occupied the post.
+Thirteen prisoners, including three officers, were captured in this
+area. The British during the night also attacked German trenches west
+of Wytschaete, where they were successful in attaining their
+objectives and captured a number of prisoners.
+
+[Illustration: This notice was posted in French munitions works by
+order of the Minister of Munitions. It contains an aviator's pictures
+of Fort Douaumont before and after the artillery bombardment and
+proves the importance of immense munitions supplies.]
+
+Owing to the almost continuous bad weather, heavy rains, and snowfall,
+there was little fighting along the Somme during the succeeding days,
+but the bombardment of enemy positions was continuous, and the British
+took some prisoners in trench raids.
+
+In the morning of January 17, 1917, British forces on the Ancre
+launched the strongest attack that had been attempted for weeks on a
+front of 600 yards north of Beaucourt. Preceded by a heavy bombardment
+that shattered the German defenses British troops occupied a line of
+enemy posts at the cost of a few casualties. The position won by the
+British was especially valuable because it afforded them better
+advantages than they possessed for observation in this area. In the
+afternoon of this date the Germans attempted a counterattack which was
+broken up with heavy losses by the British artillery barrage.
+
+Another daylight raid was successfully carried out by the Canadian
+troops northeast of Cite Calonne on the same morning. The Canadians
+succeeded in penetrating German trenches on a front of 700 yards and
+pushed forward to a depth of 300 yards, or as far as the enemy's
+second line. The German dugouts were completely wrecked. The British
+report stated that heavy losses were inflicted on the enemy. They
+captured one officer and ninety-nine of other ranks, and several
+machine guns and a trench mortar. In the evening of this date the
+Germans, after three hours of intense artillery fire, delivered a
+series of reconnoitering attacks in Chevaliers Wood on the height of
+the Meuse (Verdun front). The British artillery and machine guns at
+once became active and sent such a withering fire against the Germans
+that they were scattered with heavy losses.
+
+Violent artillery duels continued for several days following, but
+there was no important fighting along the Somme. On January 20, 1917,
+in the region south of Lassigny, the Germans were especially active in
+shelling French positions. They attempted a surprise attack on one of
+the advanced French trenches, but were beaten off. On this date the
+French launched a successful attack against German lines in the Vingre
+sector, where they captured a number of prisoners. In the sector of
+Burnhaupt, in Alsace, the French won a victory in an encounter with
+enemy patrols, and repulsed a strong German reconnaissance which
+attempted to reach French lines in the region southwest of Altkirch.
+
+During the night of January 20, 1917, and most of the following day,
+German and French artillery fought an almost continuous duel on the
+right bank of the Meuse, while patrols of the two armies engaged in
+close and sanguinary encounters in Caurieres Wood. It was during the
+fighting in this region that the British took over twelve miles of the
+French front. French troops, however, still held the line on the
+northern bank of the Somme near Mont St. Quentin, the key to Peronne.
+
+In the morning of January 21, 1917, the British forces made a
+successful raid on German trenches southeast of Loos. It was a short
+but spirited fight while it lasted. The British reported that they had
+bombed and destroyed dugouts full of Germans, while their own losses
+were slight. A number of Germans were made prisoner in this raid, but
+the majority preferred to fight rather than yield, and fighting fell.
+
+In the evening on this date the Germans on the right bank of the Meuse
+(Verdun front) attacked on two different occasions the French trenches
+to the northeast of Caurieres Wood. They made the advance after an
+intense preliminary bombardment, but were unable to reach the French
+position. The accurate fire of the French artillery proved destructive
+and drove them back, and the French were enabled to hold their lines
+without a break. About the same time British troops repulsed a German
+raid on their lines north of Arras. During the night and on the day
+following, January 22, 1917, the British took a number of prisoners as
+the result of patrol and bombing encounters in the neighborhood of
+Grandcourt, Neuville-St. Vaast, Fauquisart, and Wytschaete.
+
+German Army Headquarters reported that on this date the British
+attacked their lines near Lens and in a hand-grenade engagement were
+repulsed with some losses. Near Bezon one of their reconnoitering
+detachments brought back several prisoners and one machine gun from
+short excursions into hostile positions.
+
+In the night of January 22, 1917, the Germans attempted two raids on
+British positions between Armentieres and Ploegsteert. In one instance
+the Germans were driven back before they could reach the British
+trenches. The second party of raiders succeeded in penetrating a
+portion of the British position, but were quickly driven out. The
+raiding party while advancing, and again on returning, came under
+British machine-gun fire and left a number of dead on the field. On
+this date the British lost one aeroplane and drove a hostile machine
+down in the neighborhood of Aubigny. About the same time the French
+reported the capture of a Fokker, which landed in their lines near
+Fismes. Two other German machines were brought down in an aerial
+engagement in the vicinity of Marchelpot, and another by the fire of
+French antiaircraft guns in the direction of Amy.
+
+A new division, and the sixth to enter the fight, was now flung
+against the French with the purpose of cutting through the line and
+covering the German occupation on the southern slope of Hill 304. "The
+blackened stumps of the shell-swept wood," said an eyewitness,
+"offered no protection to the kaiser's legions, and regardless of the
+officers' shrill whistles and brandished revolvers the German soldiers
+flung aside their equipment, rifles, and hand grenades and raced back
+to their former trenches."
+
+During the night of January 26, 1917, French artillery continued to
+pound German lines in the sector of Hill 304. At Les Eparges a
+surprise attack was attempted by German troops that was repulsed with
+considerable losses to the attackers. During the day's fighting in
+this sector the French aviators brought down five hostile aircraft,
+Lieutenant Guynemer scoring his thirtieth victory.
+
+[Illustration: Allies' Gain at the Somme, up to February, 1917.]
+
+In the neighborhood of Transloy on the Somme front British forces
+carried out a successful operation on January 27, 1917. Owing to the
+blizzard weather the Germans evidently did not expect an attack,
+perhaps thinking that the British would remain under shelter as they
+were doing. No unusual preparation seemed to be going on within the
+British lines that would suggest to an outside observer that an
+important military operation was about to be launched. But in the
+British trenches well prepared and organized troops were waiting the
+order to attack. Suddenly the British batteries spoke in thunderous
+tones, showering German trenches and defensive works with shells of
+enormous destructive force. The barbed-wire obstructions before the
+German positions were cut like packthread. The British troops at the
+signal sprang out into no-man's-land following the curtain of fire.
+Sweeping over and around the position, the Germans were trapped in
+their dugouts before they could get up to bomb the invaders or fire
+upon them with machine guns. The whole German garrison of this strong
+position gave up the fight after making but slight resistance.
+
+The prisoners, numbering six officers and 352 men of the Hundred and
+Nineteenth and Hundred and Twenty-first Regiments, the Wuerttembergers
+of Koenigen Olga, who had hardly recovered from the surprise occasioned
+by their capture, were packed into old London busses and were hurried
+to their camp on the British side of the battle field.
+
+The prisoners confessed that they had been caught napping. The British
+gunfire they had believed was simply the usual morning salutation, and
+remained in their dugouts until it was over. They said they would have
+put up a fight if they had had any kind of chance, but taken by
+surprise they could only surrender.
+
+German gunners at other points had by this time observed the red
+lights that went up, the signals of distress, and thus learned that
+the position had been captured. But they were too late in getting
+their guns into action, and the white haze that hung over the scene at
+that early morning hour hindered their observation, so that the feeble
+fire they could concentrate on the captured position did no harm.
+
+The British had pressed on farther than the objective given to them to
+a point 500 yards beyond the German first line, where they established
+themselves, finding the deep warm dugouts much more comfortable than
+the temporary shelters of their own which they had left. Later in the
+day the British troops occupying the most advanced position were
+withdrawn to the ground which had been assigned as the objective in
+the attack. The Germans made different attempts to force them out of
+this position, but all attacks broke down under fire, for the British
+had perfect observation of their movements from the higher ground they
+had won in recent battles in this sector.
+
+On the French front there was active fighting all day long on January
+27, 1917. On the left bank of the Meuse French troops engaged the
+Germans with hand grenades on the eastern slopes of Hill 304. On the
+right bank of the river they made a successful attack against German
+positions between Les Eparges and the Calonne trench. The German
+position was found to be strewn with dead, and a great quantity of
+booty was taken. In Lorraine there were numerous artillery duels in
+the sector of the forest of Bezange. Near Moulainville a German
+aeroplane was brought down in flames by the fire of French guns.
+
+The continued bad weather that prevailed along the Somme and on the
+Verdun front did not hinder the Allies from assuming the offensive
+whenever there appeared to be an opportunity to make even the
+slightest gain. At daybreak on January 28, 1917, British forces
+penetrated German trenches northeast of Neuville-St. Vaast, where they
+successfully bombed the enemy in dugouts and brought away a number of
+prisoners. All day British artillery was active north of the Somme in
+the neighborhood of Beaumont-Hamel, Lens, and the Ypres sector.
+Northeast of Festubert the British carried out a successful raid in
+which they captured an officer and a number of other ranks. The
+British raiders escaped without any casualties. The Germans after an
+intense bombardment attempted to rush a British post east of
+Fauquissart, but were repulsed in disorder.
+
+On this date the French forces also displayed courage and activity in
+carrying out successfully important minor operations at different
+points along the Somme. During the night they entered German positions
+in the sector of Hill 304 on the left bank of the Meuse; artillery
+duels and grenade fighting were almost continuous. In the Champagne,
+and at various places on the front in Alsace, there were numerous
+patrol encounters between the Germans and French in which the latter
+were generally victorious. A German attack made on a French trench at
+Hartmannsweilerkopf was repulsed with heavy losses to the raiders. An
+attempt made by German aviators to bomb the open town of Luneville
+proved abortive. No damage was done and no lives were lost.
+
+The British forces in France did not attempt any offensive during the
+day of January 29, 1917, but at night a successful raid was carried
+out in the neighborhood of the Butte de Warlencourt north of
+Courcelette.
+
+The British penetrated the German trenches and bombed the dugouts,
+destroying a gun and taking seventeen prisoners. East of Souchez
+another British raiding party penetrated German lines and wrecked the
+defenses.
+
+The Germans continued their efforts to drive the French out of their
+positions in the region of Hill 304. On this date, January 29, 1917,
+they made a violent attack with grenades on an advanced French trench
+in this sector, but were repulsed with losses by the French artillery.
+Three German aeroplanes were brought down.
+
+The 30th of January, 1917, was an unimportant day in the fighting in
+France. The British bombarded German positions opposite Richebourg
+l'Avoue, east of Armentieres and Ypres. Between Soissons and Rheims
+the French artillery dispersed two surprise attacks attempted by the
+Germans, one in the sector of Soupir and the other in the region of
+Beaulne (Aisne).
+
+In Lorraine during the night a French detachment penetrated the first
+and second line of German trenches at a point south of Leintrey. The
+defenders of these positions were put out of action and the French
+took about fifteen prisoners. In the region of Moncel another party of
+French raiders successfully carried out a surprise attack on German
+positions.
+
+On this last day of the month the British headquarters in France
+reported that during January they had captured 1,228 Germans,
+including twenty-seven officers.
+
+
+
+
+PART II--EASTERN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE NEW DRIVE AGAINST LEMBERG
+
+
+Coincident with their attempt to recapture Kovel, the Russians
+launched a new drive against Lemberg, the ancient capital of Galicia.
+This movement was a result of the successes which they had gained in
+the Bukowina and in eastern Galicia during July, 1916. By the end of
+that month, as has been previously told, the Russians had reconquered
+all of the Bukowina, overrun some of the most southern passes of the
+Carpathians, and were in possession of that part of eastern Galicia
+located north of the Pruth and Dniester Rivers and east of the Strypa
+River.
+
+Having gained these advantages, they now attempted to press them and
+attacked Lemberg both from the north and from the south. In the former
+direction they advanced from Brody and Tarnopol against the strongly
+held Styr and Bug line. In the south Lemberg was defended by the
+Dniester line. Before forcing this line it was necessary to capture
+Stanislau, an important point on the Czernowitz-Lemberg railway.
+Between the Bug and the Dniester lines of defense Lemberg was secured
+in the east, and still farther by a third line of natural defenses.
+This was formed by a series of northern tributaries of the Dniester,
+of which the most important were the Sereth, Strypa, and Zlota Lipa
+Rivers. The former two had already been crossed by the Russians, but
+there still remained the very formidable and extremely strong line of
+defenses along the last, which had more than once before proved very
+difficult to overcome.
+
+On the Russian side there were engaged in this struggle three army
+groups under Generals Sakharoff, Stcherbacheff, and Lechitsky. The
+Austro-German forces were divided into four groups under Generals
+Puhallo, Boehm-Ermolli, Von Bothmer, and Von Pfanzer-Ballin.
+
+During the first few days of August, 1916, the fighting along this
+entire line, though continuous and severe, was not particularly well
+defined and was more or less split up into comparatively small and
+local engagements. On August 1, 1916, engagements of this nature took
+place southwest of Burkanoff and west of Buczacz. In the latter region
+the ground offered great difficulties. A small but very marshy
+river--the Moropiec--was strongly defended by the Austro-German
+forces, and when these finally had to give way, they destroyed all
+bridges. Nothing daunted, the Russians waded across in the face of
+severe fire and frequently up to their necks in water, gained the
+western bank, and after making some hundreds of prisoners, promptly
+dug themselves in. Other engagements occurred on the same day in the
+Dniester-Pruth sector--in the direction of Stanislau near Wisniowcza
+and Molodgonow.
+
+On August 2, 1916, the Russians developed a strong attack on both
+sides of the railway near Brody against Ponikowica, but were
+unsuccessful. However, the attacks were kept up and by the next day,
+August 3, 1916, yielded not only considerable ground, but more than
+1,000 prisoners. Fighting was kept up in this locality throughout the
+following day. The Austro-Germans launched nine counterattacks, all of
+which were repulsed. The losses on both sides were very severe. For,
+though the Austro-German forces had to give way, they did so only
+after the most stubborn resistance. Every little village had to be
+fought for for hours, and each street had to be cleared at the point
+of the bayonet. Especially severe encounters occurred near Meidzigory
+and Tchistopady. By August 5, 1916, the Russians had registered some
+important successes in this small sector. The number of their
+prisoners had mounted to over 5,000, and a considerable number of
+machine guns and bomb throwers had fallen into their hands. The
+Austro-Germans tried to dislodge their opponents by means of violent
+artillery fire and a series of strong counterattacks, but were
+unsuccessful, and by the end of the fourth day, August 5, 1916, the
+Russians were in possession of the west bank of the Sereth, near and
+northwest of Zalocze, and of the villages of Zvyjin, Ratische,
+Tchistopady, Gnidava, and Zalvoce, and the entire ridge of heights
+between them.
+
+Without let-up the Russians continued to hammer away at the
+Austro-German lines on the Graberka and Sereth Rivers. On August 6,
+1916, the Russian troops captured some more strongly fortified
+positions in the vicinity of the villages of Zvyjin, Kostiniec, and
+Reniuv. This region abounds with woods, and lends itself therefore
+easily to the most determined defense. This resulted again in very
+fierce bayonet encounters. The Austro-German forces attempted to stop
+the Russian advance and launched a long series of very energetic
+counterattacks, especially in the region of the river Koropiec. All of
+these, however, were in vain. They were repulsed and resulted in
+considerable losses. According to their official statement, the
+Russians made about 8,500 prisoners in the Sereth sector on August 5
+and 6, 1916, captured four cannon, nineteen machine guns, eleven
+trench mortars, a large number of mine throwers and much war material
+of all kinds. The amount of ground captured by August 7, 1916, was
+claimed to have reached the considerable total of sixty-one and
+one-half square miles.
+
+Closer and closer the Russians were getting to their immediate
+objective, Stanislau. On August 7, 1916, strong Russian forces
+attacked along a front of about fifteen miles on a line between
+Tlumach and Ottynia and succeeded in forcing back the Austro-Germans
+along this entire front. They forced their way into the town of
+Nizniow (about fifteen miles northeast of Stanislau), which was
+captured, as also were the villages of Bratychuv, Palakhiche,
+Nodworna, Charnolocza, Krovotula, Nove, and the small town of Ottynia,
+and finally the town of Ilumach itself.
+
+In spite of the gradual retirement of the Austro-Germans they
+maintained their counterattacks, which, however, were not successful.
+By April 8, 1916, they had been forced to take their line back to the
+west of Nizinoff-Tysmienitsa-Ottynia, or within a few miles east of
+Stanislau. The Russians on that day crossed the Koropiec, drove their
+opponents out of their fortified positions, and themselves occupied
+the left bank up to the point of its juncture with the Dniester. Late
+on the same day the town of Tysmienitsa was taken as well as a ridge
+of heights to the northeast as far as the right bank of the Dniester.
+The fall of Stanislau now had become only a matter of days.
+
+Throughout the next two days, August 9 and 10, 1916, the battle for
+the possession of Stanislau continued to rage incessantly. One after
+another the Russians overcame all the obstacles in their way. River
+after river was crossed, trench after trench was stormed, and village
+after village was captured. At last, about 8 o'clock in the evening of
+August 10, 1916, the Russians under General Lechitsky entered
+Stanislau from where the Austro-German troops had previously retired
+in good order in a northerly direction against Halicz.
+
+Farther north, in the region of Buczacz and Zalocze, the Russian
+advance likewise progressed, though somewhat slower. Although by
+August 11, 1916, the ground between the Zlota Lipa and the Horovanka
+from the village of Kraseczuv up to the village of Usciezelione had
+been captured, the Russian line had not been able to push quite as far
+west toward Lemberg as in the region of Stanislau. In spite of this
+fact, however, the Russians continued to push their advance. On August
+12, 1916, they occupied Podhaytse on the Zlota Lipa, halfway between
+Buczacz and Brzezany, and Mariampol on the Dniester.
+
+The Austro-German forces continued their stubborn resistance all along
+the line, and every bit of ground gained by the Russians had to be
+fought for very hard. On August 13, 1916, fighting occurred along the
+entire Galician front, from the Dniester up to the upper Sereth. The
+Zlota Lipa was again crossed on that day at some of its numerous
+turnings. After a very stubborn fight the village of Tustobaby,
+northwest of the Dniester, strongly defended by fortifications and
+machine guns, fell into the hands of the Russians. Russian attacks in
+the region of Zboroff on the Tarnopol-Lemberg railroad were repulsed,
+as were also attacks made west of Monasterzyska.
+
+"In addition, there were taken a large number of rifles, 30 versts of
+small-gauge railways, telegraphic materials, and several depots of
+ammunition and engineering materials."
+
+Throughout the next few days the Austro-Germans resumed the offensive
+along the entire line. In spite of this the Russians managed to
+advance at some points. At others they stubbornly maintained their
+ground, and only in a few instances were they forced to yield
+slightly. As the end of August approached the fighting along the
+entire eastern front decreased very much in importance and violence.
+Local engagements, it is true, took place at many points. But the
+result of none of these had any important influence on the respective
+positions of the Russians and Austro-Germans. The latter had lost
+considerable ground during the Russian offensive and, if the Russian
+reports were at all reliable, had suffered even more severe losses in
+men and material. In this respect, however, the Russians had fared no
+better, and possibly even worse. At any rate, neither Kovel nor
+Lemberg, apparently the two chief objectives of the Russian
+operations, had been reached, so that in spite of the Russian gains
+the advantage seemed to rest with the Austro-Germans.
+
+At the same time at which the Russians advanced against Kovel and
+Lemberg the Austro-German forces renewed with increased vigor their
+activities in the Carpathian Mountains, undoubtedly with the object to
+reduce, if possible, the Russian pressure on their Bukowinian and
+Galician positions. To a certain extent the Central Powers met with
+success.
+
+On August 4, 1916, a strong force of about one division, belonging to
+the army group of the then Austrian heir-apparent, Archduke Charles
+Francis Joseph, attacked the Russians in the mountain passes southwest
+of Kutty on the Cheremosh, drove them back in a northeasterly
+direction and captured some 400 men and a few machine guns. Again on
+the next day, August 5, 1916, the Austro-Germans attacked in force,
+this time somewhat farther west on the Pruth River in the vicinity of
+Jablonitza south of Delabin, without gaining any noticeable ground.
+
+On August 6, 1916, the Austro-German successes of August 4, 1916, were
+somewhat extended by the capture of some additional heights on the
+Cheremosh River. For the next few days there was little fighting in
+these regions. But on August 11, 1916, an attack begun the day before
+south of Zabie on the Cheremosh resulted in the capture of about 700
+Russians and a few machine guns.
+
+Gradually this movement spread until on August 14, 1916, the Russians
+saw themselves forced to evacuate Jablonitza on the Pruth, which,
+together with some near-by villages, was immediately occupied by the
+Austro-Germans. Over 1,000 Russians were captured. Additional
+territory was regained by the Austro-Germans in this vicinity on
+August 15, 1916. During the next few days the Russian resistance
+gradually stiffened. In spite of this fact, and in spite of some local
+successes gained by the Russians on August 15, 1916, south of Delatyn
+and north of Kimpolung and again on August 17, 1916, south of
+Jablonitza near Korosmezo, the Austro-Germans continued to gain ground
+and increased the number of their prisoners. On August 19, 1916, the
+Russians reported some additional successes in the Jablonitza sector
+as well as on the Cheremosh and in the neighborhood of Kirlibaba,
+northwest of Kimpolung near the Hungarian-Bukowinian-Rumanian border.
+
+On the same day, however, August 19, 1916, the Austro-Germans occupied
+some heights south of Zabie, which they succeeded in holding against
+strong Russian attacks launched on the same day, as well as on August
+20 and 21, 1916. During the balance of August, 1916, the fighting in
+the Carpathian Mountains deteriorated as a result of the new
+developments farther south on the Rumanian border in a number of small
+local engagements. The results of none of these had any particular
+influence on the general position of either side, and in most
+instances amounted to little more than fighting between outposts. The
+only exception was the fighting in the neighborhood of Nadvorna, a
+few miles south of Stanislau, where the Russians in the face of
+stubborn resistance made some slight advance toward the Hungarian
+border, from which they were, on August 29, 1916, still some twenty
+miles distant.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE BATTLE ON THE STOKHOD RIVER
+
+
+In preceding chapters we have learned of the successful onslaught
+which the Russians made against the Austro-German lines during the
+months of June and July, 1916. Along the entire southern part of the
+eastern front--from the southern base of the Pinsk salient down to the
+Austro-Russo-Rumanian border--the troops of the Central Powers had
+been pushed back many miles.
+
+From June 4, 1916, to August 1, 1916, the Russians had regained some
+15,000 square miles in Volhynia, Galicia, and the Bukowina. Lutsk,
+Dubno, and Czernowitz were some of the valuable prizes which had
+fallen into the hands of the czar's armies. At the beginning of
+August, 1916, they now threatened the important railway centers of
+Kovel and Lemberg, the latter the capital of Galicia.
+
+In defending the former the Austro-German armies had made a determined
+stand on the banks of the Stokhod River. This bit of water has its
+origin some ten miles west of Lutsk, from which point it winds its
+tortuous course for about one hundred miles in a northerly direction
+toward the Pripet River, of which it is a tributary. Its northern part
+flows through the Pripet Marshes. Its southern part, up to about the
+village of Trojanovka, forms a salient, with its apex on an almost
+straight line drawn between Kolki on the Styr and Kovel on the Turiya.
+This salient, as well as the part of the Stokhod between the southern
+base of the salient and its origin, formed a valuable and very
+formidable natural line of defense for Kovel against any attacks from
+the northeast, east, and southeast. Here the Austro-Germans had thrown
+up strong defensive works and were resisting with all their might.
+
+On August 1, 1916, the most furious kind of fighting took place in the
+Stokhod sector. By that time the Russian attack, begun a few days
+before, had made considerable progress, so that the Russians were at
+some points some few miles west of the river. Time and again the
+Russians heavily attacked the German-Austrian lines. In most places,
+however, the latter not only held, but were even strong enough to
+permit of repeated powerful counterattacks. This was especially true
+in the region of the bend of the Stokhod near the villages of
+Seletsie, Velitsk, and Kukhari. Very heavy fighting also developed at
+many points north of the Kovel-Sarni railway. Near the village of
+Smolary the Russians attacked three times, but were thrown back as
+often, and between Witoniez and Kiselin six Russian attacks followed
+each other in rapid succession, encountering the most stubborn
+resistance.
+
+Without abatement the Russians threw themselves against their
+opponents' lines in this sector on the following day, August 2, 1916.
+But the Germans protected themselves with such a well-directed and
+furious curtain of artillery fire that the czar's troops could make no
+further progress in spite of exceedingly heavy losses. Again Witoniez
+and Kiselin were the center of desperate fighting which gradually
+spread to the forest near Ostrow, north of Kiselin, and to the region
+near the villages of Dubeschovo and Gulevitchie.
+
+As the fighting progressed it became more and more evident that the
+Austro-German command had determined to make a stand at the Stokhod at
+any cost. The special correspondent of the London "Times," observing
+the fighting from the Russian side, described its furiousness and the
+ever-increasing resistance of the Austro-Germans as follows:
+
+"From an observation point eighty feet above the ground in the swaying
+foliage of a huge oak, a few versts distance from the battle field, I
+obtained an extraordinary view of the country and of the Russian
+artillery preparation. The country here is as flat as a board and
+marshy, with the slow-flowing Stokhod oozing in the midst of beds of
+water lilies. The difficulties of an advance are almost incredible,
+yet our troops forded the river in places, passing mazes of barbed
+wire sunk in the water.
+
+"The cannonading continues day and night, at times reaching such
+violence that it is impossible to distinguish sounds; it is simply a
+continuous roar like thunder. At night the whole sky is illuminated by
+bursting shells, searchlights, and star bombs. The town is filled with
+wounded."
+
+During the night of August 3 to 4, 1916, the stiffening of the
+Austro-German defensive found expression in a series of very violent
+German attacks against the village of Rudka-Miryanskaia, which formed
+a very strong salient in the Russian positions. This little hamlet--it
+is hardly more than that--is situated on the river Stavok, a tributary
+of the Stokhod. Austro-German forces advanced from three sides.
+Throughout the entire night the fighting for the possession of this
+point was kept up. Attack after attack was repulsed by the Russians.
+But in the early morning hours the latter were forced to evacuate the
+village and to retreat more than 500 yards to the east. A few hours
+later reenforcements arrived and the Russians once more gained
+possession of the village, in the streets of which the sanguinary kind
+of hand-to-hand fighting raged for hours. As a result the
+Austro-German forces were finally thrown back beyond the river Stavok.
+Before long, however, fresh Austro-German troops launched new
+counterattacks and regained most of this territory, holding it
+thereafter in the face of a number of violent Russian counterattacks.
+
+Considerable fighting occurred likewise on August 3, 1916, both
+somewhat farther north and south of this position. In the former
+direction Russian detachments crossed the Stokhod at some points near
+Lubieszow and occupied a series of heights, where they fortified
+themselves strongly. To the south Ostrow again was the center of
+bitter engagements, which, however, yielded no definite results.
+
+By this time, August 10, 1916, it had become more or less evident that
+the Russian drive against Kovel had been stopped by the
+Austro-Germans. For a few days now a comparative reduction in the
+violence of the fighting in the Stokhod sector set in.
+
+Local attacks, however, as well as counterattacks continued even
+during this period near Lubieszow and Zarecze, especially on August 11
+and 12, 1916. Gradually, and concurrent with increased activity on
+other parts of the eastern front, engagements in the Stokhod sector
+became fewer and less important.
+
+On August 18, 1916, however, the Russians somewhat renewed their
+activity. The first sign was increased artillery fire at various
+points. This was quickly followed by local attacks near
+Rudka-Czerwiszce, Szelwow, and Zviniache. Especially noticeable was
+the increase in Russian activity in the neighborhood of the first of
+these three places, where the village of Tobol, after having changed
+hands repeatedly, was finally occupied by the Russians. The latter
+were successful on August 17, 1916, in crossing the Stokhod in this
+vicinity at a point where they had previously been unable to make any
+progress. On the other hand, they were forced to evacuate some of
+their positions east of Kiselin.
+
+Both on August 20 and 21, 1916, the Russians attempted to enlarge the
+success which they had gained near Rudka-Czerwiszce. In this, however,
+they were not successful, encountering the strongest kind of
+determined resistance and suffering considerable losses. Local
+engagements at various points on the Kovel-Sarni railroad and in the
+neighborhood of Smolary likewise terminated in favor of the
+Austro-German forces. During the balance of August, 1916, fighting on
+the Stokhod was restricted to moderate artillery fire, local infantry
+engagements, and extensive reconnoitering operations, carried on now
+by one side, now by the other, without, however, yielding any
+important results or changing to any extent the respective positions.
+
+While the Russians were developing their attack against Kovel the
+balance of the eastern front was comparatively inactive with the
+exception of the Galician and Bukowinian sectors. The fighting which
+occurred there had as its object the capture of Lemberg and developed
+soon into a struggle of the first magnitude. It will be described in
+detail in the following chapter.
+
+North of the Stokhod occasional local engagements occurred from time
+to time. Thus the Germans gained a slight local success on August 1,
+1916, near Vulka on the Oginsky Canal to the northwest of Pinsk. On
+the same day considerable fighting took place near Logischin and on
+both sides of Lake Nobel, both in the same vicinity. The fighting on
+the banks of the lake continued during the next few days, but bore no
+important results.
+
+Smorgon, the small but important railroad station on the Vilna-Minsk
+railway, just southwest of the Vilia River, which so many times before
+had been the center of furious fighting, again was made the scene of
+attacks on the night of August 2, 1916. At that time the Germans
+launched gas attacks on both sides of the railway. The attack opened
+at 1 o'clock in the morning and the gas was released six times with
+intervals between the waves. The gas attacks finished at 6 a. m. The
+use of gas was discovered in good time, with the result that the
+Germans, who were following the attacks, on attempting to advance,
+were met with rifle and machine-gun fire and suffered severe losses.
+
+On August 3, 1916, considerable activity was displayed in the vicinity
+of Lakes Narotch and Wiszniew. The Russians there attempted to advance
+against the German field positions near Spiagla, but were promptly
+thrown back. Farther north the Germans gained some slight local
+successes by capturing a few advanced Russian trenches northwest of
+Postavy. At some other points, especially on the Shara, southeast of
+Baranovitchy, the railway center east of Slonin, lively hand-grenade
+battles occurred.
+
+On the following day, August 4, 1916, the Russians made an attempt to
+cross the Dvina near Deveten, a few miles northwest of Dvinsk, but
+were repulsed. Another similar undertaking, attempted August 8, 1916,
+east of Friedrichstadt, met the same fate. On that day German
+batteries successfully bombarded Russian torpedo boats and other
+vessels lying off the coast of Kurland and forced them to retire.
+
+August 10 and 11, 1916, brought a series of small, local attacks
+launched by the Russians south of Lake Wiszniew, near Smorgon and
+Krevo. They were all repulsed. These attacks were renewed on August
+12, 1916, bringing, however, no better results. On August 13, 1916,
+considerable fighting took place in the region of Skrobiowa and along
+the Oginsky Canal, south of Lake Wygonowskoie.
+
+A lively local engagement developed on August 16, 1916, west of Lake
+Nobel in the Pripet Marshes, about sixty miles northeast of Kovel. The
+fighting lasted throughout August 17 and 18, 1916, and finally
+resulted in a repulse for the Russians, who lost some 300 men and a
+few machine guns.
+
+A gas attack, launched by the Germans during the night of August 22,
+1916, in the region south of Krevo, a little town north of the
+Beresina River and about fifty miles southeast of Vilna, brought no
+results of importance. The same was true of an attack against Russian
+trenches south of Tsirin, northwest of Baranovitchy, made after
+considerable artillery preparation on August 24, 1916.
+
+Toward the end of August, 1916, the Russians again attempted at
+various times to cross the Dvina. In no case, however, were they
+successful. Even when they succeeded in launching their boats, as they
+did on August 26, 1916, near Lenewaden east of Friedrichstadt, they
+were driven back by the German fire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+RENEWED DRIVE AGAINST LEMBERG
+
+
+In spite of the temporary setback which the Russians experienced at
+the end of August, 1916, in their attempt to reach and capture once
+more Galicia's ancient capital, Lemberg, they were undaunted.
+
+With the beginning of September, 1916, the vigor of their attacks
+increased noticeably. On September 1, 1916, Russian attacks were
+launched against the Austro-German lines east of Lemberg from all
+directions. They were especially strong and violent in the vicinity of
+Zlochoff and Halicz. In both these regions the Russian troops were
+successful in advancing after capturing a number of positions. Without
+abatement fighting continued on the next day, both before Halicz and
+Zlochoff. In spite of the most fierce attacks, many of which were made
+at the point of the bayonet, the Russians on September 2, 1916, were
+unable to advance.
+
+The fighting on September 3, 1916, was centered chiefly around
+Brzezany and Zboroff. In both localities the Russians claimed
+successes and reported large numbers of prisoners. Again, on September
+4, 1916, Brzezany was the center of much fighting. Attack after attack
+was launched by the Russians and thrown back by the Austro-Germans. On
+the following day, September 5, 1916, the Russian persistency finally
+found its reward. Although Russian attacks near Zlochoff broke down
+under the Austro-German fire, other attacks between the Zlota Lipa and
+the Dniester resulted in the pressing back of the Austro-German
+center. Throughout the next few days the Russians continued to hurl
+attack after attack against the Austro-German lines, stretching, to
+the west of Lemberg, from Brody to Halicz. The regions near Zlochoff,
+Zboroff, Brzezany, and Halicz, and especially that small strip of
+country lying between the Zlota Lipa and the Dniester, were witnesses
+of some of the most stubborn and sanguinary fighting which even this
+blood-drenched corner of unhappy, war-swept Galicia had seen.
+
+Again and again the Russian regiments would sweep up against the
+strongly fortified and strongly held Austro-German lines, after
+gunfire of unheard-of violence had attempted to prepare their task.
+But though occasionally they made some advances, stormed some
+trenches, or by the very violence of their attacks forced back the
+Austro-Germans, the latter, generally speaking, held their ground.
+
+Some very interesting sidelights are thrown on the fighting near
+Halicz by the special correspondent of the London "Times," Stanley
+Washburn, who writes from the Russian lines about the middle of
+September, 1916, as follows:
+
+"Our troops are now but a few hundred yards from Halicz railway
+station, and just across the river from the town.
+
+"Fighting has been going on on this army front almost without
+intermission since August 31, and has resulted in the capture of
+25,000 prisoners, of whom 8,000 are Germans, and twenty-two guns, some
+of them heavy guns.
+
+"The most significant, observation one makes on coming to this front
+after two months with the more northern armies is the complete
+reorganization of the Austrian front since the beginning of the
+offensive in June. It was then held by six Austrian divisions and one
+German. It is now held with a slightly extended front by fragments of
+nine German divisions, two Turkish divisions, and three and a half
+Austrian divisions. Of the Austrian divisions originally here three
+have been completely destroyed, and two have departed, one for the
+Rumanian front and another is missing.
+
+"The composition of the German forces here shows the extraordinary
+efforts the Germans are making to bolster up the Austrian cause and
+preserve Lemberg. The only German division here at the inception was
+the Forty-eighth Reserve Division. Last July there came from the
+Balkans the Hundred and Fifth German Division, and at the same time
+the Hundred and Nineteenth from our Riga front. Subsequently two
+regiments of this division were sent to Kovel. Now one of these has
+been hurried back here. The Ninety-fifth and the Hundred and
+Ninety-ninth Divisions came in August, and within the past few days
+the Hundred and Twenty-third Division arrived from the Aisne and the
+Two Hundred and Eighth from the Somme. In addition there are present
+here a fragment of the First Reserve Division and of the Third
+Prussian Guard Division.
+
+"The Turkish troops, which came several weeks ago, consist of the
+Nineteenth and Twentieth Divisions, which last year opposed the Allies
+at the Dardanelles. They have been fighting with extraordinary
+fierceness.
+
+"The immense efforts being made by the Germans to hold this front and
+to make sweeping movements, become increasingly difficult, and the
+campaign here promises to become similar to that in the west, where
+the enemy's lines must be slowly digested mile after mile."
+
+With the beginning of October, 1916, the Russians once more began
+their drive against Lemberg. On the last day of September, 1916, the
+Russians advanced short distances along both sides of the
+Brody-Lemberg railroad, as well as farther south, near Zboroff, until
+they were stopped by the curtain of fire directed against them from
+the Austro-German lines. Still farther south, along both sides of the
+Zlota Lipa, violent hand-to-hand encounters occurred. In the angle
+between the Tseninoka and the Zlota Lipa the Russians also advanced
+and gained a foothold in the first line of the Austro-Germans.
+
+The latter immediately launched strong counterattacks on October 1,
+1916, which resulted in the recapture of some of the lost ground,
+especially along the Brody-Lemberg railroad. By October 2, 1916, the
+battle for Lemberg was again in full swing all along the line from
+Brody down to the Dniester, and the Russians succeeded in advancing at
+some points on the Zlota Lipa. Without diminution the battle continued
+on October 3, 1916. But so stubborn was the Austro-German resistance
+that the Russians, in spite of the most violent assaults, were unable
+to make any noticeable progress, except in the neighborhood of Brody
+and Zboroff, as well as on the Zlota Lipa. Not only were infantry
+attacks kept up for two full days, but the most lavish expenditure of
+shells resulted in the most stunning artillery fire. No changes of any
+importance, however, occurred in the positions of either side. The
+same condition continued on October 6, 1916. On October 7 and 8, 1916,
+the fighting in this region had slowed down to a considerable extent,
+except in the vicinity of Brzezany where a series of attacks and
+counterattacks took place without having any definite result for
+either side.
+
+Throughout the following week up to October 15, 1916, little of real
+importance occurred in the Lemberg sector. Engagements, some of them
+more nearly deserving the name "battles," were frequent at many
+points, but barren of results. Gradually, however, the artillery fire
+from both sides increased in violence, a sure sign of new attacks. On
+October 14, 1916, coincident with the new Austro-German offensive in
+the Carpathians, the Russians again attacked in force near Zboroff,
+while the Germans attempted an advance south of Halicz. These
+undertakings gradually developed, and by October 15, 1916, the battle
+was again raging furiously all along the line east of Lemberg.
+Especially on the western bank of the Narayuvka, a few miles north of
+Halicz, strong Austro-German forces were employed and began to gain
+ground slowly. This small success was gradually increased during the
+following days, and on October 19, 1916, additional ground was gained
+in this section. The Austro-Germans claimed to have captured over
+2,000 men and held their newly regained positions against a number of
+strong counterattacks. This success was again enlarged on October 20,
+1916.
+
+The fighting for complete control of the west bank of the Narayuvka
+continued on October 21 and 22, 1916, and by that day the Russians had
+been forced to give up all their positions. This greatly improved the
+Austro-German positions before Halicz. This, in conjunction with the
+severe losses, which the Russians had suffered, resulted in a
+reduction of fighting and, at least for the time being, the Russian
+attempts to reach Lemberg ceased. During the balance of October
+nothing of importance happened in the Lemberg sector of the eastern
+front, although the Russians attempted a number of times during the
+last two days of the month to recapture the positions which they had
+lost on the Narayuvka.
+
+These attempts were renewed on November 1 and 2, 1916, with equal lack
+of success. Engagements in this region which occurred on November 3,
+1916, gave a few additional Russian positions to the Austro-Germans.
+For the rest of November, 1916, the vicinity of the Narayuvka was
+frequently the center of minor actions between comparatively small
+detachments. Similar engagements occurred at various other points on
+the Lemberg sector, and in some instances were preceded by heavy
+artillery fire. The net result of all this fighting made practically
+no change in the relative positions, except that it gave an
+opportunity to the Austro-Germans to strengthen their positions near
+Halicz and to bar the way to Lemberg more efficiently than ever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE FIGHTING FROM RIGA TO LUTSK
+
+
+Just as the Russians maintained their attacks against Lemberg, they
+continued their drive against Kovel, farther north, in September,
+1916. On the first of that month fierce fighting occurred east and
+south of Vladimir Volynsky, about twenty-five miles south of Kovel. On
+the Stokhod Austro-German counterattacks near the village of Tobolo,
+about forty miles northeast of Kovel, likewise resulted in fierce
+engagements. On September 2, 1916, strong Russian attacks were
+launched northeast and southeast of Sviniusky. At one time these
+resulted in the capture of the village of Korytniza, which, however,
+had to be given up again by the Russians when the Austro-Germans
+commenced a dangerous outflanking counterattack.
+
+The fighting in this region continued for that entire week, September
+3 to 9, 1916. Neither side could gain any noticeable advantage. No
+matter how often and how violently the Russians threw themselves
+against the Austro-German lines on the Stokhod, the latter held as
+they had done before so often. In isolated places the Austro-Germans
+even assumed the offensive. But in that respect they were not any more
+successful than their opponents.
+
+[Illustration: Attack in the Riga Sector.]
+
+On September 9, 10, and 11, 1916, the Russians launched a series of
+very fierce attacks, carried out by strong forces against Bavarian
+troops, holding part of the Stokhod line near Stara Czerwiszcze. Again
+and again they came on in wave after wave. But neither great numbers
+nor the most extensive artillery fire had any effect, as far as
+gaining ground was concerned. The losses on both sides, however, were
+appalling. By the middle of September, 1916, the fighting in the Kovel
+sector lost noticeably in violence. On September 16, 1916, however,
+the Russians again attacked west of Lutsk over a front of about twelve
+miles. Though they suffered severe losses, they could not overcome the
+Austro-German resistance, and for the balance of the month of
+September, 1916, comparative quiet reigned along the Kovel sector of
+the eastern front.
+
+Simultaneously with their renewed efforts against Lemberg the Russians
+began once more to drive against Kovel, with the beginning of October,
+1916. On October 1 and 2, 1916, the most stubborn fighting developed
+west of Lutsk in the neighborhood of Zaturze, Zola Savovskaia, and
+Shelvov. In some places Russian troops stormed twelve times against
+one and the same position, and at one point they made seventeen
+attacks. These attacks were kept up for a number of days, but met with
+little success, and by October 5, 1916, comparative calmness prevailed
+on the Volhynian sector.
+
+However, on October 8, 1916, the battle west of Lutsk, in the
+direction of Vladimir Volynski, broke out once more in full fury. On
+that day the Russians gained some slight successes at a few points,
+which they lost, however, again on the following day. During the next
+few days a number of smaller engagements occurred at many places west
+of Lutsk, near Kiselin and along the Stokhod. These were only
+forerunners of a new drive against Kovel which was begun on October
+14, 1916.
+
+On that day the Russians captured some trenches near Korytniza, forty
+miles south of Kovel. These were held against many violent
+Austro-German counterattacks, although the latter were kept up for a
+number of days. By October 18, 1916, a new battle had developed in the
+neighborhood of Kiselin, and fighting also was renewed more vigorously
+on the Stokhod. In the latter region the Austro-Germans regained some
+ground which they held against strong counterattacks. By October 20,
+1916, activities on the Volhynian front had slowed down to an exchange
+of artillery fire of varying intensity and to minor engagements of
+local extent and little importance. This condition continued
+throughout the balance of October, 1916, except that during the last
+few days the Russian artillery fire along the entire Stokhod line,
+especially just west of Lutsk, increased greatly in violence.
+
+Throughout November, 1916, only a few actions of real importance took
+place in the Kovel sector. Most of these occurred on the Stokhod,
+where the Austro-Germans succeeded in improving their positions at
+various points. The Russians seemed to be satisfied everywhere to
+maintain their positions and to repulse as violently as possible all
+Austro-German attempts to press them back. The most important
+engagement in this sector most likely occurred on November 9, 1916, in
+the region of Skrobova, near Baranovitchy, where the Central Powers
+attacked along a front of about two and one-half miles and inflicted
+heavy losses on the Russians.
+
+Throughout the entire period of the Russian offensive against Kovel
+and Lemberg comparative quiet reigned in the northern half of the
+eastern front. Of course there, as well as everywhere else, continuous
+engagements occurred. But they were almost all of a minor character,
+and in most instances amounted to little more than clashes between
+outposts or patrol detachments. On September 2, 1916, the Germans made
+a somewhat more pretentious attack against some Lettish battalions of
+the Russian army near Riga. The latter retorted promptly by a strong
+counterattack which inflicted severe losses. On September 3, 1916, the
+Russians repulsed a strong German gas attack.
+
+During the balance of September, 1916, comparatively little of
+importance occurred along the northern half of the eastern front
+between Riga and the Styr. On September 6, 1916, the Russians crossed
+to the western bank of the Dvina, north of Dvinsk, drove the Germans
+out of their trenches along a short stretch and captured these
+positions. On the next day the Germans promptly attacked these
+positions, first with artillery and then with infantry, but were
+unable to dislodge the Russians. On September 12, 1916, the Russians
+made a number of attacks north of Dvetnemouth and near Garbunovka, but
+were repulsed. A similar fate was suffered by a series of massed
+attacks, preceded by a gas attack, which were undertaken by the
+Germans on September 22, 1916, southwest of Lake Narotch.
+
+The month of October, 1916, brought little of moment on the northern
+half of the eastern front. Of course, local engagements occurred at
+various places almost continuously, but most of them were little less
+than fights between outposts of patrols. On October 12, 1916, the
+Germans suddenly attacked Russian trenches near the village of
+Goldovitchy, on the western bank of the Shara, north of the Pripet
+Marshes. A few isolated gas attacks were attempted by the Russians in
+the same vicinity on October 24 and 25, 1916. The latter was
+reciprocated by an infantry attack, carried out by a small German
+force on October 26, 1916, which had no result. A similar attack made
+against the Russian positions just south of Riga was equally
+unsuccessful.
+
+During November, 1916, practically nothing of importance happened
+anywhere along that part of the eastern front which stretches from
+Riga to the Styr. Occasional attacks by small infantry groups were
+made by both sides, but resulted in no actual change in the relative
+positions. At other times artillery duels would take place, varying in
+duration and intensity, and having likewise no result of real
+importance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+FIGHTING IN THE CARPATHIANS
+
+
+Accompanying the renewed Russian efforts against Lemberg and Kovel in
+the beginning of September, 1916, fighting broke out again with
+greater vigor in the Carpathians. Numerous local engagements took
+place on September 1, 1916, none of which, however, brought any
+successes to the attacking Russians. They were more successful on the
+following day, September 2, 1916. South of Rafailov, in the region of
+Kapul Mountain and also near Dorna Vatra, the Austro-Germans lost some
+strongly fortified positions and the Russians thereby captured some
+heights. Considerable fighting also occurred on both banks of the
+Bystritza near the Rumanian border. These successes were somewhat
+extended by the Russians on September 3, 1916. On the following day
+small engagements developed southwest of Zabie and in the region of
+Shypoth. Strong Russian attacks were repulsed with heavy losses
+southwest of Fundul Moldowi. Finally, on September 5, 1916, these
+continuous Russian attacks lasting day and night somewhat undermined
+the Austro-German resistance and resulted in a slight Russian advance
+along the entire line of attack.
+
+On September 6, 1916, the Russians attacked southeast of Zielona,
+about thirty-five miles southwest of Stanislau, and on the Bagaludova
+west of the Kirlibaba Valley, on the border between the Bukowina and
+Hungary. Both of these attacks were repulsed. The Austro-Germans
+promptly replied with counterattacks near Zielona and west of Shypoth
+on September 7, 1916. The Russians registered some successes on the
+following day, September 8, 1916, west and southwest of Shypoth as
+well as near Dorna Vatra. On the same day the Austro-Germans were also
+forced to retreat northwest of Mount Kapul, a neighborhood in which
+more or less fighting had been in progress ever since July, 1916. This
+mountain peak is about 5,000 feet high. Again on September 9, 1916,
+the Russians gained some ground west of Shypoth after attacking at
+many points in the southern Carpathians. The heights east of the Cibo
+Valley, about three miles west of Mount Kapul and just within the
+Hungarian line, were also occupied by Russian forces.
+
+Attacks again occurred in the Mount Kapul sector on September 10 and
+11, 1916. On the latter day the Russians finally succeeded in
+capturing Mount Kapul, after first having occupied a ridge to the
+north of it. Almost 1,000 prisoners as well as some machine guns and
+mortars fell into their hands. This success apparently encouraged the
+Russians to other efforts in this territory.
+
+On September 12, 1916, they attacked in the Carpathians along the
+entire line from Smotrych, southwest of Zabie, to the Golden
+Bystritza, without, however, making any headway.
+
+Part of the position on Mount Kapul lost by the Austro-Germans on
+September 11, 1916, was recovered on the fourteenth. To the west, in
+the Cibo Valley, the fighting continued, but here too, as along the
+balance of the eastern front, fighting gradually slowed down during
+the rest of September, 1916.
+
+During the first half of October, 1916, fighting in the Carpathians
+was of a rather desultory nature. Neither side, though frequently
+undertaking local engagements, registered any noticeable successes.
+Suddenly on October 14, 1916, simultaneously with the increased vigor
+shown by the Russians in Volhynia and Galicia, the Central Powers
+launched a violent offensive movement along the entire Carpathian
+front, from the Jablonica Pass down to the Rumanian border, on a front
+of some seventy-five miles.
+
+Especially heavy fighting occurred near Kirlibaba, in the Ludova
+sector, and south of Dorna Vatra. In the latter region the Russians
+were thrown back over the Negra Valley. These early successes,
+however, led to nothing of importance. After October 15, 1916, up to
+the end of the month only local engagements took place. By that time
+weather conditions in the Carpathians had become too severe to permit
+of any extensive operations.
+
+Just as on the other parts of the eastern front the Carpathian sector
+showed comparatively little activity during the month of November,
+1916. Only at one point, in the region south of Dorna Vatra, did there
+occur an action of somewhat greater importance. The Russians there had
+gradually gained some ground by a series of small engagements. About
+the middle of the month the Austro-Germans launched a strong
+counterattack and regained all the ground, inflicting at the same
+time heavy losses on the Russians. At other points occasional
+artillery duels took place, and at many places small local engagements
+between outposts and patrol detachments occurred almost daily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+WINTER AT THE EASTERN FRONT
+
+
+With the beginning of December, 1916, the severity of the cold weather
+became so pronounced that activities at the eastern front had to be
+reduced to a minimum by both sides. During the first week of December,
+1916, considerable fighting, however, continued in that part of the
+Carpathians just north of the Rumanian border, especially in the
+vicinity of Dorna Vatra and Kirlibaba. This, too, gradually decreased
+in violence, and during the second week of the month only minor
+engagements between outposts and the usual trench activities occurred.
+
+On December 17, 1916, the Germans, after considerable artillery
+preparation, started a more extensive offensive movement in the
+vicinity of Great and Little Porsk, about twenty-one miles southeast
+of Kovel. After considerable fighting, lasting all afternoon,
+nightfall put a temporary stop to this undertaking. It was, however,
+renewed during the early morning hours of the following day, and as a
+result the Germans occupied small portions of the Russian positions.
+These were held against a number of Russian counterattacks made during
+the following days. Minor engagements also occurred on December 16,
+17, and 18, 1916, near Kabarowce, northwest of Tarnopol; in the
+Jezupol region of the river Bystrzyca between Stanislau and the
+Dniester; southwest of Vale Putna in the extreme south of the
+Bukowina; on the Narajowka River near Herbutow, about ten miles north
+of Halicz; and near Augustowka south of Zboroff.
+
+During the balance of December, 1916, nothing of importance happened
+at any part of the eastern front, except that on December 25, 1916,
+the Germans violently bombarded the Russian positions in the region
+between Brody and Tarnopol in Galicia and farther south on the
+Narajowka south of Brzezany.
+
+The first few days in January, 1917, brought little change on the
+eastern front. Engagements between small detachments occurred daily at
+a number of places. None of these was of any importance.
+
+On January 23, 1917, the Germans after extensive artillery preparation
+launched an attack with considerable forces against the positions
+which the Russians had recently gained along the river Aa. Though
+meeting with stubborn resistance they were successful, and captured
+not only considerable ground, but also some 1,500 prisoners. The
+Russians were forced to retire about a mile and a half toward the
+north. During the next two days, January 24 and 25, 1917, they were
+forced back still farther. These gains the Germans were able to hold
+in the face of strong Russian counterattacks made on January 26 and
+27, 1917, though they were unable to extend them.
+
+During the last four days of January, 1917, engagements along the
+entire front increased occasionally in number and violence. On January
+28, 1917, Russian troops attacked positions held by Turkish troops
+near the Galician village of Potutory, some seven miles south of
+Brzezany. At the point of the bayonet the Turks were forced to yield,
+and in spite of a number of counterattacks the Russians maintained
+their success. Fighting on January 29, 1917, was restricted chiefly to
+the vicinity of the river Aa, where the Germans again made some slight
+gains. This was also the case on January 30, 1917, when the Germans
+with the assistance of extensive artillery bombardments and a series
+of gas attacks captured some more Russian positions as well as about
+900 prisoners and fifteen machine guns.
+
+On the last day of January, 1917, practically nothing of any
+importance occurred at any point of the eastern front, the whole
+length of which was that day in the grip of ever-increasing cold.
+
+
+
+
+PART III--THE BALKANS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+RUMANIA'S MILITARY STRENGTH
+
+
+Finally the military power of Rumania was of enough consequence to
+warrant the greatest exertions on the part of diplomats to obtain its
+active support. With a population of close to 7,000,000, the little
+state could throw a respectable army into the field. In 1914 her
+infantry numbered well over a quarter of a million, her cavalry close
+up to 20,000, while her equipment included 600 modern cannon and 300
+machine guns. Aside from this there was a considerable reserve to draw
+from. By the middle of 1916, just before she entered the war, it was
+estimated by good authorities that the Rumanian army numbered at least
+600,000 men under arms and that about an equal number could still be
+counted on in the reserves. In theory at least, it was a well-trained
+army. The artillery of all classes numbered about 1,500 guns, but
+there was a marked shortage of really powerful cannon. The horse and
+field artillery were armed with Krupp quick-firers of 3-inch caliber,
+and the heavy and the mountain guns were from the Creusot works in
+France. The infantry was armed with the Austrian Mannlicher rifle, but
+of these arms Rumania possessed barely enough to arm her 600,000 men.
+
+Shortly before she definitely made her decision, this stock of arms
+was considerably augmented by shipments from France and England, and
+even from Russia, but on account of the fact that they must be shipped
+by a dangerous sea route and then across Russia, the time of transit
+covering six weeks, she was probably not very well supplied with
+ammunition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+HOSTILITIES BEGIN
+
+
+The first news of the actual fighting was given to the world through
+an official Austrian communique, dated August 28, 1916, announcing
+that, during the preceding night, the Rumanians had begun a determined
+attack on the Austrian forces in the Red Tower Pass and the passes
+leading to Brasso. On the following day another report added that the
+attempted invasion had become general and that the Imperial troops
+were resisting attacks in all the passes along the whole frontier.
+But, added the report, everywhere the Rumanians had been successfully
+repulsed, especially near Orsova, in the Red Tower Pass, and in the
+passes south of Brasso. In spite of these successes, however, the
+Austrians were compelled to retire their advanced detachments to a
+position prepared in the rear, as planned long before, because
+overwhelming forces of Rumanians were attempting a far-reaching
+flanking movement. As a matter of fact, the Austrians, never very
+determined fighters, and now especially demoralized by the recent
+success of the Russian offensive under Brussilov, were giving way all
+along the line before the Rumanians under General Averescu. On the
+same day a Rumanian official report gave a long list of villages and
+towns which the Rumanians had taken beyond the frontier, their Fourth
+Army Corps also having taken 740 prisoners. Within two days Averescu
+had advanced so rapidly that he was in possession of Petroseny, north
+of the Vulkan Pass, and of Brasso, beyond Predeal Pass. His troops
+were pouring through the Tolgyes and Bekas Passes up in the north in
+steady streams, and were advancing on Maros Vasarhely, a military base
+and one of the principal towns of central Transylvania. The Rumanians
+advancing by way of Gyimes, after a sharp encounter with the
+Austrians, had driven the latter back to the heights east of
+Csikszereda, a point over twenty miles inside the Austrian frontier.
+Finally, spirited fighting was taking place in the Varciorova Pass on
+the Danube, and here too the Austrians made a very poor showing.
+
+Then on the last day of the month came the announcement from Bucharest
+that Russian forces had arrived on Rumanian soil and were already
+crossing the Danube over into Dobrudja, their left wing on the Black
+Sea coast being protected by ships of the Russian fleet. The commander
+of this force was General Zaionchovsky, who, together with his staff,
+had been welcomed in Bucharest by a throng of the enthusiastic
+inhabitants, women and children hurling bouquets of flowers on the
+Russians as they passed through the streets. Another peculiar feature
+of this event was the organization of a brigade of Serbians, interned
+soldiers who had escaped into Rumanian territory during the invasion
+of their country the year previously. These now became a part of the
+Russian contingent. Meanwhile in the north the Rumanians and the
+Russians had also joined forces, and on August 29, 1916, Berlin
+officially announced that the German-Austrian forces in that section
+had been attacked by the Russo-Rumanians in the Carpathians.
+
+On the Danube the Austrian river fleet showed some activity. A monitor
+shelled Varciorova, Turnu Severin, and Giurgevo, situated on the
+Rumanian bank, and some small craft were captured at Zimnita. On the
+other hand, the Rumanians were reported to have begun a general
+bombardment of Rustchuk, an important Bulgarian port on the river. And
+on the night of the 28th the fact that the nation was at war was
+brought home to the citizens of the capital by an aeroplane and a
+Zeppelin, which sailed over the city dropping bombs, but doing very
+little harm. During the following month such raids were to be almost
+daily occurrences, and many were the women and children killed by the
+bombs hurled down from above.
+
+On the 1st of September, 1916, came the announcement of a really
+striking victory for the Rumanians: Orsova, where heavy fighting had
+been raging since the first hour of the war and in which the Austrians
+were daily claiming success, was finally taken. Here the Austrians
+held a strong position, against which the Rumanians had hurled one
+assault after another, until they succeeded in taking two heights
+overlooking the town, each over a thousand feet high and thus forced
+the defeated enemy over the Cserna River, a northern branch of the
+Danube. This success caused some sensation, for now it appeared that
+the way was opening for an offensive across the southern portion of
+Hungary which should sever the Teutons and the Magyars from their
+Bulgarian and Turkish allies.
+
+Badly beaten as they had been by Brussilov, the Hungarians and the
+Austrians were now considerably shaken. Again, Germany was called on
+to come to the rescue, as she had done before on the eastern front and
+in Serbia. Nor could the Germans afford to overlook the call, for
+there had been much agitation in Hungary for a separate peace. Indeed,
+Germany had for some time been preparing to relieve the situation as
+subsequent events conclusively proved. On the following day, September
+2, 1916, her first blow was struck.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+BULGARIA ATTACKS
+
+
+Up to this time the Rumanians had hoped, perhaps, even believed, that
+Bulgaria would refrain from attacking in Dobrudja. Not a word had come
+from Sofia indicating that Bulgaria intended to begin hostilities. But
+on this day, September 2, 1916, a strong force composed of Bulgarians,
+Turks, and Germans, which had been quietly mobilizing behind the
+Bulgarian frontier, hurled itself over into Dobrudja and threw back
+the weak Rumanian guards. The force with which this blow was delivered
+was understood a few days later, when it was learned that Germany had
+sent her best field commander, General Mackensen, to direct operations
+in this zone.
+
+This territory is of a nature entirely different from the scene of the
+fighting along the eastern and northern borders of Rumania. Dobrudja
+forms a square tract of level country, about a hundred miles long and
+sixty broad, lying just south of the delta of the Danube and along the
+Black Sea coast. The larger part of it is marshy or low, sandy plain.
+Here the Danube splits into three branches, only one of which, the
+Sulina, is navigable. Two railroads traverse this country; the one
+running from Bucharest to Constanza, an important seaport; another
+branching off from this line below Medgidia, running down to Dobric,
+thence over the frontier into Bulgaria. The former was of special
+importance to the Rumanians, as it was the only line of communication
+between Rumania and any Rumanian force that might be operating in
+Dobrudja. It crossed the Danube over a bridge and viaduct eleven miles
+in length, forming the only permanent crossing over the river below
+the bridge at Belgrade. This structure ranks as one of the big
+engineering works in the world, its cost being close to $3,000,000. It
+consists, first of a bridge of three spans, 500 yards in length, then
+follows a viaduct eight miles in length, resting on piers built on
+islands, and finally comes a bridge 850 yards in length, of five
+spans, crossing the main channel of the river, which here is a hundred
+feet deep in places. Such is the famous Cernavoda Bridge. Toward this
+important point Mackensen's first move was obviously directed.
+
+On September 3, 1916, a Rumanian dispatch announced that Mackensen was
+attacking in full force along his front below Dobric and that he had
+been repulsed. But as developed within twenty-four hours Mackensen was
+not repulsed. On the contrary, he was advancing, as was shown the next
+day when he had extended his lines to a point eight miles northwest of
+Dobric, while the full length of the frontier was well within his
+front. On the following day, the 4th, Dobric was attacked and easily
+taken, and the combined forces of Bulgarians, Turks, and Germans
+hurled themselves against the outer fortifications protecting the
+south end of the bridge at Tutrakan. Fortunately for the Rumanians
+they were now reenforced by a considerable body of Russians, and the
+Bulgarians were temporarily checked, the heaviest fighting taking
+place in the neighborhood of Dobric. But the Rumanians and the
+Russians were plainly outnumbered, at Dobric they were gradually
+pressed back, while at the bridgehead they were severely defeated. At
+this latter point the enemy showed his vast superiority in artillery,
+which he had concentrated here for the purpose of demolishing the
+fortifications. After nearly a dozen assaults, each following a
+furious artillery preparation, the Bulgarians finally, on September 6,
+1916, drove the Rumanians back and took the fort. It was at this point
+that the German and Bulgarian dispatches claimed that 20,000 Rumanians
+were taken prisoner, but dispatches from Bucharest stoutly denied
+this. However, as was admitted later, the total losses of the
+Rumanians could not have been much less.
+
+After the fall of Tutrakan the Russo-Rumanian forces, under the
+command of General Aslan, retired northward, and a lull came in the
+fighting on this front which lasted almost a week. On the 8th Silistra
+too was evacuated by the Rumanians after a spirited defense by the
+small garrison. When the news of these reverses became known to the
+people of Bucharest little depression was shown, for the operations
+against the Austro-Hungarians were continuing successfully for the
+Rumanians.
+
+In spite of the fact that the Austro-Hungarians had had two years'
+experience of warfare, and that the Rumanians were new to actual
+fighting, the former made very poor resistance. With comparative ease
+the Rumanians advanced beyond Brasso and took Sepsiszentgyorgy and
+forced the Austro-Hungarians to retreat west of Csikszereda. On the
+8th the Rumanians announced themselves in possession of Toplicza, San
+Milai, Delne, and Gyergyoszentmiklos, while in the sector between
+Hatszeg and Petroseny they were pressing the enemy severely. Nowhere
+did the Austrians make any serious resistance: they retreated, as
+slowly as possible, under the protection of rear-guard actions,
+yielding over 4,000 prisoners to the advancing Rumanians, as well as a
+great deal of railroad rolling stock, cattle, and many convoys of
+provisions. That they were expecting the assistance which was
+presently to come to them from the Germans seems obvious from the
+fact that they did not destroy the railroad or its tunnels or bridges
+as they retired; they apparently felt certain of returning. The
+peasantry, on the other hand, burned their houses and crops in those
+sections where the population is Magyar, then fled toward Budapest,
+which was beginning to fill with refugees. In those sections where the
+Rumanians were numerous the people, according to the Rumanian
+dispatches, welcomed the invaders with frantic enthusiasm.
+
+The victorious Rumanians continued toward Hermannstadt, taking
+Schellenberg on the way. Here a Hungarian army had been defeated in
+1599 by Rumanians under Michael the Brave. Hermannstadt, however,
+marked the high tide of Rumanian victory. At this point the resistance
+of the enemy began suddenly to stiffen. And then came the report that
+the Rumanians were observing German uniforms among the opposing
+forces. Again Germany had come to the rescue. On September 13, 1916,
+the first German troops to arrive on the scene came in contact with
+the Rumanians southeast of Hatszeg near Hermannstadt. Within two days
+the Rumanians were no longer able to gain ground, though for some time
+longer they sorely pressed their enemies.
+
+Meanwhile, Mackensen in Dobrudja was showing extreme activity. The
+lull which followed the retirement of the Rumanians from Tutrakan was
+suddenly terminated on the 12th, when the Bulgarians and their allies
+attacked Lipnitza, fifteen miles east of Silistria. Here the Rumanians
+resisted furiously, and after an all-night fight they severely
+repulsed Mackensen's troops, taking eight German guns. However, this
+was only a temporary advantage. Some days later the German kaiser, in
+a telegram to his wife, announced that Mackensen had gained a decisive
+victory in Dobrudja. While this phraseology is perhaps a little too
+strong as a description of the situation at that date, the fact was
+that the Rumanians and the Russians were again forced to retire
+northward. According to the German reports the retreat was a
+disorderly flight, but the absence of any reports indicating a large
+capture of prisoners or material would indicate that the Germans
+exaggerated their success. At this moment a new loan was being
+launched in Germany, and it was natural that the military situation
+should be somewhat warmly colored.
+
+On September 17, 1916, the Rumanian dispatches indicated that the
+Russo-Rumanian forces in Dobrudja had fallen back to a line reaching
+from Rasova, south of Cernavoda some ten miles to Tuzla, twelve miles
+south of Constanza. Thus the situation was quite grave enough.
+Meanwhile, some days before, General Averescu, who seemed to have been
+doing so well on the Hungarian front, was sent to Dobrudja, in the
+hope apparently that his superior abilities would save the situation.
+He arrived on the 16th, together with considerable reenforcements
+which had been drawn from the northwest, where the Russians were
+supporting the Rumanians. Further Russian contingents had also
+arrived, and on the following day, the 17th, Averescu turned suddenly
+on Mackensen and gave him determined battle. This was the heaviest
+fighting which had so far taken place in this section. Again and again
+Mackensen hurled his Bulgarians and Turks against the Russo-Rumanian
+lines, first battering them with his huge cannon. At Rasova, on the
+Danube, his attacks were especially heavy. Had he taken this point he
+would have been able to flank the Rumanians at Cernavoda, capture the
+bridgehead there and so cut all communication between the Rumanians in
+Dobrudja with Rumania itself. The battle raged until the 19th all
+along the line, with no definite advantage to either side. But on that
+day reenforcements came to Averescu. That night he began to advance.
+The mightiest efforts of Mackensen's forces were unable to check him.
+At dawn the Bulgarians began to retreat, setting fire to the villages
+through which they retired. In this battle the Rumanians were plainly
+victorious. No doubt they were in superior numbers, for Sarrail's
+offensive in Macedonia had grown extremely formidable and the
+Bulgarians had been compelled to rush down reenforcements from the
+Dobrudja front. At any rate, Mackensen was forced to retreat until he
+established his re-formed lines from Oltina, on the Danube, to a
+point southwest of Toprosari, thence to the Black Sea coast, south of
+Tuzla. For the time being the Rumanians were much elated by their
+success. But, as time was to show, it was merely temporary.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE GERMANS ARRIVE
+
+
+The center of interest in the campaign now became the Hungarian front.
+As has already been stated, by the middle of the month the arrival of
+German reenforcements had checked the advance of the Rumanians, and
+now the situation along this front assumed an aspect not quite so
+encouraging to the Rumanians. Some little progress was still made in
+this direction in the third week of the month; after a few slight
+engagements the Rumanians occupied Homorod Almas and Fogaras, the
+latter a town of some importance halfway between Brasso and
+Hermannstadt. During these operations nearly a thousand prisoners were
+taken. Finally, on the 16th, they reached Barot, dominating the
+railroad between Brasso and Foeldvar, some thirty miles beyond the
+frontier.
+
+Meanwhile German troops had reenforced the Austrians at Hatszeg, in
+the valley of the Streiu. Here on the 14th a pitched battle was begun
+in a mountain defile, which lasted two days and resulted in the defeat
+of a force of Magyars. On the 18th General von Staabs, commanding a
+large force of German troops, attacked the Rumanians in the Hatszeg
+sector, and after a very hot fight thrust them back. And at about the
+same time German forces began attacking the Rumanians in the Gyergyoi
+Havosok and Kalemen Hegyseg ranges of the Carpathians.
+
+On the 21st a Berlin dispatch announced that the Teutonic forces had
+carried the Vulkan Pass and cleared it of the enemy. On the following
+day, however, the Rumanians were still fighting at this point and
+three days later forced the Teutons back and reconquered the lost
+territory, as well as the neighboring Szurduk Pass. By the 28th they
+had recovered ten miles of lost ground within the Hungarian frontier,
+driving the Austrians and the Germans before them.
+
+[Illustration: Teutonic Invasion of Rumania.]
+
+A month had now passed since the outbreak of hostilities and the
+Rumanians were still holding a large conquered territory, nearly a
+third of Transylvania, or about 7,000 square miles of country. They
+were in complete occupation of four out of fifteen administrative
+departments and a portion of five others. Up to this time 7,000
+prisoners had been captured. Meanwhile large forces of Germans
+continued arriving and reenforcing the enemy's lines, and now the
+determination of the Germans to devote their best energies to the
+punishment of Rumania was indicated by the fact that this northern
+army was under the command of General von Falkenhayn, formerly chief
+of the German General Staff.
+
+On September 26, 1916, the Germans began their first really serious
+advance, the point of attack falling on the Rumanians near
+Hermannstadt, about fifty miles northeast of Vulkan Pass. For three
+days the Rumanians made a heroic resistance against a great
+superiority in men and heavy cannon on the part of the enemy. On the
+third day the Rumanians found themselves entirely surrounded, their
+retreat through the Red Tower Pass being cut off by a column of
+Bavarian Alpine troops who had scaled the mountain heights and
+occupied the pass in the rear. Rendered desperate by this situation,
+the Rumanians now fought fiercely to escape through the ring that
+encircled them, but only a comparatively few succeeded in reaching
+Fogaras, from which town another Rumanian force had been trying to
+make a diversion in their favor. In this action, according to German
+accounts, the Rumanians lost 3,000 men, thirteen guns, ten
+locomotives, and a quantity of other material. This battle, called by
+the Germans the Battle of Hermannstadt, enabled them to occupy again
+the Red Tower Pass. On October 1, 1916, they had continued beyond this
+pass and were attacking a Rumanian force south of it, near Caineni, on
+Rumanian territory. Thus, with the first of the new month the
+Rumanians were on the defensive in this region.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+THE RUMANIAN RAID ACROSS THE DANUBE
+
+
+On the following day general attention was again attracted toward the
+Dobrudja by a feat on the part of the Rumanians which for the moment
+gave the impression that she was about to strike the enemy an
+unexpected and decisive blow. A day or two before a Turkish and a
+Bulgarian division had been severely repulsed near Toprosari, south of
+Tuzla. Immediately there succeeded a general assault along the entire
+line to which Mackensen had retreated on the 20th, but though thirteen
+guns were captured, he did not again give ground.
+
+Suddenly, on the morning of October 2, 1916, the Rumanians threw a
+pontoon bridge across the Danube at Rahova, about halfway between
+Rustchuk and Tutrakan, and well in the rear of Mackensen's line.
+Before the small Bulgarian forces stationed at this point were aware
+of what had happened they were completely overwhelmed by the
+Rumanians, who were streaming across the bridge. All the villages in
+the neighborhood were seized and for twenty-four hours it was expected
+that Mackensen was about to suffer a sensational repulse. But
+apparently the Rumanians lacked the forces necessary for the
+successful carrying out of what would have been a brilliant stroke, or
+possibly the Bulgarian forces which appeared here against them were
+larger than had been expected, for the next day they announced that
+the force which had been thrown across the river had again retired,
+unharmed, the object of its demonstration having been accomplished.
+According to the Bulgarian accounts their retreat was forced because
+of the appearance of an Austrian monitor, which began shelling and
+destroying the pontoon bridge, and that before the retreat had been
+completed the bridge had been destroyed and a large remnant of the
+Rumanian force had been captured or killed. In general, however, the
+fighting during these first few days of the month gave neither side
+any advantage, and again the situation calmed down to comparative
+inactivity.
+
+That the retirement of the Rumanians was well ordered is shown by the
+fact that even the Berlin dispatches claimed very few prisoners, in
+addition to a thousand taken at Brasso, while the Austro-Germans had
+lost considerably over a thousand. On the 6th Fogaras had been
+relinquished. North and east of Brasso the Rumanians had also
+retreated. On the 8th Berlin announced that "the entire eastern front
+of the enemy was in retreat." This was, in general, quite true, except
+that for a few days longer they still held their positions in the
+valley of the Maros.
+
+Aside from the advantage in his superiority of numbers, Falkenhayn
+also had at his disposal the better railroad accommodations. A line
+running parallel with almost the entire front enabled him to shift his
+forces back and forth, wherever the contingencies of the situation
+made them needed most. By the 12th he was facing the Rumanians in the
+passes. Heavy fighting then began developing at Torzburg, Predeal, and
+Buzau Passes. Finally the Rumanians were forced back toward Crasna on
+the frontier. A critical moment seemed imminent. Averescu, who had
+defeated Mackensen, was now recalled from the Dobrudja and sent to
+take command of the Rumanian forces defending the passes behind
+Brasso.
+
+By the middle of the second week of October, 1916, the Rumanians had
+lost all the territory they had taken, except a little in the
+northeast. The German-Austrian pressure was now heaviest in two areas:
+about the passes behind Brasso and before the Gyimes Pass in the
+northeast.
+
+In the latter region, on the 11th, the Rumanians had retired from
+Csikszereda and from positions higher up on the circular strategic
+railroad in the valley of the Maros. Before Oitoz Pass they resisted
+fiercely, and for a time were able to hold their ground. But it was in
+the passes behind Brasso that Falkenhayn's weight was being felt most
+severely. On the 12th the following description of the general
+situation was issued from Bucharest:
+
+"From Mount Buksoi as far as Bran the enemy has attacked, but is being
+repulsed."
+
+On the following day came better news than the Rumanians had heard for
+some weeks. The Germans had not only been checked in the Buzau and the
+Predeal Passes, but they had suffered a genuine setback there, being
+forced to retire. This victory was important in that Predeal Pass had
+been saved, for not only was this pass close to Bucharest, but through
+it ran a railroad and a good highway, crossing the mountains almost
+due south of Brasso at a height of a little over 3,000 feet. On the
+next day, however, the Rumanians were driven out of the Torzburg Pass
+and forced to retire to Rucaru, a small town seven miles within
+Rumanian territory. Falkenhayn's forces were now flowing through the
+gap in the mountain chain and deploying among the foothills on the
+Rumanian side of the chain. Here the situation was growing dangerous
+to an extreme degree. Only ten miles farther south, over high, rolling
+ground, was Campulung, the terminus of a railroad running directly
+into Bucharest, only ninety miles distant.
+
+But Falkenhayn made no further progress that day. In the neighboring
+passes he was held back successfully while his left flank in the Oitoz
+Pass and his right flank in the Vulkan Pass were each thrown back. All
+during the 15th and the 16th the fighting in the passes continued
+desperately, the battle being especially obstinate before the railroad
+terminus at Campulung, up in the foothills. At about this same time
+the Russians in the Dorna Vatra district, where they joined with the
+Rumanians, began a strong offensive, in the hope of relieving the
+pressure on the Rumanians farther down. This attempt was hardly
+successful, as the German opposition in this sector developed to
+unexpected strength. On the 17th Falkenhayn succeeded in squeezing
+himself through Gyimes Pass and reaching Agas, seven miles inside the
+frontier. At about the same time strong fighting began in the Red
+Tower Pass. The battle was, indeed, raging at a tense heat up and down
+the whole front. It was now becoming obvious that the Central Powers
+had determined to make an example of Rumania and punish her
+"treachery," as they called it, even though they must suspend activity
+in every other theater of the war to do so. Not a little anxiety was
+caused in the Allied countries. The matter was brought up and caused a
+hot discussion in the British Parliament. In the third week France
+sent a military mission to Bucharest under General Berthelot, while
+England, France, and Russia were all making every effort to keep the
+Rumanians supplied with ammunition, in which, however, they could not
+have been entirely successful.
+
+The Rumanians, on their part, continued defending every step forward
+made by the enemy. On the 18th they won a victory in the Gyimes Pass
+which cost the enemy nearly a thousand prisoners and twelve guns. At
+Agas, in the Oitoz region, the Austro-Germans also suffered a local
+defeat. Nor had they so far made very marked progress in the passes
+behind Brasso. There seems to be no doubt that had the Rumanians been
+able to devote all their forces and resources to the defense of the
+Hungarian frontier, they would probably have been able to hold back
+Falkenhayn's forces. But Mackensen had forced them to split their
+strength.
+
+On October 19, 1916, the situation in Dobrudja again began assuming an
+unpleasant aspect. On that date Mackensen began a new offensive. Since
+his retirement a month previous he had remained remarkably quiet,
+possibly with the purpose of making the Rumanians believe that he had
+been more seriously beaten than was really the case, so that they
+might withdraw forces from this front for the Transylvania operations.
+This, in fact, they had been doing, and when, on the 19th, he suddenly
+began renewing his operations, the Russo-Rumanian forces were not in a
+position to hold him back.
+
+After a vigorous artillery preparation, which destroyed the
+Russo-Rumanian trenches in several places, Mackensen began a series of
+assaults which presently compelled the Russo-Rumanian forces to
+retire in the center and on the right wing. On the 21st the Germans
+reported that they had captured Tuzla and the heights northwest of
+Toprosari, as well as the heights near Mulciova, and that they had
+taken prisoner some three thousand Russians. This success now began to
+threaten the railroad line from Cernavoda to Constanza. This line had
+been Mackensen's objective from the beginning. On the 23d a dispatch
+from Bucharest announced that the Rumanian lines had retired again and
+were barely south of this railroad. Having captured Toprosari and
+Cobadin, the Bulgarians advanced on Constanza, and on the 22d they
+succeeded in entering this important seaport, though the Rumanians
+were able to remove the stores there under the fire of the Russian
+warships.
+
+[Illustration: General von Mackensen and his staff in Rumania. Already
+victorious in campaigns in Galicia and Serbia, Mackensen won new
+laurels in the Dobrudja. His troops pushed on to Bucharest, which fell
+December 6, 1916.]
+
+On the same date Mackensen began an attack on Medgidia, up the
+railroad about twenty-five miles from Constanza, and succeeded in
+taking it. He also took Rasova, in spite of the fierce resistance
+which the Rumanians made at this point. In these operations Mackensen
+reported that he had taken seven thousand prisoners and twelve guns.
+Next he attacked Cernavoda, where the great bridge crossed the Danube,
+and on the morning of the 25th the defenders were compelled to retire
+across the structure, afterward blowing it up. Thus the railroad was
+now in the hands of Mackensen. The Russians and the Rumanians had been
+driven across the river or up along its bank. But it would be no small
+matter for the enemy to follow them. With the aid of so effective a
+barrier as this broad river it now seemed possible that the Rumanians
+might decrease their forces very considerably on this front, still
+succeed in holding Mackensen back, and turn their full attention to
+Falkenhayn in the north. Of course, there still remained the northern
+section of Dobrudja, passing up east of southern Rumania to the head
+of the Black Sea and the Russian frontier, along which Mackensen might
+advance and get in behind the rear of the main Russian lines. But this
+country in large part constitutes the Danube delta and is swampy, and
+is certainly not fitted for operations involving heavy artillery.
+Moreover, Mackensen was now at the narrowest part of Dobrudja, whose
+shape somewhat resembles an hourglass, and a farther advance would
+mean an extension of his lines. Aside from this, by advancing farther
+north, he laid his rear open to a possible raid from across the river,
+such as the Rumanians had attempted on October 2, 1916,
+unsuccessfully, to be sure, but sufficiently to show that the whole
+bank of the river must be guarded. The farther Mackensen advanced
+northward the more men he would require to guard his rear along the
+river. For the time being, at least, the river created a deadlock,
+with the advantage to whichever side should be on the defensive. The
+Rumanians might very well now have left a minimum force guarding the
+river bank while they turned their main forces northward to stem the
+tide of Teuton invasion through the passes.
+
+For over a week this seemed exactly what the Rumanians were doing. On
+November 4, 1916, the situation along the Rumanian front in the
+mountains looked extremely well for King Ferdinand's armies. At no
+point had the Teutons made any appreciable headway, while in two
+regions, in the Jiul Valley and southeast of Kronstadt, Bucharest
+reported substantial gains. Berlin and Vienna both admitted that the
+Rumanians had recaptured Rosca, a frontier height east of the Predeal
+Pass.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+MACKENSEN PRESSED BACK
+
+
+On November 6, 1916, came the news from Bucharest that the Rumanian
+and Russian forces in northern Dobrudja had again assumed the
+offensive and that Mackensen's line was giving way; and that in
+retiring his troops had burned the villages of Daeni, Gariot, Rosman,
+and Gaidar. Full details of these operations were never issued, but as
+day after day passed it became obvious that the Russo-Rumanian armies
+were indeed making a determined effort to regain the ground lost in
+Dobrudja.
+
+On November 9, 1916, it was announced through London that the Russian
+General Sakharov had been transferred from Galicia and was now in
+command of the allied forces in Dobrudja; that he had succeeded in
+pushing Mackensen's lines back from Hirsova on the Danube, where a
+gunboat flotilla was cooperating with him, and that Mackensen was now
+retreating through Topal, twelve miles farther south, and was only
+thirteen miles north of the Cernavoda-Constanza railroad. On November
+10, 1916, an official announcement from Petrograd stated that "on the
+Danube front our cavalry and infantry detachments occupied the station
+of Dunareav, three versts from Cernavoda. We are fighting for
+possession of the Cernavoda Bridge. More than two hundred corpses have
+been counted on the captured ground. A number of prisoners and machine
+guns have also been captured. We have occupied the town of Hirsova and
+the village of Musluj and the heights three versts south of Delgeruiv
+and five versts southwest of Fasmidja." On the following day the
+Russian ships began bombarding Constanza and set fire to the town
+which, according to the Petrograd reports, was burned to the ground.
+At the same time a Russian force advancing southward along the right
+bank of the Danube occupied the villages of Ghisdarechti and Topal. On
+that same date Sofia also reported heavy fighting and an enemy advance
+near the Cernavoda Bridge. Two days later, on the 13th, an indirect
+report through London stated that the Russians had crossed the Danube
+south of the bridge, behind Mackensen's front. This was not officially
+confirmed, but apparently another attempt was made to strike
+Mackensen's rear from across the river.
+
+Meanwhile the Russo-Rumanian line was pressing Mackensen's front back,
+hammering especially on his left wing up against the river, until he
+was a bare few miles north of the railroad and thirty miles south of
+the point farthest north he had been able to reach. Here he seems to
+have held fast, for further reports of fighting on the Danube front
+become vague and contradictory. At any rate, the Russo-Rumanian
+advance stopped short of victory, as the recapture of the
+Cernavoda-Constanza railroad would have been. That Mackensen's
+retreat may have been voluntary, to encourage the enemy to advance and
+thereby weaken his front on the Transylvanian front, seems possible in
+the light of later events. Also, it was possible that his forces had
+been weakened by Bulgarian regiments being withdrawn and sent down to
+the Macedonian front, where Monastir was in grave danger and was
+presently to fall to the French-Russian-Serbian forces. From this
+moment a silence settles over this front; when Mackensen again emerges
+into the light shed by official dispatches, it is to execute some of
+the most brilliant moves that have yet been made during the entire
+war.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE RUMANIANS PRESSED BACK
+
+
+Meanwhile hard fighting had been going on on the Transylvanian front,
+one day favoring one side and on the next day favoring the other. On
+November 5, 1916, the Germans regained Rosca heights, which the
+Rumanians had taken on the 3d. On the 7th the Russians were pressing
+the Germans hard below Dorna Vatra, while southeast of Red Tower Pass
+and near the Vulkan Pass the Rumanians suffered reverses, losing a
+thousand men as prisoners, according to the Vienna and Berlin
+dispatches. But before another week had passed it became evident that
+the Teutons were gaining, whether because of superior artillery, or
+because the Rumanians had weakened this front for the sake of the
+Dobrudja offensive. For each step the Teutons fell back they advanced
+two. Not unlike a skillful boxer Falkenhayn feinted at one point, then
+struck hard at another unexpectedly. Without doubt skill and superior
+knowledge, as well as superior organization, were on the side of the
+invaders. By the middle of the month the Rumanians were being forced
+back, both in the Alt and the Jiul valleys, facts which could not be
+hidden by the dispatches from Bucharest announcing the capture of a
+machine gun at one point or a few dozen prisoners at another. A few
+days later the London papers were commenting on the extremely
+dangerous situation in Rumania.
+
+The Teutons had been pushing especially hard against the extreme left
+of the Rumanian line in western Wallachia. On the 15th, after a week
+of continuous hammering, the Austro-Germans forced their way down from
+the summits after battering down the permanent frontier fortifications
+with their heavy mortars. Pushed down into the foothills, the
+Rumanians, who were now being reenforced by Russian forces, decided to
+make a stand on the range of hills running east and west and lying
+south of Turgujiulij, the first important town south of the mountains.
+Foggy weather favored the Russo-Rumanians and enabled them to take up
+a strong position at this point before being observed by the Germans.
+The latter began launching a series of assaults. For three days these
+frontal attacks were continued. Finally numbers told; the Rumanian
+center was broken. Then the German cavalry, which had been held in
+reserve, hurled itself through the breach and raced down through the
+valley toward the railroad, thirty miles distant, preventing the
+fleeing Russians and Rumanians from making any further stands. On the
+following day, the 19th, the cavalry had reached the Orsova-Craiova
+railroad and occupied it from Filliash, an important junction, to
+Strehaia station, a distance of twelve miles.
+
+Two days later came the announcement that Craiova itself had been
+taken by the Teuton forces. This town is the center of an important
+grain district on the edge of the Wallachian Plain. From a military
+point of view the importance of its capture was in that it was a
+railroad junction and that the Germans now held the line of
+communication between the Orsova region, constituting the extreme
+western portion of Wallachia, and the rest of Rumania. As a matter of
+fact, as was to develop a few days later, the Teutons had broken
+through the main Rumanian lines, and in doing so had clipped off the
+tip of the Rumanian left wing. Some days later the capture of this
+force was announced, though it numbered much less than had at first
+been supposed--some seven thousand men.
+
+But now a new danger suggested itself. The Teutonic invasion was
+heading toward the Danube. Should it reach the banks of that river
+there would be nothing to prevent a juncture between the forces of
+Falkenhayn and those under Mackensen, thereby forming a net which
+would be stretched clear across Rumania and swept eastward toward
+Bucharest. Falkenhayn had only to clear the northern bank of the
+Danube, and nothing could prevent Mackensen's crossing; as was
+presently to develop, this fear was not without foundation. On the
+24th came the announcement from Berlin that Falkenhayn had captured
+Turnu-Severin on the Danube and that Mackensen's troops had crossed in
+several places and effected a juncture with Falkenhayn's men. Farther
+north the Rumanians were reported to be falling back to positions
+along the Alt River, a swift, deep stream in its upper reaches which
+broadens out into many arms down on the plain and forms a difficult
+obstacle to an advancing army. At Slatina the bridge is over four
+hundred yards in length. This, apparently, was to be the new line of
+defense, running north and south. Still farther north, in the
+Carpathians, in Moldavia, the Austro-Germans were developing another
+strong offensive, and here, near Tulghes Pass, where the Russians held
+the line, a pitched battle of unusual fury developed, bringing the
+Austro-Germans to a standstill for the time being, at least. Again
+there came reports from Petrograd of activity along the front in
+Dobrudja, but this appears to have been at the most nothing but a
+demonstration to distract Mackensen from effecting any crossing
+farther up the Danube at a point where he might flank the Rumanian
+lines along the Alt. Throughout the countries of the Allies it was now
+generally recognized that Rumania was doomed, unless the Russians
+could send enough forces to rescue her.
+
+On the 26th official dispatches from both Berlin and Bucharest stated
+that Mackensen had crossed the Danube at Zimnitza and was advancing
+toward Bucharest. The German statement had him in the outskirts of
+Alexandria, only forty-seven miles from the capital, and reported that
+the Rumanians were retreating eastward from the lower Alt. On the
+following day Berlin announced that the entire length of the Alt had
+been abandoned by the Rumanians, which was confirmed by a dispatch
+from Bucharest. This retreat had been forced by the crossing effected
+by Mackensen's troops to the rear of the line, threatening its flank
+and rear. That the danger to Bucharest was now being felt was obvious
+from the fact that on the following day the Rumanian Government and
+diplomatic authorities removed from Bucharest to Jassy, about two
+hundred miles northeastward, near the Russian frontier. On this date,
+too, it was reported that Mackensen had captured Giurgiu, which showed
+that he had advanced thirty miles during the past twenty-four hours.
+From Giurgiu there is direct rail connection with Bucharest: this line
+Mackensen could use for transport service, thus increasing the danger
+to the Rumanian main army that it might have its retreat cut off.
+Having abandoned the Alt line, the next logical line that the
+retreating Rumanians should have attempted to hold was the Vedea,
+another river running parallel to the Alt and emptying into the
+Danube. Here, too, there was a railroad running along the river bank,
+or close to it, which would have served as a supply line. But it was
+just this railroad which Mackensen had captured at Giurgiu. Once more
+he threatened the Rumanian flank, and so a stand at the Vedea became
+also impossible. Certainly the Teutons were now moving with
+extraordinary rapidity, and there was undoubtedly some truth in the
+Berlin statement that the Rumanians were fleeing eastward in a
+panic-stricken mass. Great quantities of war material were abandoned
+and captured by the advancing Teutons. It is significant, however,
+that neither Berlin nor Vienna were able to report the capture of any
+great amount of prisoners.
+
+By the first of the month the Teutons had almost reached the Arges
+River, the last large stream that ran between them and the outer
+fortifications of Bucharest. Behind this river the Rumanians finally
+came to a stand, and now Berlin, instead of describing the precipitate
+flight of the enemy, spoke only of the hard fighting which was going
+on. At this time the German War Office also announced the capture of
+Campulung, which opened the road through the Torzburg Pass.
+
+That Russia was now making strong efforts to relieve the pressure on
+the Rumanians before Bucharest became obvious on December 1, 1916,
+when it was reported from Petrograd that a Russian offensive had been
+begun on the Bukowina border and was spreading down along the Rumanian
+frontier south of Kirlibaba, along a front over two hundred miles in
+length. Here, according to the report, the Rumanians, in cooperation
+with the Russians, captured a whole range of heights in the Buzeu
+Valley southeast of Kronstadt, while the Russians themselves reported
+similar progress. At the same time Berlin, while also touching on the
+severity of the fighting in the north, reported that the Russians were
+hurling themselves against Mackensen's entire front in Dobrudja. The
+German reports admitted that here and there the Russian attacks
+effected slight local gains at tremendous cost. Whatever the actual
+facts, this offensive movement came too late to have any material
+results; Bucharest, at any rate, was doomed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE RIVER ARGECHU
+
+
+On December 3, 1916, what appears to have been a desperate battle from
+the German reports took place along the river Argechu in the region
+before Bucharest. This is a mountain stream which, from Piteshti to
+southwest of Titu, is sometimes a hundred yards in width and at some
+points twenty meters deep, though fords are found at frequent
+intervals. At this time, however, the river was well flooded and only
+the bridges were available for crossing. At this point strong
+detachments of Bulgarians, Austrians, and Germans coming together from
+the north, east, and south met with resistance from the Rumanians on
+the other side of the river. For an entire day the Rumanians held back
+the enemy, then suddenly broke and fled so abruptly that they had not
+time to destroy the bridges, over which the invaders streamed after
+the retreating Rumanians, capturing several thousands of prisoners.
+
+On the following day the left wing of the Austro-Germans captured
+Tergovistea. At Piteshti the First Army of the Rumanians made another
+brief stand, but was driven back beyond the Titu junction of railroads
+from Bucharest to Campulung. South of Bucharest Russian and Rumanian
+forces also offered a stout resistance, but were finally compelled to
+retire when the enemy's cavalry cut around in their rear and
+threatened their line of retreat. During this one day the Germans
+claimed to have taken 8,000 prisoners, the Danube army capturing also
+thirty-five cannon and thirteen locomotives and a great amount of
+rolling stock.
+
+It was not the battle along the Argechu, however, which was the cause
+of the immediate danger to Bucharest. The blow which decided the fate
+of the Rumanian capital came from the north. The real danger lay in
+the German forces coming down from the passes south of Kronstadt.
+Already Campulung was taken and the Argechu crossed in the north. Then
+the invaders streamed down the Prahova Valley, which begins at the
+passes and runs down southeast behind Bucharest. The Rumanians now had
+the choice of evacuating their capital or having it surrounded and
+besieged. Bucharest was a fortified city, but the Germans carried such
+guns as no fortifications built by the hand of man could resist.
+Antwerp had been the first demonstration of that fact.
+
+The plan of holding the city had also several other objections. From a
+military point of view the city was of little value. Its retention
+would have had a certain moral value, in that it would have shown that
+the Rumanians were by no means entirely defeated, but as practically
+all the nations of Europe were now on one side or the other of the
+fighting line, this political effect would have found few to
+influence. To defend it, moreover, would have meant its complete
+destruction, and sooner or later the defending force would have been
+taken prisoners. There was no chance of saving the city from Teuton
+occupation, such occupation might be delayed, nothing more. Rather
+than waste a large force in a futile defense, the Rumanians decided
+to evacuate the capital without any effort to stay the advancing enemy
+at this point. This decision seems to have been taken some time before
+the city was in actual danger. The civilian population was leaving the
+city in a steady stream and every railroad carriage going eastward was
+crowded to full capacity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+BUCHAREST FALLS
+
+
+On December 6, 1916, the German War Office announced the entry of
+Teutonic troops into the Rumanian capital, and what was more important
+still from a military point of view, the capture of Ploechti, an
+important railroad junction thirty-five miles northwest of Bucharest,
+famous for its oil wells and therefore of great value to the
+Austro-Germans. As developed later, however, these wells were
+destroyed by the retreating Rumanians, and for some time to come, at
+least, rendered almost useless.
+
+Whatever the value of Bucharest from a military point of view, there
+can be no doubt that its capture was a heavy blow to the Allies. With
+it went one-half of Rumania. The mightiest efforts of Russia had been
+unable to save the kingdom from the hands of the invaders. Thereby she
+had been forced to confess a certain degree of weakness. Nor had
+Sarrail in Macedonia been able to divert the activities of the
+Bulgarians from Dobrudja to any serious extent. This too constituted a
+second confession of weakness.
+
+Indeed the activities, or lack of activities, on the part of the
+Allies in Macedonia, in spite of the capture of Monastir, had been
+even more disappointing than the inability of the Russians to save
+Rumania.
+
+But the disaster to the cause of the Allies was more apparent than
+real. As has been demonstrated on the Russian front more than once
+during this war, the capture of territory alone has very little
+influence on the final result of a campaign. It is not enough to
+defeat an enemy; his forces must be destroyed, eliminated, wholly or
+in part, and this can only be accomplished by the capture of his
+forces. Though the Germans claimed that the Rumanians had lost 100,000
+men to them as prisoners, an obvious exaggeration, the Rumanian
+fighting forces remained comparatively intact after the fall of
+Bucharest. The best of the Rumanian troops undoubtedly remained, for
+by this time they were becoming seasoned veterans.
+
+Having taken Bucharest, the German rush noticeably subsided; it lost
+its force. This was in part due to the bad weather conditions which
+now set in and lasted a week; rain fell in the plains in torrents and
+made the passage of troops, and especially of artillery, very
+difficult, even impossible. No doubt this also hindered the retreat of
+the Rumanians, but the advantage was on their side.
+
+On the 18th it was reported from Petrograd that the entire Rumanian
+front was being held by Russian soldiers, the Rumanians having retired
+to their rear beyond the Sereth River at Jassy and in Bessarabia,
+where they were being reorganized for future operations. After the
+Bucharest-Ploechti line had been lost, according to one unofficial
+report, the Russians had sent some strong cavalry divisions to support
+the Rumanian retreat. The Russians offered strong resistance in the
+region of Buzeu so as to permit their engineers to construct a
+defensive front between Rimnik Sarat and the marshes at the mouth of
+the Danube. On that same date Berlin announced an advance of the
+Teutonic forces in northern Dobrudja. It was in this latter section
+that the Teutons now centered their activities. The Russo-Rumanians
+still remained in Dobrudja, on the south side of the Danube. So long
+as they had a footing here they remained a potential threat to the
+Teutons, which might awaken into active danger at the first favorable
+opportunity. To be ousted from this northern tip of Dobrudja would be
+even more serious to the Russo-Rumanians than the loss of Wallachia.
+From this point they might, at some future day, initiate an offensive
+against Bulgaria which might become extremely dangerous. Once across
+the river, however, it would be difficult for them to recross, for
+reasons that have already been discussed: no line of fortifications,
+no intrenched positions they might throw up, would be so effective a
+defense to the Teutons as the mouth of the Danube.
+
+In Rumania, west of the river, continuous and at times heavy fighting
+continued, sometimes assuming almost the proportions of pitched
+battles. During the last week of the month Mackensen apparently
+realized the hopelessness, for the present at least, of driving the
+enemy out of Dobrudja, and shifted some of his forces over to the west
+bank of the river. The Russians had retired behind the Rimnik River, a
+small stream which is about twenty-five miles north of the Buzeu and
+parallel to it. On January 1, 1917, the Germans announced that the
+Russians had been forced back against the bridgehead at Braila and
+that in the Dobrudja they had advanced beyond Matchin. On the 5th,
+Braila, the most important city left to the Rumanians, fell into the
+hands of Mackensen, and at the same time the last of the Russians
+retired from the northern tip of Dobrudja. This was the heaviest blow
+that had fallen since the capture of Bucharest, and from a military
+point of view was even more serious. Once driven across the broad
+waters of the Danube mouth, the Russians and the Rumanians could not
+recross in the future except in very strong force and with great
+losses. At the same time it was now possible for Mackensen to reduce
+his forces in Dobrudja to a minimum and reenforce the troops operating
+over in Rumania proper.
+
+During the rest of the month the fighting continued up and down the
+line with unabated vigor, though without any sensational results. The
+Germans were now hammering at the main line of the Russian defense and
+could not expect any large gains. The defeat of the Rumanians had
+been, after all, only the driving back of a salient. But in general
+the fighting during the latter half of January, 1917, seemed to favor
+the Teutons.
+
+On the 15th Berlin reported that the Bulgarian artillery was
+bombarding Galatz from across the Danube. On this date too the
+Russians lost Vadeni, ten miles southwest of Galatz, their last
+position south of the Sereth. On the other hand, Petrograd announced
+on this same day that on the northern Rumanian front, in a violent
+engagement on the Kasino River, the Rumanian troops forced the Germans
+back, while the German attacks northeast of Fokshani were repulsed by
+the Russians. By the following day these local attacks developed into
+a general engagement, such as had not been fought since before
+Bucharest had fallen. At Fundani, Berlin reported, the Russians hurled
+one mass attack after another--waves of humanity as they were
+termed--against the German lines and gained some temporary advantages.
+On the 17th Petrograd announced the recapture of Vadeni. After a
+prolonged artillery preparation the Russians rushed their infantry
+against the position in the town and drove the Germans out. The
+latter, after receiving reenforcements and assisted by an artillery
+drumfire, made a powerful counterattack, but did not succeed in
+driving the Russians back. Berlin admitted this defeat, incidentally
+mentioning that Turkish troops were here engaged. Berlin also admitted
+that "between the Kasino and Suchitza Valleys the Russians and
+Rumanians made another mass attack and succeeded in regaining a height
+recently taken from them." On the 20th, Mackensen's forces, as was
+stated by Berlin and admitted by Petrograd, succeeded in taking
+Nanesti and driving the Russians back to the Sereth.
+
+On January 22, 1917, an Overseas News Agency dispatch stated that the
+number of Rumanian prisoners taken during the entire campaign to date
+now numbered 200,000. Describing the situation of the Rumanian army at
+that time, the dispatch continued:
+
+"The rest of the Rumanian army, part of which fought well, is
+reorganizing in Moldavia and Bessarabia. The few Rumanian divisions
+which still are engaged at the front are very much reduced in numbers.
+According to the assertions of Rumanian prisoners, one division was
+composed of only 2,800 men, while another numbered but 2,400. The
+Rumanians suffered their heaviest losses from artillery fire. The
+large number of dead in proportion to the wounded is remarkable. On
+one square kilometer (about three-fifths of a square mile) of the
+battle field of Campulung 6,000 Rumanian dead were counted. Some of
+the Rumanian infantry regiments were composed of only four companies
+of 150 men each. Because of the lack of sanitary organization, an
+extraordinary large percentage of the wounded died in the hospitals,
+which, however, afforded room only for the officers, while large
+numbers of wounded soldiers were lodged in damp cellars, peasants'
+huts, and barns, where they died miserably."
+
+On January 20, 1917, the military critic of the Overseas News Agency
+summed up the situation as follows:
+
+"The Russo-Rumanian efforts to delay the advance of the Teutons
+against the Sereth Plain are taking the form of fierce counterattacks,
+launched to avert the danger that their position on the Putna and the
+Sereth be outflanked. During the last few days especially violent
+attacks have been directed against the position situated on the
+Carpathian slopes north of the Suchitza. These developed no success
+and cost the enemy heavy losses in casualties and prisoners.... On the
+Carpathian front, in the Oituz district, the Teutonic forces have
+pressed forward until they are in a position whence they can take the
+circular valley of Ocna under their fire. As has been confirmed by the
+Russian headquarters report, Bogdaneshti and Ocna were shelled. Ocna
+is an important railroad station and a point of support for the
+Russian defense in the upper Trotus Valley, while Bogdaneshti bars the
+outlet to the great valley of the Trotus and Oituz. All the determined
+attempts made by the Russians and Rumanians to extend the narrow
+limits of their hold on the southern bank of the Sereth have been more
+or less unsuccessful. The German troops, however, with their capture
+of the village of Nanesti, tore the pillar from the wall of the
+Russian defense. Nanesti forms the strategical center of the
+bridgehead of Fundeni and covers the great iron bridge across the
+Sereth, which is in the immediate vicinity of Nanesti. The entire
+construction of the Nanesti-Fundeni bridgehead, which is a modern
+field fortification, illustrates its importance as a central point of
+support of the Sereth line. In the remaining sectors of the Sereth
+snowstorms and mists have interfered with military activity."
+
+During the middle of January, 1917, the French Admiral du Fournier of
+the Entente fleet in Greek waters paid a visit to the Russo-Rumanian
+front. On his return from this tour, which was taken on the way to
+France, he wrote in the Paris "Matin":
+
+"The Russian army was surprised by the rapid succession of Rumanian
+reverses and had to suspend Brussilov's offensive in Galicia in order
+to send large reenforcements to Rumania, but its position was such
+that it could not cover its flank in Wallachia and its rear in
+Dobrudja rapidly enough to stop the advance of the invaders. It was
+only on the Sereth that it succeeded in forming with the first corps
+that arrived from the army of General Sakharoff a front which was
+lengthened by several good Rumanian divisions. A few weeks will
+witness a change in the military situation. In my journey in a motor
+car with the troops on the march I saw nothing but magnificent
+soldiers, admirably equipped and in excellent form."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+SARRAIL'S OFFENSIVE
+
+
+The half year ending with February 1, 1917, was a period of almost
+continuous activity before Saloniki, in sharp contrast to the previous
+six months, which had been quite uneventful. Yet that interval between
+the conquest of Serbia by the Austro-German and Bulgarian troops and
+the renewal of fighting, beginning in August, 1916, were months of
+furious preparation by General Sarrail and his colleagues. From what
+was little more than a precarious footing in Saloniki itself they had
+established a firm base protected by a wide circle of intrenchments,
+while their forces had been augmented to something not far from
+three-quarters of a million men under arms and a huge supply of
+ordnance and munitions. From a mere expedition to keep a back door
+open for the defeated Serbians, Sarrail's army had developed into what
+was obviously going to be a gigantic campaign against the rear of the
+Central Powers, an attempt to enter Austria through a back window.
+Such, at least, was the supposition of military critics the world
+over. Incidentally the presence of so large a force of the Allies in
+Macedonia served various other purposes. Viewing the situation with a
+retrospective eye, at the present moment, there can be no doubt that
+Greece would by now have thrown her lot in with the Central Powers had
+it not been for her fear of Sarrail's forces. Also, the Teutons and
+the Bulgarians were compelled to devote a large force to holding a
+front opposite Sarrail, and so weaken their other fronts. And finally,
+without Sarrail in Saloniki, Rumania would never have decided to join
+hands with the Allies, certainly not so early as she did. To be sure,
+Rumania was defeated, but her defeat must have cost the Central Powers
+grave losses which may eventually prove to have turned the tide in
+favor of the Allies.
+
+Already before August, 1916, it was becoming obvious that Sarrail was
+beginning to feel strong enough to play a less passive part. Little by
+little he had been pushing out his lines. The remnants of the Serbian
+army, which had been recuperating at Corfu, were reorganized and
+transported to Saloniki by sea, whence they were sent to take over a
+portion of the front on the extreme left. Somewhere around August 1,
+1916, Russian soldiers began landing at Saloniki, though this
+significant fact was not reported till nearly three weeks afterward,
+when about 80,000 of them had joined Sarrail's force and had been sent
+out on the left front, west of the Serbians. During this interval a
+large force of Italians also joined the Allied troops at Saloniki and
+joined the British near Doiran. All the Allies except Japan were now
+represented on this front by their contingents, though of course the
+French and British were still in vastly preponderating majority. The
+moral effect was strong, for it was the first time that troops of all
+the Allies were camped side by side. The landing of the Russians, who
+had come through France, thence by the sea route, was no doubt
+effected in the hope of affecting the Bulgarians, who are not only
+Slavs, but have a very strong feeling of affinity for the Russians,
+who liberated them from the Turks. It was probably hoped that on being
+brought face to face with them on the firing line many Bulgarians
+would desert, or possibly even there would be an uprising in Bulgaria
+against Czar Ferdinand's policy. That nothing of this sort did
+actually happen, either in Macedonia or in Dobrudja and Rumania, where
+the Russians also faced Bulgarians, may perhaps be ascribed to the
+revulsion of feeling against the Russians which many Bulgarians had
+begun experiencing of recent years, on account of the many black
+intrigues which the Russian Government had hatched against the
+independence of Bulgaria.
+
+In the matter of Bulgaria, it is but fair to state that Russia,
+Rumania, and Serbia had little right to complain; Bulgaria had just
+scores to wipe off against all of them. Each was but paying the price
+for some selfish policy in the past for which Bulgaria had had to
+suffer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+UNREST IN GREECE
+
+
+There was the intense racial hatred between Greeks and Bulgars, more
+fully explained in previous volumes. Hatreds of this nature affect the
+public more than governing bodies. On the public sentiment of Greece
+this hatred seems to have been a more powerful influence than more
+subtle political considerations. The detested Bulgar, the barbarian,
+the "kondri-cephalous" (blockhead) was advancing into eastern
+Macedonia, which the Greeks had gained at so much cost, and they were
+taking possession of that section of the country where the population
+really is preponderatingly Greek. In the north, in western Macedonia,
+he was also invading Greek territory, taking Florina, approaching the
+very boundaries of Greece proper; indeed, cavalry patrols of the
+Bulgarians had descended as far as the plains of Thessaly.
+
+Public indignation flamed to a white heat. On September 1, 1916, came
+a press dispatch from Athens stating that the population was rising
+against the Government and that the king had abdicated in fear. This
+latter statement proved untrue, but in the Macedonia occupied by the
+Allies a modified revolution was indeed taking place, no doubt
+encouraged by the Allies. A provisional committee, or government, had
+been organized, and to this authority the Greek garrisons at Vodena,
+Port Karaburun, and Saloniki had surrendered. "Cretan gendarmes and
+Macedonian volunteers," continued the report, "have surrounded the
+barracks of the Greek infantry in Saloniki and exchanged shots with
+the garrison after cutting the water main and electric-light wires and
+shutting off food supplies. A detachment of sixty regulars attempted
+to break its way out. Its surrender was demanded, and when the
+regulars refused the volunteers fired shots in the air. The regulars
+replied with a volley, whereupon the volunteers opened fire on them,
+compelling them to return to the barracks. Altogether three men were
+killed and two wounded. Before the garrison finally surrendered three
+companies of French colonial infantry marched to the parade grounds.
+They were soon followed by two battalions of infantry, which took up
+positions on both sides of the parade grounds in the rear of the
+barracks. Machine guns were posted at conspicuous points and armored
+cars were stationed opposite the entrance of the barracks.... At 11
+o'clock that night the Greek troops marched out unarmed and were
+interned at Camp Keitinlek outside the city."
+
+Apparently these incidents had a temporary influence on the Government
+at Athens, for on September 3, 1916, it was reported that all parties
+had agreed to give their support to the Zaimis cabinet, which was now
+ready to reconsider its previous policy and give its full support to
+the cause of the Allies. The German Ambassador, it was said, had left
+Athens. How confident was Venizelos in the belief that the Government
+had come around to his policy is obvious from the following statement,
+which he made on that same date:
+
+"The addition of one more nation to the long list of those fighting
+against Prussian militarism for the liberty of Europe and the
+independence of the smaller states cannot but give more strength to
+the common confidence in a complete victory of the Allies. I deeply
+grieve that my country has so much delayed in paying her due
+contribution to the struggle for these most precious benefits of
+humanity, and trust the influence caused by Rumanian intervention will
+render it absolutely impossible for the existing Greek authorities any
+further to persist in their policy of neutrality, and that at the
+earliest moment Greece too will join the camp of her proved and
+traditional friends for the purpose of accomplishing her own national
+ideals."
+
+Meanwhile the revolt in Greek Macedonia seemed to be spreading. A
+provisional government was declared established with a Colonel
+Zimorakakis at the head, and all the gendarmes and the cavalry had
+gone over to the new regime.
+
+What gave further color to the reports that Greece was definitely
+deciding to go over to the Allies was the announcement that the
+elections had been postponed indefinitely. The Zaimis cabinet, it will
+be remembered by those who have read the previous volume, was merely
+provisional to fill the interim until the next elections. These had at
+first been fixed for August 7, 1916, then postponed for another month.
+Now they were again postponed indefinitely. Truly it seemed that the
+two big parties had come to an understanding. Added to this was the
+report that Baron Schenk, the chief of the German propaganda, had been
+arrested and brought a prisoner aboard one of the French warships.
+Also the telegraph and telephone systems of the country had been given
+over to the control of the Allies.
+
+There now followed an interval of complete silence, broken only on the
+10th, when it was reported from London that the Greek Premier, Zaimis,
+had held a conference with the Entente ministers and had asked what
+consideration Greece would receive should she join the Allies. The
+ministers were reported to have replied that they would ask
+instructions from their respective governments. On the following day
+Zaimis suddenly offered his resignation. The king refused to accept it
+and, on the ministers of the Entente expressing their confidence in
+his sincerity, he withdrew his resignation. On the following day the
+Entente Powers made their reply to Premier Zaimis, regarding what
+reward Greece might expect should she join them. They were not
+disposed, they stated, to enter into a discussion of this subject. If
+Greece desired to join them, she must waive the question of
+compensation for the present, though the Entente Powers stood ready to
+assist her in equipping her with arms and munitions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+A GREEK ARMY SURRENDERS TO GERMANY
+
+
+Meanwhile an incident in eastern Macedonia occurred which aroused a
+great deal of feeling against the Greek Government in the Entente
+countries. It will be remembered that the Bulgarians had advanced
+along the coast in this region, being unopposed there by Allied
+troops, and that they had finally appeared before Kavala. In spite of
+the vigorous shelling from the Allies' warships they occupied the
+forts surrounding the city, which were immediately evacuated by the
+Greek garrisons. These, together with the soldiers in the city and
+other outlying garrisons, numbering between six and eight thousand,
+constituted a part of the Fourth Army Corps of the Greek army. On
+September 13, 1916, Germany suddenly issued the announcement that this
+body of Greek soldiers had surrendered.
+
+"After German and Bulgarian troops," continued the announcement, "had
+found themselves compelled by General Sarrail's offensive to march as
+a counterattack into Greek Macedonia, the Fourth Greek Army Corps
+stood ready in Seres, Drama, and Kavala, behind the left Bulgarian
+wing, which had advanced to the Struma. The measures of the Entente
+aimed at forcing these Greek troops to its side or preparing for them
+a fate similar to that which befell the overpowered portions of the
+Eleventh Greek Division at Saloniki. Free communication with Athens
+was interrupted and intercourse with the home authorities was
+controlled by the Entente and refused arbitrarily by the Entente.
+
+"The commanding general of the Fourth Greek Army Corps at Kavala,
+faithful to the will of the chief commander and the legally
+constituted Government's policy of maintaining neutrality, and in view
+of the unsupportable situation of the troops under his command,
+menaced by famine and disease, has been compelled to proceed on his
+own authority. On September 12, 1916, he asked the German chief
+commander to protect his brave troops, loyal to the king, to relieve
+them of the pressure of the Entente and provide food and shelter for
+them. In order to prevent any breach of neutrality, it has been agreed
+with the commanding general to transport to lodging places in Germany
+these Greek troops in the status of neutrals with their entire arms
+and equipment. Here they will enjoy hospitality until their fatherland
+is free of invaders."
+
+There now arose the cry in the press of all the Entente countries that
+the surrender of this force of Greek soldiers was only an act on the
+part of the Greek Government to assist the Germans, whom it planned to
+support actively when a propitious moment should come. In reply the
+Greek Government published the telegrams that it had exchanged with
+the Greek commander at Kavala. On the 11th he had telegraphed to
+Athens, through the admiral of the British fleet:
+
+"The Fourth Greek Army Corps at Kavala wishes to surrender immediately
+to the British. The Bulgarians have threatened to bombard the city
+to-morrow."
+
+The British admiral thereupon sent the following message to General
+Calaris, the War Minister in Athens:
+
+"Do you wish me to permit the Greek troops to embark on Greek ships?"
+
+In response the Greek War Minister wired:
+
+"To the Fourth Army Corps at Kavala: Transport yourselves immediately
+with all your forces to Volo, arranging with the British admiral. The
+police and civil authorities must remain at Kavala."
+
+Apparently the division that existed throughout the entire Greek
+population appeared among these Greek soldiers, for not all
+surrendered with their commander to the Germans; a large number
+withdrew and escaped to Thaos. On the face of the telegraphic
+correspondence, involving the British admiral, it would seem that the
+Greek commander acted in accordance with his personal sympathies
+rather than from instructions, but the incident nevertheless succeeded
+in stirring strong feeling against Greece in France and England.
+
+That matters were not running smoothly within the inner circle of the
+Greek Government became evident on September 16, 1916, when it was
+announced that Premier Zaimis had now definitely and absolutely
+resigned, and that Nikolas Kalogeropoulos had been asked by the king
+to form a new cabinet. He was one of the foremost lawyers of Greece,
+had lived for many years in France, and was said to be in sympathy
+with Venizelos and the Allies. In 1904 he had been Minister of Finance
+for a brief period, and in 1908 and 1909 he had been Minister of the
+Interior. The new premier was sworn into office under the same
+conditions as surrounded his predecessor: his was merely a service
+cabinet, to maintain control until the elections could be held in
+accordance with the constitution.
+
+In strange contrast to this event, which seemed to bode well for the
+Allies, the "Saloniki movement," as the revolt in favor of
+intervention was called by the British press and which had been lying
+quiet for some time, now broke out afresh. On September 21, 1916, came
+the report that the people on the island of Crete had risen and
+declared a Provisional Government in favor of the Allies, and that the
+new authorities had sent a committee to Saloniki to tender their
+adherence to General Sarrail. Also it was rumored that Venizelos was
+going to Saloniki to place himself at the head of the revolt. On the
+20th he gave out an interview to the Associated Press correspondent
+in which he certainly did not deny the possibility of his doing so:
+
+"I cannot answer now," he said, "I must wait a short time and see what
+the Government proposes to do.... As I said on August 27, if the king
+will not hear the voice of the people, we must ourselves devise what
+it is best to do."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+THE SERBIANS ADVANCE
+
+
+Having reviewed the situation in Greece during the month of September,
+1916, we may now return to our narrative of the military activities
+along the Macedonian front. At the end of August, 1916, a lull seemed
+to settle down along the entire front, nothing being reported save
+minor skirmishes and trench raids. On the 2d the Italians at Avlona in
+Albania, said to number 200,000, were reported from Rome to be making
+an advance. Here the Austrians were facing them, the only point along
+the line in which Austrian troops were posted. The Italians made an
+attack on Tepeleni on the Voyusa, and drove the enemy from that
+position as well as from two neighboring villages. After this event
+nothing further was heard from them, though, as will appear later, it
+was obvious that they were making some headway. Apparently it was
+their object to cooperate with the rest of the Allies in Macedonia by
+turning the extreme right of the Bulgarian line.
+
+On the 11th the silence was broken by the announcement from London
+that an energetic offensive was being resumed along the entire front
+on the part of the Allies. On that date the British made a crossing of
+the Struma over to the east bank and attacked the Bulgarians
+vigorously and, in spite of the counterattacks of the enemy, were able
+to hold their advanced position. The French, too, began hammering the
+foe opposite them west of Lake Doiran to the Vardar, and a few days
+later reported that they had taken the first line of trenches for a
+distance of two miles.
+
+It was over on the extreme left, however, that the Allies were to
+gain what seemed to be some distinct advantages. Near Lake Ostrovo the
+Serbians hurled themselves up the rocky slopes toward Moglena and
+stormed the well-intrenched positions of the Bulgarians, and succeeded
+in dislodging them and driving them back. A few miles farther over, at
+Banitza, a station on the railroad, they also centered on a determined
+attack, and there a pitched battle developed, the Bulgarians having
+the advantage of the bald but rocky hills behind them. Over in the
+west, before Kastoria (Kostur, in Bulgarian dispatches), the Russians
+advanced and succeeded in driving the Bulgarians back. Some miles
+north of the town rise the naked crags and precipices of an extremely
+difficult range of mountains; here the Bulgarians stood and succeeded
+in preventing the Russians from making any further progress, their
+right flank being protected by the two Prespa lakes.
+
+For almost a week the battle raged furiously back and forth along this
+section of the front. On the 15th the Bulgarian lines opposed to the
+Serbians suddenly gave way and broke, and the triumphant Serbs made a
+rapid advance, pursuing the enemy for nine miles and capturing
+twenty-five cannon and many prisoners, according to dispatches of
+Entente origin. For the next thirty-six hours the fighting was
+intense, and then the whole Bulgarian right wing seemed to crumple and
+swing backward. For a while the Bulgarians made a stand on the banks
+of the Cerna, at the southern bend of the great loop made by the
+river, but finally the Serbians effected a crossing and continued
+driving the Bulgarians up along the ridges forming the eastern side of
+the Monastir Valley. Farther to the left the French and Russians were
+also succeeding in their efforts. The Bulgarians were driven out of
+and beyond Florina (Lerin in Bulgarian dispatches) and General
+Cordonnier, in command of the French, immediately established his
+headquarters at this important point, commanding the whole Monastir
+plain. Up this level country the Bulgarians fled. Reports did not
+indicate to just what point up the valley the French were able to
+advance, but it was quite obvious that the Bulgarians were able to
+stay them some distance before Monastir, where the mountains approach
+the city and offer excellent positions for artillery against troops
+advancing up the railroad line toward the city. On the map at least
+this important city seemed to be threatened, but it was still too
+premature to pronounce it in serious danger, as did the Entente press.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+THE GREEKS ON THE FIRING LINE
+
+
+It was during these six days' hard fighting that the Greek volunteers
+underwent their baptism of fire and the first of them shed their blood
+for the cause of the Allies. These constituted the First Regiment of
+Greek volunteers commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Gravanis. He was
+under the command of the French general at Fiorina, and he and his men
+took a prominent part in the capture of the town. During the next few
+days the fighting calmed down, except farther eastward above Ostrovo,
+where the Serbians had succeeded in driving the Bulgarians from their
+important positions along the Kaimakcalan ridges. Here the Bulgarians
+counterattacked bitterly and continuously, but apparently with no
+success. These assaults were repeated at intervals of several days
+during the rest of the month, and though Sofia reported the recapture
+of Kaimakcalan Heights and a general triumph along this whole section
+of the front, the reports from both sides later indicated that these
+dispatches were wholly false, probably issued to satisfy a restless
+general public. On the other hand, the Allies made no further advance:
+by the first day of the following month they held about the same
+ground they had gained during the intensive fighting shortly after the
+middle of September, 1916. As is usual after extreme military
+activity, there followed a period of calm, during which both sides
+were preparing for the next outburst of effort. But the end of
+September, 1916, showed plainly that the Bulgarians and Teutons were
+entirely on the defensive in Macedonia and were content to hold their
+own.
+
+During the month of October, 1916, little of a sensational aspect
+occurred on the Macedonian front; the latter half of this period was,
+however, one of hard fighting and steady hammering along the Serbian
+sector. On the 2d the Serbians reported that they had not only
+consolidated the positions they had taken on the important heights of
+Kaimakcalan but they had advanced beyond this point three kilometers
+and taken Kotchovie. At the end of the week Jermani, a village at the
+base of a high ridge on the lower shore of Little Prespa Lake, was
+taken by the French. Some days after came a rather detailed dispatch
+from Rome, significant in the light of later events. The Italians from
+Avlona were obviously making steady progress over a very difficult
+territory--difficult on account of the poor communications. On the
+10th it was reported that they had taken Klisura, about thirty-five
+miles from Avlona, in the direction of Monastir. This was barely a
+fourth of the distance; nevertheless they were advancing toward Lake
+Ochrida, west of the Prespa Lakes, against which the Bulgarians rested
+their right wing. It was evident that they had driven back the
+Austrians who were supposed to hold this section.
+
+On the 12th the British made an advance over on the right section of
+the front; nothing of any real importance had occurred over here since
+the supposed advance had begun, but there had been a great deal of
+noise from the artillery on both sides. On this date the British
+reached Seres, but were held back by the Bulgarians, who had
+previously driven out the Greek garrison and occupied the forts in the
+immediate neighborhood. These positions the British now began
+hammering with great vigor, with their biggest guns, though without
+any immediate result.
+
+At the end of the third week of the month the Serbians, under General
+Mischitch, made another drive ahead and succeeded in penetrating the
+enemy's lines for a distance of two miles, taking Velyselo, and a day
+later Baldentsi. At the beginning of this battle, which lasted two
+days, the advantage rested with the Bulgarians. They held the higher
+line beyond the Cerna River, whose slopes were so steep that they
+could roll huge bowlders down on the attacking parties. After a two
+hours' artillery preparation early in the morning, the Serbians
+suddenly sprang forward with loud cheers and rushed the heights. From
+the rear they could be recognized at a great distance, on account of
+the large square of white calico which each man had sewn to the back
+of his coat, and the leaders carried white and red flags with which to
+indicate the farthest point reached, so that the artillery in the rear
+could see and avoid shelling them. While the Serbians stormed one
+crest, the artillery pounded the crest just beyond. Finally all the
+crests were covered by little fluttering red and white flags, while
+the Bulgarians fled headlong down the opposite slopes. On the
+following day a period of very bad weather set in and drowned further
+operations in a deluge of rain.
+
+On the 21st came another report from Rome of some significance. In the
+Iskeria Mountains east of Premeti an Italian detachment occupied
+Lyaskoviki, on the road from Janina to Koritza. The latter town marks
+the racial boundary between the Bulgarian and Albanian countries. To
+the eastward was the rough country of Kastoria in which the Russians
+were operating. In other words, the Italians were emerging from
+Albania and were getting within reach of the Macedonian field of
+operations. In fact, on the 29th it was reported that this Italian
+expedition had linked up with the extreme left of the Allied wing, but
+this report must have been quite premature; it still had some very
+rough country to traverse before this could be accomplished. The end
+of the month saw a lull in the operations in the entire Macedonian
+theater on account of the bad weather.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+SEIZURE OF THE GREEK FLEET
+
+
+On October 11, 1916, the patience of the Allies seems to have been
+again exhausted with the wavering policy of the Greek monarch. On that
+date Admiral du Fournier came to Athens and demanded the surrender of
+the entire Greek fleet, except the cruiser _Averoff_ and the
+battleships _Lemnos_ and _Kilkis_ (the latter two formerly the
+American ships _Idaho_ and _Mississippi_). He further demanded the
+transfer of control to the Allies of the Piraeus-Larissa railroad and
+that the shore batteries should all be dismantled. These demands were
+complied with at once, and all but the three vessels named were
+surrendered and their crews landed. The ships so handed over consisted
+of three battleships, one protected cruiser, four gunboats, three mine
+layers, one torpedo depot ship, sixteen destroyers, twelve torpedo
+boats, four submarines, and the royal yacht. The rest of the Greek
+navy had already gone over to the Allies, as was mentioned, and was
+now in Saloniki. The Piraeus-Larissa railroad, which the Allies also
+demanded, runs for a distance of 200 miles in a winding course from
+Piraeus, the seaport of Athens, to Larissa. The cause of this sudden
+action, as explained by the British press, was that for some time
+Greek troops had been concentrating in the interior near Larissa,
+while other troops were gathering in Corinth, from whence they could
+easily reach the force in Larissa.
+
+An Athens division had been quietly moving along the railroad line,
+leaving a regiment to intrench themselves before the king's palace at
+Tatoi. Apparently the fear was that King Constantine was preparing, at
+a favorable moment, to retire with his army and intrench himself in
+the plains of Thessaly until he could there join hands with the
+Bulgarians and the Germans and perhaps attack the Allies on their left
+flank. The surrender of the railroad now made this impossible.
+
+The result of this action was that large street demonstrations began
+at once, supposed to have been instigated by the Reservists' League.
+The French admiral thereupon landed a large force of marines and
+occupied a number of public buildings whence he could control the main
+streets with machine guns. By the 16th all Athens seemed to be in an
+uproar, but the violence which took place was directed against
+Venizelist sympathizers, while in their demonstrations against the
+Allies the rioters contented themselves with jeering and hurling
+insulting remarks. In these disorders the police remained absolutely
+passive, and on some occasions joined with the rioters. This caused
+the French admiral to demand that the command of the police force
+should be practically turned over to him. A French officer was at once
+established as chief inspector at the Ministry of the Interior.
+Transfers or dismissals in the force could now not be made without his
+consent, while he himself had arbitrary power in dismissing and
+transferring. He was also empowered to appoint inspectors throughout
+the rest of the kingdom. Naturally, the royalist press came out in
+strong denunciations, but these were terminated when the French
+established a press censorship.
+
+On the 22d the Allied governments demanded that the Greek force
+concentrated at Larissa be withdrawn from that point and scattered
+throughout the southern part of the country, and this demand was also
+promised. During the rest of the month there were reports of
+conferences between King Constantine and the French admiral and the
+representatives of the Entente, all tending to show that he was again
+becoming intensely pro-Ally.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+THE BULGARIANS DRIVEN BACK
+
+
+The quiet which prevailed in the field of military effort in Macedonia
+toward the end of October, 1916, continued well into November, 1916,
+save for local artillery activity and trench raids. But on the 11th
+fighting broke out again in the bend of the Cerna River on the sector
+held by the Serbians and French. That the Allies here made serious
+gains was proved by the fact that for the first time Sofia dispatches
+admitted an enemy advance, though they minimized it to trifling
+significance. On that date the Serbians began a series of attacks
+which resulted in the capture of Polog and 600 prisoners. During all
+of the following day the battle continued, and again the Serbians
+advanced, supported by the French, this time penetrating the enemy's
+lines for a distance of seven miles, enabling them to take the village
+of Iven and another 1,000 prisoners. On this date the Serbians
+announced that since September 14, 1916, when the offensive began,
+they had taken 6,000 prisoners, 72 cannon, and 53 machine guns. Again
+the Sofia dispatch admitted that the Serbians had succeeded in "making
+a salient before our positions northeast of Polog."
+
+The Serbians had now broken through the range of hills intervening
+between themselves and the eastern edge of the Monastir Plain. For a
+day there was a lull, and then the Serbians and French resumed their
+attacks. Northeast of Iven the Bulgarians and Germans were compelled
+to fall back, close pressed by the Serbians, who occupied the village
+of Cegal. North of Velyeselo the French and Serbians also advanced;
+the fighting spread westward as far as Kenali. The prisoners taken
+during the past few days now numbered 2,200, among whom were 600
+Germans. But more important still, the Allies were now almost due east
+of the city of Monastir. That city was now in imminent danger.
+
+On the 16th the entire line of formidable frontier defenses centered
+on Kenali had to be abandoned by the German and Bulgarian troops, in
+which operation they lost heavily. They then retreated across the Viro
+River, west of the railroad and across the Bistritza River to the east
+of the line, so that the Russians, following them up closely,
+succeeded in arriving within four miles of the city. Meanwhile the
+Serbians, in the mountains east of the swamps which protected the
+plain along the Cerna, were rushing rapidly on in their effort to
+swing around to the northeast of the city before the enemy should be
+able to intrench himself among the rolling hills that bound the
+northern extent of the plain. It was significant that among the
+prisoners were a number of members of regiments which had been
+fighting, only a week previously, upon the Dobrudja front under
+Mackensen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+MONASTIR FALLS
+
+
+A glance at the map will show that Monastir was now practically in the
+hands of the Allies, that it would be impossible for the Germans and
+Bulgarians to hold it any longer. As has already been explained, the
+plain or valley near whose head it stands is a broad, level region
+which here penetrates the mountainous interior of this portion of the
+Balkan Peninsula. To the eastward it is bounded by low, rolling
+foothills, which gradually rise into high, rocky mountains or heights.
+On the west there are no foothills: the mountains rise abruptly,
+stretching south almost to Kastoria. The railroad, after leaving
+Banitza, in the foothills, swings around into the plain, but under the
+shadows of the high ridges on the western side. Up toward the head of
+the plain these mountains curve slightly inward. About ten or fifteen
+miles below the point where they meet the rolling foothills, thus
+forming the head of the valley, the city of Monastir lies, some of its
+outlying suburbs being plastered up against the base of the mountains.
+
+An army occupying the heights above would absolutely dominate the
+city; its artillery could pound it to a wreck within a few hours.
+
+It was along these heights on the western edge of the plain that the
+French and the Serbians had advanced, driving the Bulgarians and
+Germans before them. Just at Monastir these heights are especially
+high and jagged, and the Bulgarians and Germans might very well have
+held out here against the enemy for a much longer period. But the
+foothills over on the eastern side of the plain had been passing into
+the hands of the Serbians operating in that region. These forces were
+now passing to the northward of the city, though the marshy plain
+still intervened. They were advancing toward the head of the valley.
+Should they succeed in reaching this point, where the highway to
+Prilep passed, they would cut off the retreat of the Bulgarians.
+
+But there was still another road by which the Bulgarians might have
+retreated: the highway leading through Resna to the upper part of Lake
+Ochrida. Had this been open they might have risked the blocking of the
+Prilep road. But, as was later indicated by the reports, the Italians
+had by this time advanced above Koritza and were not only in touch
+with the Russians operating around Kastoria and the lower part of the
+Prespa and Ochrida lakes, but they were skirting the western shore of
+Ochrida and threatening to advance on Monastir by this very highway.
+Thus the Bulgarians were threatened from two directions--by the
+Italians, who were turning their right flank, and by the Serbians, who
+had broken through their lines in the foothills east of the Monastir
+plain. There is probably no doubt that they could have held off all
+frontal attacks from the heights above Monastir. Thus they were
+squeezed, rather than driven, out of the city.
+
+On the night of the 18th the German and Bulgarian forces in the city
+quietly withdrew and retreated along the Prilep road to the head of
+the valley. At 8 o'clock the following morning, on November 19, 1916,
+exactly a year since the Serbians had been driven out of the city by
+the Austrians and Bulgarians, the Allied forces marched into the
+Macedonian city, and an hour later the flag of King Peter once more
+floated above the roofs. Apparently the Bulgarian retreat had been too
+long delayed, for before reaching the head of the valley they were cut
+off by the Serbians and only escaped after heavy losses, both in
+killed, wounded, prisoners, and materials. At the same time the
+Serbians effectually closed the road, taking several villages and all
+the dominating heights.
+
+From a military point of view the fall of Monastir was not of vast
+importance; it was of about the same significance from a tactical
+aspect as Bucharest. But from a moral and political aspect it was of
+immense importance. Though only populated by some 50,000 of mixed
+Turks, Vlachs (Rumanians), Greeks, a few Serbs and Bulgarians, the
+latter predominating, it was the center of the most Bulgarian portion
+of Macedonia. Throughout the outlying districts down to Kastoria, over
+to Albania, and up to Uskub, the population is purely and aggressively
+Bulgar. Here the simple peasants were persecuted by the Greek Church
+for fifteen years preceding the First Balkan War and by the Serbians
+afterward; by the one on account of their religion, by the other on
+account of their nationality. Here, too was the center of the
+revolutionary movement against the Turks, and here the people rose
+time and time again in open insurrection, only to be quenched by fire
+and blood. Nowhere in the Balkan Peninsula has there been so much
+oppression and bloodshed on account of nationality. For these reasons
+Monastir has a deep sentimental significance to every Bulgarian. No
+part of Macedonia means so much to him. Its possession by the Serbians
+after the Balkan Wars did more, probably, to reconcile the country to
+King Ferdinand's otherwise hateful pro-German policy than anything
+else. As is now well known, Ferdinand stipulated that this city should
+not only be taken from the Serbians, but that it should belong to
+Bulgaria, before he entered the war on the side of the Germans and
+Austrians. Otherwise it is quite likely that the Teutons would not
+have considered it worth while to advance so far south. Its recapture
+by the Serbians and their allies must, therefore, have had a
+corresponding depressing effect in Bulgaria.
+
+On the day following the evacuation of Monastir the Italians appear
+for the first time in the reports of the fighting in this region. They
+had obviously come in contact with the Bulgarians on their extreme
+right and were pressing them back, thus forcing the whole line to
+retire. The French, too, made some advance along the eastern shore of
+Lake Prespa, while the Serbians took five villages in the foothills at
+the head of the plain. The main forces of the Bulgarians and Germans
+were making their stand about twelve miles north of the city, well up
+in the hills and crossing the Prilep highway.
+
+For some days following bad weather again settled down over the
+Monastir section of the Macedonian front, and though it did not stop
+the fighting, it rendered further progress on the part of the Allies
+very difficult. But in spite of the brilliant victories announced by
+the dispatches from Berlin and Sofia, these very reports indicated, by
+the changing localities of the skirmishes that the Germans and
+Bulgarians were still being pressed back. By the end of the month the
+Serbians northeast of Monastir had advanced as far as Grunishte. In
+the northwest the Italians were fighting in the mountains about
+Tcervena Stana. Reporting on the last day of the month, Berlin
+announces that "this was the day of hardest fighting." The Germans and
+the Bulgarians had now reached their next line of defense and were
+making desperate efforts to hold it.
+
+Meanwhile, over on the right of the Allied front, between Doiran and
+the Vardar, violent fighting had been going on during the past few
+weeks, and though the Allies seemed to make some slight progress here
+and there, none of these gains were of a significant nature. Here the
+Bulgarians seemed to be holding their own completely. Possibly it was
+not Sarrail's object to attempt any real advance over in this section;
+merely to keep the enemy engaged there and prevent his rendering too
+much aid to the harried Bulgarian right wing. His main offensive, if
+he really had contemplated a real advance, had evidently been planned
+for the Monastir route into Serbia. That all the Slavic troops, the
+Russians and Serbians, were placed over in this section gives,
+besides, some little color to this supposition.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+GREEK FIGHTS GREEK
+
+
+In Greece the same old situation continued. In the beginning of the
+month there had come the first clash between the volunteer soldiers
+of the Provisional Government and the troops of the king. The Greek
+troops at Larissa had not yet had time to remove to southern Greece,
+in accordance with the demands of the Allies, when on November 2,
+1916, a body of volunteers of the Provisional Government marched
+overland to Katerina, a town twenty-five miles northeast of Larissa,
+where a garrison of royalist troops was stationed. Whether the
+insurgents really attacked the garrison, or whether the royalist force
+withdrew peacefully, was not made clear, but the fact was that the
+volunteers entered the town and took possession. Following this
+incident, it was stated from Athens on the 12th that King Constantine
+had given his permission that any of his officers in either the army
+or navy might join the forces of the Provisional Government, provided
+they first resigned from the regular establishment. On this date
+Germany entered her official protest against Greece handing over her
+ships and much war material to the French admiral. In connection with
+this report it was stated that Germany herself, on taking the forts
+and towns in eastern Macedonia, had seized 350 cannon, 60,000 rifles
+and $20,000,000 worth of ammunition. In the light of these facts,
+naturally Germany's protest was not taken very seriously. Indeed, it
+seems only to have suggested to the Allies that they complete what
+Germany had so well begun, for on the 18th Admiral Fournier presented
+a demand to the Greek Government that it surrender all arms,
+munitions, and artillery of the Greek army, with the exception of some
+50,000 rifles. The reason given was that the equilibrium had been
+disturbed by Germany's seizure of so much war material. This demand
+the Greek Government refused to concede five days later. Admiral
+Fournier thereupon declared that the Greek Government had until
+December 1, 1916, in which to make its decision.
+
+On the 26th the Provisional Government, through President Venizelos,
+formally declared war against Germany and Bulgaria. On this same date
+the Allied representatives protested to the Greek Government against
+the continued persecution of the adherents of the Provisional
+Government, and warned it that these must stop. At the same time
+several prominent Venizelists in Athens were advised that they would
+be fully protected, among them the mayor of the city.
+
+On December 1, 1916, when the ultimatum regarding the surrender of the
+arms and ammunition of the Greek forces expired, a crisis was again
+precipitated. The day before a transport with French troops appeared
+in Piraeus Harbor and preparations were made to land them. At the same
+time the Greek Government took control of the telegraphs and the post
+office, expelling the French officers in charge. During the day
+Admiral du Fournier notified the Greek Government that the first
+installment of war material must be delivered that day. The reply was
+a definite refusal. Thereupon troops and marines were landed from the
+transport and ships at Piraeus. Again large mobs assembled in the
+streets, and on the Allied troops marching into Athens a number of the
+demonstrators fired on them with revolvers. It was even reported that
+royalist troops took part in these disorders and made organized
+attacks on the French troops. Three Greek officers and twenty-six
+soldiers were reported killed, while the Allies lost two officers and
+forty-five marines. Apparently the Venizelists also took part in the
+rioting and the street fighting against the royalists, for General
+Corakas, head of the recruiting bureau for the Provisional Government
+in Athens, was arrested on a charge of inciting guerrilla warfare in
+Athens and using his room in the Hotel Majestic as a point from which
+to fire upon Greek soldiers. Mayor Benakas of Athens, a sympathizer of
+the Provisional Government, was also removed from office.
+
+On the following day, the disorders still continuing, the Entente
+Powers declared an embargo on all Greek shipping in their ports.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+FIGHTING IN THE STREETS OF ATHENS
+
+
+On December 4, 1916, Lord Robert Cecil, War Trade Minister, said in
+the British House of Commons that the situation was more serious than
+it had ever been before. Despite assurances from the Greek king that
+no disturbances would be permitted, a "most treacherous and unprovoked
+attack was made on the Allies' detachments landed by the French
+admiral on Friday." The British Government, Lord Cecil continued,
+considered the responsibility of the king and Greek Government to be
+deeply involved in this matter and Great Britain was considering, in
+conjunction with her Allies, immediate steps to secure a radical
+solution of the situation which had arisen. During these troubles the
+Greek ministers at Paris and London and the consuls at London and
+Manchester resigned, stating that they could no longer identify
+themselves with the present Government of Greece.
+
+By the following day the Allied forces had been compelled to withdraw
+under the protection of their ships at Piraeus. Meanwhile, it was said,
+the Greeks were intrenching on all the heights around the city. All
+the citizens of the Allied nations had left the city and had taken
+refuge in Piraeus. The diplomatic representatives of the United States,
+Holland, and Spain entered a protest against the treatment being
+accorded the Liberals. To this the Greek Government replied as
+follows:
+
+"The Royal Government from the first day had in view only the
+reestablishment and maintenance of order in the trouble on Friday and
+Saturday caused by revolutionary elements. This was done completely
+with as little damage as possible.
+
+"If, contrary to the orders given, there was some excess of tension
+and indignation on the part of the population and the troops, who saw
+in a movement so tragic for the fatherland agitators taking advantage
+of the unhappy events of the day to take up arms against the country
+and try to overthrow the established government, this must be taken
+into consideration. This exasperation was particularly aroused by the
+bombardment of the Royal Palace and the neighborhood thereof, in this,
+an open city, at the very moment when, an armistice having been
+concluded, it was hoped that peace would finally reign. Nevertheless,
+the Royal Government is decided to punish every person guilty of
+committing illegal acts and exceeding instructions, and a severe
+investigation will be begun to this end so soon as acts of this nature
+are brought to the attention of the Royal Government. In this
+connection the Foreign Minister considers it his duty to recall to
+your attention that by his note of November 28 he warned the neutral
+powers of the tragic position in which the Greek nation was placed as
+a result of measures taken against Greece and of the consequences
+which the French admiral's insistence on obtaining Greek war material
+might well have."
+
+A further explanation of the Greek point of view, with special
+reference to the street fighting in which the Allied troops were
+engaged, was contained in a note sent to the United States Government,
+on December 9, 1916. This communication was, in part, as follows:
+
+"Please bring to the knowledge of the Secretary of State for Foreign
+Affairs that the Royal Government, with two letters and several oral
+declarations, had informed the French admiral of the impossibility of
+delivering the war material they were summoned to give away. Despite
+these warnings the admiral decided to land a certain number of
+detachments which in several columns proceeded from Piraeus to the
+capital, which was under military control. The detachments occupied
+some of the outskirts and repulsed the royal army, which only at that
+moment decided to defend themselves without any orders. After the
+morning skirmishes between the Allied detachments and our troops, a
+truce was decided upon, at the request of the admiral. Despite the
+armistice, however, and after firing had ceased, the Allied warships
+bombarded several parts of the city and fired not less than
+thirty-eight shells, seven of which were directed against the Royal
+Palace. There can, under these conditions, be no question of treachery
+or of an unprovoked attack."
+
+After the fighting and rioting had continued for some forty-eight
+hours, quiet and order seem to have been reestablished in Athens. Then
+followed a period of secret conferences between members of the Greek
+Government, the king and the representatives of the Entente Powers,
+the details of which were not made public. On December 16, 1916, it
+was announced from Paris that Greece had accepted unreservedly the
+conditions of the Allies. Regarding the disorders of the first few
+days of the month, the Greek Government declared its desire to give
+every legitimate satisfaction and proposed arbitration. A hope was
+expressed, at the same time, that the Allies would lift the blockade
+which had been in force ever since the disorders. Further details were
+not given out; until the end of the month calm again prevailed in
+Greece. But as yet there was no indication that permanent settlement
+of the difficulties was in sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII
+
+THE SERBIANS CHECKED
+
+
+With regard to the military activities of the Allies along the
+Macedonian front, little more need be said for the period ending with
+February 1, 1917. Having been ousted out of the Monastir Plain, the
+German-Bulgarian troops were now defending a new line which seemed
+more advantageous to them. Apparently fighting continued, sometimes
+with furious determination on both sides, but the results were
+negligible. The terrain was now somewhat similar to that in France,
+and the situation seemingly became similar. The opposing lines faced
+each other deeply intrenched. Neither side could seriously drive the
+other back. By this time the Serbian capital had been reestablished in
+Monastir and the Serbians could make the claim that they were again
+fighting on native soil, though the Monastir district outside the city
+never gave birth to one Serbian.
+
+Considering the whole period covering the half year ending with
+February 1, 1917, it may well be said that, whatever his reasons,
+General Sarrail's activities have deeply disappointed the friends of
+the Entente. Reviewing the results of the entire half year's fighting
+along the Macedonian front, no results worthy of mention are visible
+save the capture of Monastir, and even this is almost entirely limited
+to its political value. From a military point of view, the Bulgarians
+have held their own with forces obviously inferior in numbers to those
+of the Allies. Naturally, in such a country the advantage is always
+with the defensive. It is significant that throughout the half year
+there are few dispatches indicating strong counterattacks on the part
+of the Bulgarians.
+
+
+
+
+PART IV--AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV
+
+THE FALL OF GORITZ
+
+
+Next to the Trentino the Isonzo was the part of the Austro-Italian
+front which had seen most fighting in the past. From the very
+beginning of the war it was there that the Italians had made their
+most elaborate efforts. Not only did the territory, difficult though
+it was ever there, allow the use of larger numbers and make possible
+more extensive operations, but success on the Isonzo front held out a
+greater promise than anywhere else--possession of Trieste.
+
+In spite of heroic efforts on the part of the Italian troops, however,
+so far not a great deal had been accomplished. It was time that the
+Italian lines were well in Austrian territory. But in midsummer, 1916,
+they were still not much farther advanced than soon after the outbreak
+of hostilities between Italy and Austria. The Austrians so far had
+resisted all Italian attempts to take Goritz, an important town on the
+Isonzo, about twenty-two miles northwest of Trieste. With Goritz in
+the hands of the Austrians Trieste was safe. For it could not be
+approached by the Italians as long as this important position
+threatened the flank and rear of any army attacking Trieste along the
+seashore.
+
+For considerable time little activity had been reported from the
+Isonzo front. In fact, during the beginning of August, 1916, nothing
+but occasional artillery engagements occurred anywhere on the
+Austro-Italian front. On August 4, 1916, however, signs of renewed
+Italian activity on the Isonzo front became noticeable. On that day a
+vigorous attack was launched against Austrian positions on the
+Monfalcone sector, the most southern wing of the Isonzo front. This
+sector was about ten miles southwest of Goritz and fifteen miles
+northwest of Trieste.
+
+Goritz was protected by three strong positions, Monte Sabotino to the
+north, Podgora to the west, and Monte San Michele to the south. The
+second of these had been in possession of the Italians for some time,
+but was of little use, though only just across the river from Goritz,
+because it was exposed to murderous fire from the Austrian positions
+on Monte Sabotino. To the south of Monte San Michele and north and
+east of Monfalcone there stretched the Doberdo and Carso Plateaus.
+These were elevated flatlands of a rocky character, very much exposed.
+They were bounded on all sides by hills, the western slopes of which
+rose almost directly out of the Gulf of Trieste. Before Trieste itself
+could be reached these plateaus had to be crossed.
+
+Following their initial successes of August 4 and 5, 1916, the
+Italians extended their operations on August 6, 1916. Stubborn
+fighting took place in the region of the Goritz bridgehead, on Monte
+Sabotino and Monte San Michele, as well as near Monfalcone and the
+Doberdo Plateau. The Italians, as may be seen from the following
+description of the special correspondent of the London "Times" who
+observed the attack, preceded the general attack with an elaborate
+artillery bombardment.
+
+"From 7 o'clock yesterday morning until 3.30 in the afternoon a
+fearful bombardment swept the Austrian positions from Monte Sabotino
+to Monfalcone such as has never been equaled even in this desolate
+zone. Gray-green clouds veiled the entire front, contrasting with the
+limpid atmosphere of a perfect day. All the hillsides on this side of
+the Isonzo were covered with new batteries, which belched forth an
+unceasing rain of projectiles on the surprised Austrians on the rocks
+of Sabotino, whose summit (2,030 feet) completely dominates Goritz.
+The Carso, the possession of which by the Austrians has been a
+deciding factor in many memorable struggles, was completely hidden by
+smoke until 3.30 in the afternoon. The general attack had been
+arranged for 4 o'clock, but the waiting troops on the Sabotino by 3.30
+could endure restraint no longer. Their commander ordered the
+cessation of the bombardment and ordered the advance.
+
+"Since October 23 last year the Italian line on the Sabotino remained
+unchanged. The southern side of the mountain sloping down to the
+Pevmica was honeycombed with elaborately constructed caverns, drilled
+out of the solid rock by the Italians. During these months each cavern
+was made to contain an entire company of infantry.
+
+"Recently, unknown to the enemy, a tunnel 850 feet long, which reached
+to within 90 feet of the Austrian trenches had been added to the
+engineering exploits of the Italians; 800 men were assembled in this
+tunnel. At a given signal they led the attack, supported by first-line
+troops and strong reserves, thanks to this intricate system of
+galleries on Sabotino's crest. The attack was watched by countless
+observers, who, on other mountains, were hanging breathless on the
+result of this hour's work. Innumerable patches of scrubby undergrowth
+had been set on fire by the Italians to prevent their serving Austrian
+snipers and were now wrapped in low-hanging clouds of black smoke.
+Between these black patches the Italians crept ahead when the signal
+came. The assault of the Austrian positions was of incredible
+rapidity. So much so that the first positions were carried by the time
+the enemy turned on his curtain of fire. The first, second, and third
+lines of trenches were carried in twenty minutes, after which the
+Austrians began a terrific bombardment of their old positions. The
+redoubt on the summit fell within an hour and the chase went on along
+the crest and down the sides, straight to the Isonzo, the pursuers
+everywhere gathering up prisoners in droves. San Mauro (one and
+one-fourth miles south of Sabotino) was taken by 6 o'clock, after
+which the work of intrenchment began."
+
+In spite of the most stubborn resistance the Austrians had to give way
+gradually. On August 7, 1916, the Austrian troops on Monte Sabotino
+were withdrawn to the eastern bank of the Isonzo. At the same time the
+positions on Monte San Michele were evacuated and the Italians thereby
+were put in full possession of the Goritz bridgehead. Their attacks of
+August 5, 6, and 7, 1916, had netted them territory for which they had
+been fighting for months, besides about 10,000 prisoners, some 20 guns
+and 100 machine guns and considerable war material of all description.
+
+Without loss of time they brought in heavy artillery and opened a
+devastating fire on unfortunate Goritz. Strong resistance was offered
+by the Austrians at many points, not so much now in the hope of
+preventing the fall of Goritz as in order to protect their retreat. In
+spite of this resistance small detachments of Italians crossed the
+Isonzo at nightfall of August 8, 1916, while their engineers threw
+bridges over the river at various points.
+
+On August 9, 1916, the bridge over the Isonzo leading directly into
+Goritz was stormed after one of the most sanguinary battles of the
+entire attack. This removed the last obstacle, and Italian troops
+immediately occupied the city. At the same time other troops took up
+the pursuit of the retreating Austrians. The latter delayed these
+operations as much as possible by rear-guard actions and by
+counterattacks against the new Italian positions on Monte San Michele
+and against the village of San Martino, just south of the mountain.
+
+On August 10, 1916, the Third Italian Army continued with increased
+pressure the attack on the San Michele and San Martino sectors, which
+had begun on the 9th instant, and succeeded in capturing very strong
+Austrian defenses between the Vippacco and Monte Cosich. The Austrians
+were routed completely and retired east of Vallone, leaving, however,
+strong rear guards on Cima Debeli and on Hill 121, east of Monfalcone.
+
+The Italians also occupied Rubbia and San Martino del Carso and the
+whole of the Doberdo Plateau, reaching the line of the Vallerie. East
+of Goritz the Austrians were holding out in trenches on the lines of
+Monte San Gabriele and Monte San Marto.
+
+The Vallone was crossed by Italian troops on August 11, 1916. The
+same detachments stormed the western slopes of Monte Nadlogern and the
+summit of Crn-Hrid and occupied Opacchiasella, on the northern edge of
+the Carso Plateau.
+
+By this time the Austrians had recovered their breath to some extent.
+They had taken up strong positions previously prepared for them in the
+hills to the east of Goritz and there resisted successfully all
+Italian attacks. Occasional counterattacks against the new Italian
+positions, however, brought no results.
+
+To the south of Goritz, too, the Italian advance came to a standstill
+after the Vallone Valley, separating the Doberdo from the Carso
+Plateau, had been crossed. Continuous fighting, however, went on along
+the northern edge of the Carso Plateau throughout the balance of the
+month of August, 1916, much of it being done by the artillery of both
+sides. The end of August, 1916, then, saw the Italians in possession
+of Goritz and their lines at some points as much as five miles nearer
+to Trieste. The latter, however, seemed at least for the time being
+safely in the hands of the Austrians, who by this time had received
+reenforcements and appeared to be determined to stop the Italian
+advance across the Carso Plateau at all odds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV
+
+FALL AND WINTER ON THE AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+
+With the beginning of fall and the slowing down of the Italian drive
+against Trieste after the capture of Goritz, activities on the various
+parts of the Austro-Italian front were reduced almost exclusively to
+artillery duels. Occasionally attacks of small bodies of infantry were
+made on both sides. They yielded, however, hardly ever results of any
+importance and had practically no influence on the relative positions
+of the Austrians and Italians.
+
+On September 1, 1916, the Austrians made an unsuccessful attack
+against Italian positions on Monte Civarone in the Sugana Valley
+(Dolomite Mountains). Italian attacks south of Salcano and west of
+Lokvicza were equally unsuccessful. Especially heavy artillery
+engagements occurred on that day on the Trentino front and along the
+coast of the Gulf of Trieste near Monte Santo.
+
+On September 2, 1916, along the coast of the Gulf of Trieste artillery
+and mine-throwing engagements continued in various sectors with
+intermittent violence. Fighting also spread to the Plava sector. On
+the Ploecken sector the Italians after a very violent artillery fire
+attacked unsuccessfully on a small front. Several attempts made by
+minor Italian detachments to advance on the Tyrol front were repulsed.
+Two attacks on Civaron failed.
+
+On the Trentino front Austrian artillery activity continued. Villages
+of the Astico Valley and the Italian positions on Cauriol in the
+Avisio Valley in particular were shelled. On the northern slopes of
+Cauriol Italian Alpine troops engaged the Austrians, inflicting
+considerable losses. In the hilly area east of Goritz some detachments
+of Italian infantry pierced two wire entanglements and bombed the
+Austrian lines, causing supports to be rushed up. These were
+effectively shelled by batteries.
+
+At the head of the Rio Felizon Valley, in the upper Bovi, during the
+night of September 3, 1916, detachments of infantry, Alpini, and
+volunteers succeeded by a daring surprise attack in capturing several
+commanding positions on the Punta del Forane. A violent Austrian
+counterattack was decisively repulsed.
+
+On September 4, 1916, the usual artillery activity took place on the
+Trentino front. The Austrian artillery fire was especially intense
+against Italian positions on Mount Civaron in the Sugana Valley, and
+on Mount Cauriol in the Fiemme Valley.
+
+A more violent attack was attempted by the Austrians on the evening of
+September 6, 1916, against the Italian lines on Monte Civarone in the
+Sugana Valley. After brisk fighting the Austrians had to withdraw,
+abandoning their arms and ammunition and leaving some dead on the
+ground.
+
+In the Vallarsa, Adige Valley, on the evening of September 7, 1916,
+strong Austrian detachments after an intense bombardment attacked
+Italian positions between Monte Spil and Monte Corno. They succeeded
+in breaking through some trenches. A counterattack recaptured for the
+Italians the greater part of the ground lost.
+
+On September 8, 1916, in the Tofana zone Italian troops repulsed an
+attack against the position in the Travenanzes Valley which their
+troops had taken on September 7, 1916.
+
+On the Trentino front the activity of the artillery was more
+pronounced on September 9, 1916. Unimportant attacks on Italian
+positions on Malga Sugna, in the Vallarsa, on the Asiago Plateau, and
+on Monte Cauriol and Avisio, were repulsed. At Dolje, in the Tolmino
+sector, after preparation with hand grenades, the Austrians attempted
+to break through the Italian line, but were driven back immediately.
+
+On the next day, September 10, 1916, between the Adige and Astico
+Valleys the Italians developed increased activity. Austrian hill
+positions in this sector were subjected to strong artillery and mine
+fire. On the Monte Spil-Monte Testo sector the advance of several
+Italian battalions was repulsed.
+
+On the same day the coast front, the Carso Plateau, and the Tolmino
+bridgehead were shelled strongly by Italian artillery. On some sectors
+of the Tyrol front there was continued activity on the part of patrols
+and the artillery. In the zone between Vallarsa and the head of the
+Posina Valley Italian infantry captured a strong intrenchment at the
+bottom of the Leno Valley. Between Monte Spil and Monte Corno they
+completed capture of the trenches still left in Austrian hands after
+the fighting of September 7, 1916. Progress was made by the Italians
+on the ground north of Monte Pasubio and on the northern slopes of
+Corno del Coston, in the upper Posina Valley. Italian batteries
+destroyed military depots near St. Ilanio north of Rovereto. The
+Austrians shelled Caprile, in Cordevole Valley, and Cortina d'Ampezzo.
+
+On September 12, 1916, Italian Alpine troops, north of Falzarego
+gained possession of a position which not only commanded Travenanzes
+Pass, but also interrupted communications between the Travenanzes
+Valley and the Lagazuoi district.
+
+This success was extended on the next day, September 13, 1916, when
+Italian detachments by a daring climb succeeded in taking some
+positions in the Zara Valley in the Posina sector and on Monte
+Lagazuoi in the Travenanzes-Boite Valley.
+
+Once more, on September 14, 1916, the Italians opened a new offensive
+in the region of the Carso Plateau. Artillery and mine fire increased
+there with the greatest violence. In the afternoon strong infantry
+forces in dense formation advanced to the attack. Along the whole
+front between the Wippach River and the sea fierce fighting developed,
+and the Italians in some places succeeded in penetrating the Austrian
+first-line trenches and in maintaining themselves there. North of the
+Wippach, as far as the region of Plava, artillery fire was very
+lively, but no infantry engagements worth mentioning developed. In the
+Fiemme Valley artillery duels continued. Several attacks delivered by
+Italian detachments about a battalion strong against the Bassano ridge
+were repulsed.
+
+A second attack on the Carso Plateau in the evening of September 14,
+1916, carried the Italian lines forward a few more miles and enabled
+them to surround the height and village of San Grado. After bombarding
+the Austrian positions for eight hours, this height and the village
+were stormed on the following day, September 15, 1916.
+
+During the balance of the month of September, 1916, only minor
+engagements and artillery duels occurred in the various parts of the
+Austro-Italian front. The only exception was a successful Austrian
+attack against the summit of Monte Cimone on the Trentino front
+southeast of Rovereto. Early in the morning of September 23, 1916, the
+entire summit was blown up by an Austrian mine and the entire Italian
+force of about 500 men was either killed or captured. Later that day
+the Italians captured the summit of the Cardinal (8,000 feet) at the
+northeast of Monte Cauriol south of the Avisio after overcoming the
+most stubborn Austrian resistance.
+
+During the first half of October, 1916, activities on the
+Austro-Italian front presented much the same picture as during the
+preceding month. Outside of artillery duels and local engagements
+there happened little of interest or importance to the general
+positions. However, there were of course a few exceptions. Thus on
+October 2, 1916, Italian troops captured two high mountains, the Col
+Bricon (7,800 feet), at the head of the Cismon-Brenta Valley, and an
+unnamed peak more than 8,000 feet high, in Carnia between Monte
+Cogliano and Pizzocollima.
+
+Various other successes of a similar nature were gained by the
+Italians during the next few days in this region, between the Avisio
+and the Vayol Cismon Valleys.
+
+In the meantime a heavy artillery bombardment had been started by the
+Italians on the Carso Plateau. From day to day the intensity of the
+artillery fire increased. At last on October 10, 1916, the Italians
+launched their attack against the Austrian lines south of Goritz and
+on the Carso. The battle lasted all day and night. After practically
+all the intricate Austrian defenses had been destroyed Italian
+infantry captured almost the whole of the line, composed of several
+successive intrenchments between the Vippacco (Wippach) River and Hill
+208, and advanced beyond it. Novavilla and the adjoining strong
+position around the northern part of Hill 208 also fell into their
+hands after brisk fighting. Prisoners to the number of 5,034,
+including 164 officers, were taken and also a large quantity of arms
+and ammunition.
+
+These successes were considerably extended on the following day,
+October 11, 1916. Strong Austrian counterattacks availed nothing.
+
+The Italians maintained their new positions and continued to push
+their advance on the Carso Plateau and southeast of Goritz, even if
+slowly, throughout October 12 and 13, 1916. For the balance of the
+month there was little activity on the Isonzo front beyond extremely
+heavy artillery fire, most of which had its origin on the Italian
+side. Occasional attempts on the part of the Italians to push their
+lines still farther had little success. Equally unsuccessful were
+Austrian endeavors to regain some of the lost ground.
+
+On the balance of the Austro-Italian front there was a great deal of
+local fighting in the various mountain ranges. The heaviest of this
+was centered around Monte Pasubio (7,000 feet), where many attacks and
+counterattacks were carried out during October 17, 18, 19, and 20,
+1916, under the most difficult conditions and frequently during very
+severe blizzards.
+
+With the beginning of November, 1916, the Italians once more resumed
+their drive against Trieste. On the last day of October, 1916, the
+Italian artillery and mine fire had reached again great violence east
+of Goritz and on the Carso Plateau. It became even more extensive and
+vigorous early in the morning of November 1, 1916. A few hours later
+the Italians began their infantry attacks against the Austrian lines,
+many of which had been destroyed previously by the bombardment.
+
+South of the Opacchiasella-Castagnievizza road the Austrian line was
+occupied at several points and held against incessant counterattacks,
+as were likewise trenches on the eastern slopes of Tivoli and San
+Marco and heights east of Sober. On the Carso, the wooded hills of
+Veliki, Kribach, and Hill 375 east and above Monte Pecinka, and the
+Height 308 east of the latter, were stormed and occupied.
+
+From Goritz to the sea heavy fighting which resulted in further
+Italian successes along the northern brow of the Carso Plateau
+continued on November 2, 1916. Here troops of the Eleventh Army Corps,
+which repulsed violent counterattacks during the night, took strong
+defenses on difficult ground east of Veliki, Kribach, and Monte
+Pecinka.
+
+On the next day, November 3, 1916, the offensive on the Carso was
+prosecuted successfully by the Italian troops. In the direction of the
+Vippacco (Wippach) Valley the heights of Monte Volkovnjak, Point 126,
+and Point 123 a little east of San Grado were stormed. An advance of
+almost a mile eastward brought Italian troops to Point 291 and along
+the Opacchiasella-Castagnievizza road to within 650 feet of the latter
+place. On the rest of the front to the sea the Austrians kept up a
+bombardment of great intensity with artillery of all calibers. A
+massed attack was directed against Point 208, but was broken up by
+concentrated fire.
+
+By November 4, 1916, the Austrian resistance had stiffened to such an
+extent that a lull became noticeable in the Italian enterprises east
+of Goritz and on the Carso Plateau. In spite of this, however, the
+Italians had succeeded again in advancing their lines, inflicting at
+the same time heavy losses to the Austrians and making almost 10,000
+prisoners in four days' fighting. Their own losses were also very
+heavy, and undoubtedly were partly responsible for the cessation of
+this new drive against Trieste.
+
+This was practically the last Italian effort during 1916 to reach
+Trieste. Weather conditions now rapidly became so severe that any
+actions beyond artillery bombardments and minor attacks by small
+detachments had become impossible. During the balance of November,
+1916, artillery duels were frequent and sometimes very severe on
+various parts of the Isonzo front, especially on the Carso Plateau.
+Beyond that neither side attempted anything of importance, though here
+and there small engagements resulted in slight adjustments of the
+respective lines. On the other parts of the Austro-Italian front much
+the same condition prevailed during all of November, 1916; indeed even
+artillery activity was frequently interrupted for days by the severity
+of the weather.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI
+
+FIGHTING ON MOUNTAIN PEAKS
+
+
+Much of the fighting on the Austro-Italian front which has been
+narrated in the preceding pages has been going on in territory with
+which comparatively few are acquainted. A great part of the front is
+located in those parts of northern Italy and the Austrian Tyrol and
+Trentino which for generations have been known and admired all over
+the world for their scenic beauty and natural grandeur. People from
+many countries of the world have used this ground which now is so
+bitterly fought over as their playground, and have carried away from
+it not only improved health, but also the most pleasant of memories.
+Though much of its beauty undoubtedly will survive the ravages of even
+this most destructive of wars, a great deal of damage has been
+inflicted. For in order to achieve some military ends the sky line of
+entire mountain ranges has been changed. Summits have been blown up,
+and contours of mountains which have been landmarks for centuries have
+been changed.
+
+Pleasant though life is in these regions when peace reigns, they offer
+particularly great and severe difficulties to the fighting men. The
+dangers and hardships which these courageous soldiers of Italy and
+Austria have been called upon to undergo are not easily appreciated
+unless one has been on the very ground on which they do some of their
+fighting. The following extracts from descriptive articles from the
+pen of Lord Northcliffe, Mr. Hilaire Belloc, and some special
+correspondents of the London "Times" give a most vivid picture of
+actual conditions in the Austro-Italian mountains in war times.
+
+Speaking of his visit to the Cadore front, Lord Northcliffe says in
+part:
+
+"In discussing the peculiarities of the hill fighting as contrasted
+with the fighting on the road to Trieste his Majesty the King of
+Italy, who has a fine sense of words, and who has spoken English from
+childhood, said: 'Picture to yourself my men 9,000 feet up in the
+clouds for seven months, in deep snow, so close to the Austrians that
+at some points the men can see their enemies' eyes through the
+observation holes. Imagine the difficulties of such a life with
+continued sniping and bomb throwing!'
+
+"The illustrated newspapers have from time to time published
+photographs of great cannon carried up into these Dolomite Alps, but I
+confess to having never realized what it means. It never occurred to
+me what happens to the wounded men or to the dead. How do supplies and
+ammunition reach these lonely sentinels of our Allies?
+
+"Here food for the men and food for the guns go first by giddy,
+zigzag roads, especially built by the Italians for this war. They are
+not mere tracks, but are as wide as the road that runs between Nice
+and Mentone, or the Hog's Back between Guilford and Farnham. When
+these have reached their utmost possible height, there comes a whole
+series of 'wireways,' as the Italian soldiers call them. Steel cables
+slung from hill to hill, from ridge to ridge, span yawning depths and
+reach almost vertically into the clouds. Up these cables go guns and
+food, as well as timber for the huts in which the men live, and
+material for intrenchments. Down these come the wounded. The first
+sensation of a transit down these seemingly fragile tight ropes is
+much more curious than the first trip in a submarine or aeroplane, and
+tries even the strongest nerves.
+
+"Man is not fighting man at these heights, but both Italians and
+Austrians have been fighting nature in some of her fiercest aspects.
+The gales and snowstorms are excelled in horror by avalanches. Quite
+lately the melting snow revealed the frozen bodies, looking horribly
+lifelike, of a whole platoon which had been swept away nearly a year
+ago.
+
+"While there have been heavy casualties on both sides from sniping,
+bombing, mountain and machine guns, and heavy artillery, there has
+been little sickness among the Italians. The men know that doctors'
+visits are practically impossible. Therefore they follow the advice of
+their officers. Yet the men have all the comforts that it is humanly
+possible to obtain. The cloud fighters are extremely well fed. Huts
+are provided, fitted with stoves similar to those used in Arctic
+expeditions.
+
+"Higher yet than the mountain fighting line stand the vedettes,
+sentinels and outposts whose work resembles that of expert Alpine
+climbers. They carry portable telephones with which they can
+communicate with their platoon. The platoon in turn telephones to the
+local commander."
+
+Of some of the fighting and of life in the Dolomites he says:
+
+"Of the three peaks of the Colbricon only the third, known as the
+Picolo Colbricon, remains to the enemy. The action which is now being
+developed on the Colbricon is especially interesting from the fact
+that the Italian advance there is not due to trained mountain troops,
+but to the light arm of Bersaglieri, who have there proved themselves
+equal to their best traditions. In the advance from the first to the
+second summit of Colbricon the Bersaglieri had to climb a gully at an
+angle of 70 degrees. At two points the wall rises perpendicularly, and
+the enemy was able to defend his positions by simply rolling down
+rocks, which carried in their train avalanches of pebbles.
+
+"In no region of the Italian front is there greater difficulty in the
+matter of supply, transport, and the care of the wounded. Every
+stretcher bearer here finds himself continually exposed to the peril
+of falling over a precipice together with his wounded.
+
+"As the sun rose the great peaks of the Dolomites stood out like pink
+pearls, set here and there in a soft white vapor. Coming through a
+Canadian-looking pine forest, with log-house barracks, kitchens, and
+canteens beneath one such peak, I was reminded of Dante's lines:
+'Gazing above, I saw her shoulders, clothed already with the planet's
+rays.' But poetic memories soon faded before a sniper's bullet from a
+very near Austrian outlook.
+
+"At one spot the Austrian barbed-wire entanglements were clearly
+visible through glasses on a neighboring summit at a height of over
+10,000 feet. A few yards below in an open cavern protected by an
+overhanging rock the little gray tents of Italy's soldiers were
+plainly seen. It may be a consolation to our men on the Somme and in
+Flanders that the war is being waged here in equally dangerous
+conditions as theirs.
+
+"The Italians have driven back the Austrians foot by foot up the
+almost vertical Dolomite rock with mountain, field, and heavy guns,
+and especially in hand-to-hand and bomb fighting. Sniping never ceases
+by day, but the actual battles are almost invariably fought by night.
+
+"The only day fighting is when, as in the famous capture of Col di
+Lana and more recently at Castelletto, the whole or part of a mountain
+top has to be blown off, because it is impossible to turn or carry it
+by direct assault. Then tunnels sometimes 800 yards long are drilled
+by machinery through the solid rock beneath the Austrian strongholds,
+which presently disappear under the smashing influence of thirty or
+forty tons of dynamite. Then the Alpini swarm over the debris and
+capture or kill the enemy survivors and rejoice in a well-earned
+triumph.
+
+"One needs to have scaled a mountainside to an Italian gun's
+emplacement or lookout post to gauge fully the nature of this warfare.
+Imagine a catacomb, hewn through the hard rock, with a central hall
+and galleries leading to gun positions, 7,000 feet up. Reckon that
+each gun emplacement represents three months' constant labor with
+drill, hammer, and mine. Every requirement, as well as food and water,
+must be carried up by men at night or under fire by day. Every soldier
+employed at these heights needs another soldier to bring him food and
+drink, unless as happens in some places the devoted wives of the
+Alpini act nightly under organized rules as porters for their
+husbands.
+
+"The food supply is most efficiently organized. A young London Italian
+private, speaking English perfectly, whom I met by chance, told me,
+and I have since verified the information, that the men holding this
+long line of the Alps receive a special food, particularly during the
+seven months' winter. Besides the excellent soup which forms the
+staple diet of the Italian as of the French soldiers, the men receive
+a daily ration of two pounds of bread, half a pound of meat, half a
+pint of red wine, macaroni of various kinds, rice, cheese, dried and
+fresh fruit, chocolate, and thrice weekly small quantities of cognac
+and Marsala.
+
+"Members of the Alpine Club know that in the high Dolomites water is
+in summer often as precious as on the Carso. Snow serves this purpose
+in winter. Then three months' reserve supplies of oil fuel, alcohol,
+and medicine must be stored in the catacomb mountain positions, lest,
+as happened to an officer whom I met, the garrisons should be cut off
+by snow for weeks and months at a time."
+
+Mr. Hilaire Belloc vividly pictures some mountain positions and
+observation posts in the high Dolomites as follows:
+
+"There stands in the Dolomites a great group of precipitous rock
+rising to a height of over 9,000 feet above the sea and perhaps 6,000
+feet above the surrounding valleys, one summit of which is called the
+Cristallo. It is the only point within the Italian lines from which
+direct and permanent observations can be had of the railway line
+running through the Pusterthal. In the mass of this mountain, up to
+heights of over 8,000 feet, in crannies of the rock, up steep couloirs
+and chimneys of snow, the batteries have been placed and hidden quite
+secure from the fire of the enemy, commanding by the advantage of the
+observation posts the enemy's line with their direct fire. One such
+observation post I visited.
+
+"A company of men divided into two half companies held, the one half
+the base of the precipitous rock upon a sward of high valley, the
+other the summit itself, perhaps 3,000 feet higher; end the
+communication from one to the other was a double wire swung through
+the air above the chasm, up and down which traveled shallow cradles of
+steel carrying men and food, munitions, and instruments. Such a device
+alone made possible the establishment of these posts in such
+incredible places, and the perilous journey along the wire rope swung
+from precipice to precipice and over intervening gulfs was the only
+condition of their continued survival. The post itself clung to the
+extreme summit of the mountain as a bird's nest clings to the cranny
+of rock in which it is built; while huts, devised to the exact and
+difficult contours of the last crags and hidden as best they might be
+from direct observation and fire from the enemy below, stood here
+perched in places the reaching of which during the old days of peace
+was thought a triumph of skill by the mountaineers. And all this
+ingenuity, effort, and strain stood, it must be remembered, under the
+conditions of war. The snow in the neighborhood of this aerie was
+pitted with the shell that had been aimed so often and had failed to
+reach this spot, and the men thus perilously clinging to an extreme
+peak of bare rock up in the skies were clinging there subject to all
+the perils of war added to the common perils of the feat they had
+accomplished.
+
+"Marvelous as it was, I saw here but one example of I know not how
+many of the same kind with which the Italians have made secure the
+whole mountain wall from the Brenta to the Isonzo and from Lake Garda
+to the Orther and the Swiss frontier. Every little gap in that wall is
+held. You find small posts of men, that must have their food and water
+daily brought to them thus, slung by the wire; you find them crouched
+upon the little dip where a collar of deep snow between bare rocks
+marks some almost impassable passage of the hills that must yet be
+held. You see a gun of 6 inches or even of 8 inches emplaced where,
+had you been climbing for your pleasure, you would hardly have dared
+to pitch the smallest tent. You hear the story of how the piece was
+hoisted there by machinery first established upon the rock; of the
+blasting for emplacement; of the accidents after which it was finally
+emplaced; of the ingenious thought which has allowed for the chance of
+recoil or of displacement; you have perhaps a month's journeying from
+point to point of this sort over a matter of 250 miles."
+
+A special correspondent of the London "Times" describes the fighting
+around Monte Pasubio in the Trentino, which has already been mentioned
+in the preceding pages, as follows:
+
+"When the tide of the Austrian invasion rolled back at the end of
+June, 1916, its margin became fixed on the crest of the Pasubio, an
+enormous and irregular group of mountains, of which the Italians
+remained in possession of the highest peak, but all the northern
+summits and the top of the whole central ridge called the Cosmagnon
+Alps remained to the enemy. It was from this ridge that they dominated
+the Vallarsa, and their first-line trenches were on its edge. Fifteen
+yards below them the Italians had burrowed in somehow and had hung on
+until now.
+
+"With the oncoming of winter, however, and the avalanches their
+hanging on became altogether too problematic. For weeks the weather
+prevented action through some meteorological phenomenon. When it is
+fair below in the plain Pasubio is crowned with dense fogs, and vice
+versa. Finally, the summits revealed themselves clear against the sky.
+The careful preparation had passed unobserved of the enemy, and during
+the night of the 8th inst., with increased intensity at dawn of the
+9th inst., the artillery attacked on the whole line for several miles.
+
+"Bombs were employed in great number, and are found to be even more
+effective here than on the Carso, the friable rock breaking into
+millions of fragments under the explosion.
+
+"In the afternoon a demonstrative attack in the Vallarsa carried the
+line ahead some 400 yards, and at half past 3 the principal attack
+carried the trenches of the crest (Cosmagnon Alps), together with the
+summit called Lora. The arduous mountaineering feat of arriving on the
+mountain's overhanging brow was accomplished on rope ladders by
+infantry Alpini and Bersaglieri.
+
+"The line once brought over the crest, the battle raged furiously on
+the mountain top. The Austrians had constructed magnificent caverns
+and dugouts, and made them as impregnable as their long residence
+permitted. Their resistance was specially keen around the fearful
+natural fortifications called the Tooth, consisting of spires and
+slender ledges and abounding in caverns. The Tooth still remains in
+part to the Austrians. From the first day, the Alpini have scaled part
+of it and still stick there.
+
+"One of the spectacular sights of the day was an Alpini perched on his
+spire of the Tooth, who kept the Austrian machine gunners from their
+task, pelting them with rocks every time they set to work.
+
+"The fighting all took place on the rolling surface of the Cosmagnon
+Alps--closed in by the barrage fire on both sides under the dazzling
+sky, but with the world below completely shut off by Monte Pasubio's
+crown of clouds. Shrapnel and shell disappeared in the ocean of
+clouds."
+
+More so than in any other war theater, fighting on the Austro-Italian
+front was influenced by weather conditions during December, 1916, and
+January, 1917. For practically its entire extent it was located in
+mountainous territory, most of it indeed, as we have seen, being among
+mountain peaks thousands of feet high.
+
+No wonder then that there was little to report at any time during
+December, 1916, and January, 1917, except artillery activity of
+varying frequency and violence. Occasionally engagements would take
+place between small detachments. These, however, were hardly ever
+little more than clashes between outposts or patrols. These and quite
+frequently even artillery activity were stopped entirely for days at a
+time by the severity of the blizzards and gales that prevailed
+throughout most of December, 1916.
+
+In January, 1917, much the same condition prevailed. Batteries
+everywhere were shelling each other and whatever positions of the
+enemy were within reach as often as the weather was clear enough to do
+so. On January 1, 1917, Goritz was subjected to a particularly heavy
+bombardment from the Austrian guns, which caused considerable material
+damage.
+
+On January 4, 1917, two attacks carried out by small Austrian
+detachments--one between the Adige and Lake Garda and the other in the
+Plava sector--were repulsed. An Italian attack on the Carso Plateau
+resulted in an advance of about 600 feet along a narrow front. Similar
+small advances were made in the same region by the Italians at various
+times. In most instances they were maintained in the face of frequent
+Austrian counterattacks, though some of the latter occasionally were
+successful.
+
+On January 18, 1917, the Austrians attempted, after especially violent
+artillery preparation, an attack against the Italian positions between
+Frigido and the Opacchiasella-Castagnievizza road on the Carso, south
+of Goritz. Italian gun and rifle fire, however, stopped the Austrian
+attack before it had fully developed. A few days later, on January 22,
+1917, a similar Austrian attack, launched southeast of Goritz, was
+somewhat more successful and resulted in the temporary penetration of
+a few Italian positions. The same success accompanied a like
+undertaking in the vicinity of Goritz near Kostanjeoica on January 30,
+1917.
+
+On practically every day through January, 1917, there was
+considerable artillery activity in the various sectors of the entire
+front. This increased in violence in accordance with weather
+conditions, but generally speaking had little result on general
+conditions, which at the end of January, 1917, were practically the
+same as had been established after the fall of Goritz.
+
+
+
+
+PART V--WAR IN THE AIR AND ON THE SEA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII
+
+AEROPLANE WARFARE
+
+
+During the six months, covering the period from August 1, 1916, to
+February 1, 1917, aeroplane warfare at the various fronts was as
+extensive, varied, and continuous as at any time during the war, if
+indeed not more so. The efficiency of machines and operators alike
+became higher and higher developed. Atmospheric conditions became less
+and less of a factor in flying. If in spite of these facts the number
+of machines and flyers lost continued to be comparatively huge, this
+was due to the fact that the development of flying made fairly equal
+progress in the flying corps of the various belligerents, and that
+increased efficiency and independence from atmospheric conditions
+rather had the tendency of increasing the daring of aviators.
+
+It is of course evident that it would be impossible within the limits
+of these chapters to narrate every flying enterprise undertaken.
+Hundred, perhaps thousands, of flights made, are never reported either
+officially or unofficially. The largest number of these of course had
+as their object chiefly the gathering of information or the more
+accurate direction of artillery fire.
+
+In the following pages, however, will be found an account of all the
+more important independent aeroplane enterprises undertaken at the
+various fronts, as well as aeroplane raids made into the interior of
+some of the countries at war.
+
+On August 1, 1916, an Italian aerial squadron attacked with
+considerable success an Austro-Hungarian plant for making Whitehead
+torpedoes and submarine works located west of Fiume on one of the
+Croatian bays of the Adriatic.
+
+Two German aeroplanes, coming from the Dardanelles, on August 4, 1916,
+dropped bombs on the aerodrome of the Entente Allies, located on the
+island of Lemnos in the AEgean Sea, but were promptly driven off by
+gunfire from British ships.
+
+On the same day, August 4, 1916, Turkish or German aeroplanes
+attempted a bombardment of shipping on the Suez Canal. The attack was
+carried out by two machines over Lake Timsah, forty-five miles south
+of Port Said. The town of Ismailia, on the lake border, also was
+bombarded. No damage was done.
+
+Again on August 6, 1916, a bomb attack by aeroplanes over Port Said
+and Suez inflicted little material damage and caused slight
+casualties.
+
+On the following day, August 7, 1916, an Austrian squadron made up of
+twenty-one aeroplanes attacked Venice. They claimed to have dropped
+three and one-half tons of explosives and to have caused great damage
+and many fires; the Italian Government, however, stated that the
+damage caused was comparatively small and that only two people were
+killed.
+
+On September 5, 1916, two British aeroplanes raided the Turkish
+aerodrome and aeroplane repair section at El Arish, ninety miles east
+of the Suez Canal, dropping twelve bombs with good results. Turkish
+aeroplanes attacked the British machines but ultimately gave up the
+fight, and the latter returned to camp undamaged.
+
+Again on September 8, 1916, three British machines bombed El Mazaar
+and the Turkish camp near by.
+
+Early in the morning of September 13, 1916, a group of Austrian
+seaplanes attacked Venice once more. Incendiary and explosive bombs
+struck the church of San Giovanni Paola, the Home for the Aged, and a
+number of other buildings, inflicting some damage, although no
+casualties were reported. Chioggra also was attacked by the same
+machines; but here, too, the damage was rather slight.
+
+On the same day in the afternoon an Italian air squadron of eighteen
+Capronis under the protection of three Nieuport antiaircraft
+aeroplanes attacked Trieste. Six Italian torpedo boats and two motor
+boats assisted them in the gulf. Numerous bombs were dropped, but
+these caused only slight damage, and none of military importance. One
+man was slightly wounded.
+
+Austrian aeroplanes and antiaircraft batteries obtained hits on the
+Italian torpedo boats. At the same time an Italian air squadron
+appeared over Parenzo, dropping twenty bombs in a field. No damage was
+done.
+
+Still another attack was reported on this day, this time by the
+Russians. A squadron of four Russian giant aeroplanes of the
+Slyr-Murometz type bombarded the German seaplane station on Lake
+Angern in the Gulf of Riga. The Russians claimed to have dropped about
+seventy-five bombs and to have started a great conflagration. They
+also claimed that eight German seaplanes counterattacked, but were
+repulsed by machine-gun fire, and that as the result of the bombing
+and the air fight not fewer than eight German machines were destroyed
+or put out of action. None of the Russian machines were reported
+either lost or damaged.
+
+A German aerodrome, located at St. Denis-Westrem in Belgium, was
+attacked on September 22, 1916, by British machines who claimed to
+have killed forty Germans and to have burned two sheds and three
+aeroplanes. On October 1, 1916, bombs were dropped by British
+aeroplanes on the Turkish camp at Kut-el-Amara.
+
+Three days later, on October 4, 1916, British aeroplanes carried out a
+successful bombing attack on Turkish camps in the neighborhood of El
+Arish. It was claimed then that recent aerial attacks on the Turkish
+aerodrome at El Arish had had the effect of compelling the Turks to
+move their machines and hangars from that place.
+
+An Austro-German air squadron on October 12, 1916, was reported to
+have dropped bombs on Constanza, the principal Rumanian Black Sea
+port.
+
+On October 20, 1916, a British naval aeroplane attacked and brought
+down a German kite balloon near Ostend. A similar machine engaged a
+large German double-engined tractor seaplane, shooting both the pilot
+and the observer. The seaplane side-slipped and dived vertically into
+the sea two miles off Ostend. The remains later were seen floating on
+the water. Both the British machines were undamaged.
+
+Two days later, October 21, 1916, a German aeroplane approached the
+fortified seaport of Sheerness at the mouth of the Thames, flying very
+high. Four bombs were dropped, three of which fell into the harbor.
+The fourth fell in the vicinity of a railway station and damaged
+several railway carriages. British aeroplanes went up and the raider
+made off in a northeasterly direction. No casualties were reported.
+
+A German seaplane was shot down and destroyed later that day by one of
+the British naval aircraft. The German machine fell into the sea.
+Judging by time, it was probably the seaplane which visited Sheerness.
+
+Margate, a resort on the southeast coast of England, was attacked on
+October 22, 1916, by a German aeroplane, which succeeded in inflicting
+slight material damage and injuring two people before it was driven
+off.
+
+The French made a strong attack on the Metz region on the same day,
+October 22, 1916, employing twenty-four machines. They claimed that
+these dropped 4,200 kilograms of bombs on blast furnaces at Hagodange
+and Pussings north of Metz, and also on the railway stations at
+Thionville, Mezures-les-Betz, Longwy, and Metz-Sablons. On the same
+day another French aerial squadron bombarded the ammunition depot at
+Monsen road (Somme). German aeroplanes dropped several bombs on
+Luneville. There were no victims and the material damage was
+insignificant. On the Somme front two German aeroplanes were brought
+down and three others were forced down in a damaged condition.
+Finally, good results were achieved by a French bombing expedition
+against factories of Rombach and the railway station at Mars-la-Tour.
+
+The Germans, however, claimed that the French air raids did no damage
+to Metz and other points, but that five civilians were killed and
+seven made ill by inhaling poisonous gases from the bombs. They
+further claimed that twenty-two French aviators had been shot down by
+aerial attacks and antiaircraft fire and that eleven aeroplanes were
+lying behind the German lines. Captain Boelke conquered his
+thirty-seventh and thirty-eighth foes.
+
+On October 27, 1916, French aeroplanes dropped forty bombs on the
+railway station at Grand Pre, eight on the railway station at
+Challerange, and thirty on enemy bivouacs at Fretoy-le-Chateau and
+Avricourt, north of Lassigny, where two fires were seen to break out.
+
+On the same night ten other French machines dropped 240 bombs on the
+railway station at Conflans and thirty on the railway station at
+Courcelles. Another French machine dropped six shells on the railway
+line at Pagny-sur-Moselle.
+
+The British report for the same day likewise announced that aerial
+engagements took place between large numbers of machines on both
+sides. It was reported that five machines fell during a fight, two of
+which were British. On another occasion one British pilot encountered
+a formation of ten German machines, attacked them single handed and
+dispersed them far behind their own lines.
+
+On October 28, 1916, it was announced that Captain Boelke, the famous
+German aviator, had been killed in a collision, with another
+aeroplane. He was credited with having brought down forty aeroplanes.
+
+Not until almost the middle of November, 1916, did aeroplane warfare
+develop its usual activity.
+
+On the night of November 9-10, 1916, British aeroplanes dropped bombs
+without success on Ostend and Zeebrugge. One British machine was
+forced down and captured and the aviator, a British officer, made
+prisoner.
+
+On the morning of November 10, 1916, a German battleplane attacked
+two British biplanes between Nieuport and Dunkirk. It shot down one
+and forced the other to retreat. In the forenoon three German
+battleplanes met a superior British aerial squadron off Ostend and
+attacked it. After a combat the British were forced to withdraw. The
+German machines returned to their base, having suffered insignificant
+damages.
+
+Between 10 and 11 o'clock on the morning of November 10, 1916, a group
+of seventeen British aeroplanes bombarded the steel works at
+Voelklingen, northwest of Saarbruecken. One thousand kilograms of
+projectiles were dropped on the buildings, which were damaged
+seriously. In the course of the operations British machines fought
+several actions against German machines, three of which were felled.
+
+On the following night between 8 and 9 o'clock eight British
+aeroplanes executed a fresh bombardment of these works, dropping 1,800
+kilograms of projectiles. Several fires were observed. All British
+machines returned safely.
+
+During the night of November 10-11, 1916, British squadrons drenched
+with projectiles the stations of Ham, St. Quentin, Tergnier, and
+Nesle, in the Somme region, and the aerodrome at Dreuze, the blast
+furnaces of Ramsbach, the aeroplane sheds of Frescati (near Metz), and
+the blast furnaces of Hagodange (north of Metz). These operations
+caused great damage, and several explosions and fires were observed.
+
+A German aeroplane during the night of November 10-11, 1916, bombarded
+several French towns. Nancy and Luneville received projectiles which
+caused damage or casualties. Amiens was also bombarded on various
+occasions during the same night. Nine persons of the civilian
+population were killed and twenty-seven injured.
+
+On November 11, 1916, five German machines were claimed to have been
+brought down by the British.
+
+The following day, November 12, 1916, a squadron of British naval
+aeroplanes attacked the harbor of Ostend. A considerable number of
+bombs was dropped on the dockyards and on the war vessels in the
+harbor. On the same day it was also reported that two successful air
+raids had been carried out by aircraft operating with the British
+forces in Egypt. The points raided were Maghdaba and Birsaba. A ton
+of high explosives was dropped. Two Fokker machines were brought down
+by the raiding aeroplanes, all of which returned safely.
+
+Near Saloniki two aeroplanes belonging to the Central Powers were
+forced to descend behind their own lines. During the night of November
+14, 1916, ten British machines at various points in France carried out
+a series of successful raids on railway stations and rolling stock.
+
+On the same day a Turkish aeroplane flying very high dropped several
+bombs in and about Cairo, Egypt, killing and wounding a number of
+civilians. No military damage was done and only one military casualty
+was incurred.
+
+On November 17, 1916, it was reported that a French aviator had
+succeeded in flying across the Alps after dropping bombs upon the
+station at Munich, the capital of Bavaria. He landed near Venice,
+having flown 435 miles in one day.
+
+London was again attacked on November 28, 1916. An aeroplane, flying
+very high, dropped six bombs which injured nine people and did
+considerable damage. A German machine, brought down a few hours later
+near Dunkirk, was supposed to have been the one returning from the
+attack on London.
+
+On November 30, 1916, in Lorraine, three British aeroplanes fought an
+engagement with several German machines. One German machine was
+brought down in the forest of Gremecy.
+
+On the same day on the Somme front French airmen fought about forty
+engagements, in the course of which five German machines were brought
+down.
+
+Six French machines dropped fifteen bombs on Bruyeres. Another French
+air squadron carried out a bombardment of the aerodrome of Grisolles
+(north of Chateau-Thierry). Between 3.45 p. m. and 7 p. m. 171 bombs
+of 120 mm. were dropped.
+
+That night between 9.30 p. m. and 1.10 a. m. four French machines
+bombarded the blast furnaces and factories of Voelklingen (northwest of
+Saarbruecken).
+
+On December 1, 1916, a group of aeroplanes of the British Naval Air
+Service bombarded the blast furnaces of Dillingen, northwest of
+Saarbruecken. During this expedition one ton of explosives was dropped.
+
+A German aeroplane was brought down during the return journey.
+
+During December 2, 1916, Italian aeroplanes bombed Austrian positions
+at Dorimbergo (Fornberg) and Tabor, in the Frigido (Vippacco) Valley.
+On the following day, December 3, 1916, another Italian air squadron
+bombed the railway station for Dottogliano and Scoppo on the Carso
+(seven and one-half miles northeast of Trieste). Notwithstanding bad
+weather conditions and the violent fire of the Austrian artillery, the
+aviators came down low to drop a ton and half of high explosives.
+
+Numerous air flights took place and one Austrian machine was brought
+down; one of the Italian machines was reported missing.
+
+Austrian seaplanes dropped bombs at several points on the Carso
+without causing casualties or damage. An Italian aeroplane dropped
+five large bombs on the floating hangars at Trieste, with excellent
+results.
+
+On December 4, 1916, Austrian aircraft dropped a few bombs on Adria
+and Monfalcone without doing any damage.
+
+On the Tigris front, during the same day, December 4, 1916, Turkish
+aeroplanes bombed successfully British camps. Six British machines
+immediately made an equally successful counterattack.
+
+On December 14, 1916, a British squadron of naval aeroplanes carried
+out a bombardment of the Kuleli-Burges bridge, south of Adrianople.
+
+Throughout the balance of December, 1916, there was a great deal of
+local air activity at many points on all the fronts. Comparatively
+speaking, however, no major actions occurred.
+
+The same condition existed during the early part of January, 1917.
+
+On January 11, 1917, an Austrian air squadron dropped a considerable
+number of bombs in the neighborhood of Aquieleja, southwest of
+Monfalcone. One Austrian seaplane was brought down by Italian
+antiaircraft batteries. At the same time two aeroplanes bombarded the
+aviation ground at Propecto and the seaplane base in the harbor of
+Trieste.
+
+The Russian front reported increased aerial activity on the following
+day, January 12, 1917. A German aerial squadron, consisting of
+thirteen airplanes, dropped about forty bombs on the station and town
+of Radzivilov. Russian aeroplanes bombarded with machine-gun fire a
+German battery near the village of Krukhov.
+
+Similar exploits were reported from many different points on the
+various fronts during the following week. Especially was this true of
+the western front. However, there nowhere occurred any major actions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+ZEPPELIN RAIDS
+
+
+During the night of July 31 to August 1, 1916, a squadron of
+Zeppelins, reported to have numbered at least six, raided the eastern
+and southeastern counties of England. Sixty bombs were dropped,
+causing considerable material damage, but, as far as was ascertained,
+no casualties.
+
+Again the following day, August 2, 1916, six Zeppelins appeared over
+the east coast of England. According to German claims, London, the
+naval base at Harwich, and various industrial establishments in the
+county of Norfolk were covered with a total of about eighty bombs,
+which caused, of course, considerable loss. Although English
+authorities claimed that antiaircraft guns registered a number of hits
+against one, or possibly two, of the Zeppelins, and that another,
+flying during its return trip over Dutch territory, was fired at and
+hit, all of the six were later reported to have returned to their home
+base undamaged.
+
+Another squadron visited the east coast again one week later, August
+9, 1916. There were reported to have been between seven and ten
+machines which dropped about 160 bombs, caused extensive damage, and
+killed twenty-three people. English batteries finally forced the
+withdrawal of the Zeppelins.
+
+About twenty-four hours after Rumania's entrance into the war on the
+side of the Allies a Zeppelin, accompanied by an aeroplane, appeared
+during the night of August 28, 1916, over Rumania's capital,
+Bucharest. After a short bombardment, which caused but little damage,
+they were both forced to withdraw by the fire of antiaircraft guns.
+Before returning to their bases they bombarded three other unnamed
+Rumanian cities without causing much damage.
+
+Shortly after 11 o'clock in the evening of September 2, 1916, the
+eastern coasts of England were again attacked, this time by a fleet of
+thirteen airships, the most formidable attack that had so far been
+launched against England.
+
+The measures taken by the English authorities for the reduction or
+obscuration of lights proved most efficacious, for the raiding
+squadrons, instead of steering a steady course as to the raids of the
+spring and of last autumn, groped about in darkness looking for a safe
+avenue to approach their objectives.
+
+Three airships only were able to approach the outskirts of London. One
+of them, the _L-21_, appeared over the northern district about 2.15 in
+the morning of September 3, 1916, where she was picked up by
+searchlights and heavily engaged by antiaircraft guns and aeroplanes.
+After a few minutes the airship was seen to burst into flames and fall
+rapidly toward the earth.
+
+The ship was destroyed, the wreckage, engines, and half-burned bodies
+of the crew being found at Cuffley, near Enfield. The other two ships
+which approached London were driven off by the defenses without being
+able to approach the center of the city. A great number of bombs were
+dropped promiscuously over the east Anglian and southeastern counties,
+causing considerable but not very serious damage. Two people were
+reported killed and thirteen injured.
+
+The funeral of the sixteen members of the German Zeppelin took place
+on September 6, 1916, at Potter's Bar Cemetery, and was carried out
+under the direction of the British Royal Flying Corps. A young member
+of the latter, Lieutenant William Robinson, who had been responsible
+for the Zeppelin's destruction, received later the Victoria Cross as
+well as a number of monetary rewards and civic honors. The site at
+Cuffley, which had been the scene of the airship's destruction, was
+presented to the English nation by its owner.
+
+During the night of September 23, 1916, twelve Zeppelins again made
+their appearance over the eastern counties of England and the
+outskirts of London. Although the material damage was widespread, it
+was borne chiefly by small homes and shops. The toll in human life was
+greater than at any other raid, amounting to thirty-eight killed and
+125 injured. However, two of the Zeppelins were forced down in Essex;
+one of them was destroyed together with its crew; the other managed to
+make a landing and its crew of twenty-one were made prisoners.
+
+Two days later, during the night of September 25, 1916, a smaller
+squadron of about six airships attacked the northeastern and southern
+counties of England. Bombs did considerable damage, most of which,
+however, was inflicted on privately owned property. Thirty-six people
+were killed and twenty-seven more injured.
+
+With the advance of autumn Zeppelin raids became less frequent. Only
+once during October, 1916, on the night of October 1 to 2, did a
+squadron of Zeppelins appear over English territory. At that time ten
+airships attacked the eastern coast and London. The damage again was
+principally to private property. Only one person was reported killed
+and one injured. One of the Zeppelins, however, was brought down in
+flames near Potter's Bar, and from its wreckage the bodies of nineteen
+members of its crew were recovered.
+
+Not until the end of November, 1916, was another Zeppelin attack
+reported. At that time, during the night of November 27 to 28, 1916,
+two airships raided Yorkshire and Durham. They did considerable
+damage, killed one and injured sixteen persons. Both Zeppelins were
+brought down and destroyed and the entire crews of both perished.
+
+One airship was attacked by an aeroplane of the British Royal Flying
+Corps and brought down in flames into the sea off the coast of Durham.
+
+Another airship crossed the North Midland counties and dropped bombs
+at various places. On her return journey she Was repeatedly attacked
+by aeroplanes of the British Royal Flying Corps and by guns. She
+appeared to have been damaged, for the last part of her journey was
+made at very slow speed, and she was unable to reach the coast before
+day was breaking.
+
+Near the Norfolk coast she apparently succeeded in effecting repairs,
+and, after passing through gunfire from the land defenses, which
+claimed to have made a hit, proceeded east at high speed and at an
+altitude of over 8,000 feet. She was attacked nine miles out at sea by
+four machines of the British Royal Naval Air Service, while gunfire
+was opened from an armed British trawler, and the airship was finally
+brought down in flames.
+
+During December, 1916, no Zeppelins were apparently used actively. As
+far as it was possible to determine definitely, the number of German
+airships wrecked from the outbreak of the war up to January 1, 1917,
+was nineteen. Of these twelve were lost during 1916 as follows:
+
+_L-19._ Wrecked in the North Sea on February 3.
+
+_L-77._ Shot down by French guns near Brabant-le-Roi on February 21.
+
+_L-15._ Shot down in raid on eastern counties, and sank off Thames
+estuary on April 1.
+
+_L-20._ Wrecked near Stavanger on May 3.
+
+Unnamed airship. Destroyed by British warships off Schleswig on May 4.
+
+Unnamed airship. Brought down by Allied warships at Saloniki on May 5.
+
+_L-21._ Burned and wrecked near Enfield, September 3.
+
+_L-32_ and _L-33_. Brought down in Essex, September 24.
+
+Airship brought down at Potter's Bar, October 1.
+
+Two airships brought down in flames off the east coast, November
+27-28.
+
+Another list, based on an article published in the "Journal of the
+Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute," yields a total of
+thirty-eight Zeppelins as having been destroyed since the outbreak of
+the war. Of this number the loss of thirty was said to have been
+authenticated.
+
+Of the larger total (38) 5 were destroyed in 1914, 17 in 1915, and 16
+in 1916. Of these 4 were lost in France, 6 in Russia, 7 in Belgium, 7
+in England, 1 in Denmark, 1 in Norway, 1 in the Balkans, 5 in the
+East, and 6 in Germany.
+
+No further activities of Zeppelins were reported during January, 1917,
+except that it was announced unofficially on January 3, 1917, that two
+Zeppelins had been destroyed at Tondern, Schleswig, by a fire due to
+defective electric wiring in a recently constructed double shed.
+
+To sum up the losses in aeroplanes incurred by the various
+belligerents during the six months' period, August, 1916, to February,
+1917, is practically impossible. Figures are available for a few
+months only, and they are not only unofficial, but come from all kinds
+of different sources, most of them very much biased.
+
+Furthermore, there always is a wide discrepancy between figures
+published by adherents of the Allies and those published by the
+friends of the Central Powers.
+
+As an example of this condition the following may well serve: At the
+end of January, 1916, an unofficial statement claimed that the Germans
+lost during 1916 on the western front a total of 221 aeroplanes. The
+French authorities immediately claimed that they had knowledge of 417
+German aeroplanes which had been shot down by their aviators, and that
+195 more machines were brought down damaged, of which undoubtedly a
+number finally were to be considered lost to the Germans. Neither
+statement, however, is supported by sufficient data to allow any kind
+of checking up. The truth, therefore, must be sought somewhere around
+the average between these two figures.
+
+Equally difficult is it to arrive at any definite figures regarding
+the losses in man power incurred by the various aviation corps. No
+official figures are available except the lists of casualties
+published in aviation papers. These, however, cover only the French
+and English organizations, and even in these two cases they contain a
+large number of men who lost their lives not at the front, but in
+aviation camps in England or France while being trained.
+
+However, that section of the French Aviation Corps containing American
+volunteers has been more liberal in publishing statistics. On November
+3, 1916, it was announced that the flying unit of the French Corps,
+consisting entirely of American volunteers, had brought down between
+May and November a total of twenty-one German machines. At that time
+it consisted of twelve American members. Unfortunately it had lost
+previously to this date two of its members.
+
+Kiffin Rockwell of Atlanta, Ga., had been killed in an air battle over
+Thame in Alsace on September 23, 1916. He had joined the Foreign
+Legion of the French army in May, 1915, had been severely wounded,
+received the Military Medal, and after his recovery had been
+transferred to the Flying Corps. He had participated in thirty-four
+air battles, and a few hours before his death had been promoted to be
+a second lieutenant.
+
+Norman Prince, Harvard graduate and native of Hamilton, Mass., was
+severely wounded early in October, 1916. He died a week later on
+October 14, 1916, in a hospital after first having been decorated with
+the cross of the Legion of Honor. He had also received some time
+before the Military Medal.
+
+On November 2, 1916, it was announced that Anthony H. Jannus, a young
+Washington aviator, had been killed in Russia on October 12, 1916,
+while flying for the Russian army.
+
+Another young American, Ruskin Watts of Westfield, N. J., who was
+serving in the English Aviation Corps on the western front, was on
+November 2, 1916, reported as missing since September 22, 1916. No
+further news of his fate was known.
+
+This meant that, as far as was known definitely, four Americans had
+lost their lives fighting for the Allies as members of their aviation
+service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX
+
+SUBMARINE WARFARE
+
+
+The totals of the damage inflicted by submarines of the Central Powers
+on the merchant fleets of the Entente Allies during July, 1916, was
+not officially announced until August 16, 1916. On that day an
+official statement was published in Berlin to the effect that German
+and Austrian submarines and mines had destroyed during July, 1916, 74
+merchantmen belonging to England and her allies. These ships had a
+total tonnage of 103,000 tons.
+
+The activity of German and Austrian submarines increased considerably
+during August, 1916. According to an official German statement
+submarines or mines sunk 126 merchant ships, belonging to England and
+her allies, totaling 170,679 tons gross, as well as 35 neutral
+merchant ships, totaling 38,568 tons. These figures, however, did not
+agree with figures compiled in this country. The New York "Journal of
+Commerce" records only 93 ships of a total tonnage of 123,397 as
+having been sunk in August, 1916. The same authority also announced
+that in the period from August 1, 1914, to September 1, 1916, there
+had been destroyed, 1,584 merchant ships, aggregating 2,939,915 tons.
+
+Among the ships sunk in August, 1916, was the Italian mail steamer
+_Letimbro_. She went to the bottom of the Mediterranean on August 4,
+1916, and it was claimed that many of her 1,100 passengers were lost.
+Other ships of more than 2,000 tons which were lost in August, 1916,
+were:
+
+British: _Tottenham_, 3,106 tons; _Favonian_, 3,049 tons; _Mount
+Coniston_, 3,018 tons; _Aaro_, 2,603 tons; _Trident_, 3,129 tons; _San
+Bernardo_, 3,803 tons; _Antiope_, 2,793 tons; _Whitgift_, 4,397 tons;
+_Britannic_, 3,487 tons; _Heighington_, 2,800 tons; and _Newburn_,
+3,554 tons.
+
+Italian: _Citta di Messina_, 2,464 tons; _Hermerberg_, 2,824 tons;
+_Siena_, 4,372 tons; _Teti_, 2,868 tons; _Nereus_, 3,980 tons;
+_Angelo_, 8,609 tons; _Sebastiano_, 3,995 tons; _Stampalia_, 9,000.
+
+Other nations: _Ivar_, Danish, 2,139 tons; _Kohina Maru_, Japanese,
+3,164 tons; _Tenmei Maru_, Japanese, 3,360 tons; _Tricoupis_, Greek,
+2,387 tons; _Ganekogorta Mendi_, Spanish, 3,061 tons; _Pagasarri_,
+Spanish, 3,287 tons.
+
+Of vessels smaller than 2,000 tons the losses to the various nations
+were as follows: Great Britain, 23; France, 6; Italy, 10; Russia, 4;
+Norway, 9; Sweden, 6; Holland, 2; Denmark, 3; Greece, 3.
+
+A large discrepancy regarding the total number and tonnage of Allied
+and neutral merchantmen sunk by mines and submarines was again
+noticeable in the figures published in the United States newspapers
+and in official statements of the German admiralty.
+
+The latter on October 26, 1916, announced that 180 ships with a total
+tonnage of 254,600 had been sunk, of which 141 of 182,000 tons
+belonged to Great Britain and her allies, and 39 of 72,600 tons to
+neutral nations. The New York "Journal of Commerce," on October 5,
+1916, published a summary of merchantmen lost during September, 1916,
+which accounted only for 70 vessels of 150,317 tons, of which 25 were
+said to have belonged to Great Britain and 18 to neutral Norway, while
+France lost 4, Italy 4, Sweden 5, Denmark 4, Spain, Greece, and
+Holland each 2, and Belgium 1. Of all these the following were more
+than 2,000 tons:
+
+British: _Duart_, 3,108 tons; _Strathalian_, 4,404 tons; _Swift
+Wings_, 4,465 tons; _Kelvinia_, 3,140 tons; _Torridge_, 5,036 tons;
+_Strathtay_, 4,428 tons; _Heathdene_, 3,541 tons; _Llangorse_, 3,841
+tons; _Butetown_, 2,466 tons; _Bronwen_, 4,250 tons; _Strathe_, 2,500
+tons; _Newby_, 2,168 tons; _Counsellor_, 4,958 tons; _Lexie_, 3,778
+tons; _Swedish Prince_, 3,712 tons; _Roddam_, 3,218 tons; _Lord
+Tredegar_, 3,856 tons; _Dewa_, 3,802 tons.
+
+Norwegian: _Elizabeth IV_, 4,182 tons; _Polynesia_, 4,064 tons;
+_Bufjord_, 2,284 tons; _Qvindeggen_, 2,610 tons; _Furu_, 2,029 tons;
+_Isdalen_, 2,275 tons.
+
+Other nations: _Antwerpen_, Dutch, 11,000 tons; _Benpark_, Italian,
+3,842 tons; _Gamen_, Swedish, 2,617 tons; _Luis Vives_, Spanish, 2,394
+tons; _Assimacos_, Greek, 2,898 tons.
+
+For the month of October, 1916, the New York "Journal of Commerce"
+placed its total figures of Allied and neutral merchantmen sunk by
+mines or submarines at 127 vessels of 227,116 tons, according to a
+compilation published on November 3, 1916. No official figures of the
+German Government for October, 1916, were available. Of the
+above-mentioned 127 vessels, Great Britain lost 38; Norway, 56;
+Sweden, 10; Denmark, 8; Greece, 5; Russia, 4; Holland, 3; France,
+Belgium, and Rumania, each 1. Of these the following were of more than
+2,000 tons:
+
+British: Franconia, 18,150 tons; _Alaunia_, 13,405 tons; _Welsh
+Prince_, 4,934 tons; _Rowanmore_, 10,320 tons; _Astoria_, 4,262 tons;
+_Cabotia_, 4,309 tons; _Midland_, 4,247 tons; _Cluden_, 3,166 tons;
+_Barbara_, 3,740 tons; _Framfield_, 2,510 tons; _Ethel Duncan_, 2,510
+tons; _Sidmouth_, 4,045 tons; _Crosshill_, 5,002 tons; _Sebek_, 4,601
+tons; _Renylan_, 3,875 tons; _Strathdene_, 4,321 tons; _West Point_,
+3,847 tons; _Stephano_, 3,449 tons.
+
+Norwegian: _Christian Knudsen_, 4,224 tons; _Risholm_, 2,155 tons;
+_Snestadt_, 2,350 tons; _Edam_, 2,381 tons; _Sola_, 3,057 tons;
+_Bygdo_, 2,345 tons.
+
+Russian: _Tourgai_, 4,281 tons; _Mercator_, 2,827 tons.
+
+Dutch: _Bloomersdijk_, 4,850 tons.
+
+Greek: _George M. Embiricos_, 3,636 tons; _Massalia_, 2,186 tons;
+_Germaine_, 2,573 tons.
+
+Rumanian: _Bistritza_, 3,668 tons.
+
+More interest than ever before in submarine warfare was aroused in
+this country when the German war submarine _U-53_ unexpectedly made
+its appearance in the harbor of Newport, R. I., during the afternoon
+of October 7, 1916. About three hours afterward, without having taken
+on any supplies, and after explaining her presence by the desire of
+delivering a letter addressed to Count von Bernstorff, then German
+Ambassador at Washington, the _U-53_ left as suddenly and mysteriously
+as she had appeared.
+
+This was the first appearance of a war submarine in an American port.
+It was claimed that the _U-53_ had made the trip from Wilhelmshaven in
+seventeen days. She was 213 feet long, equipped with two guns, four
+torpedo tubes, and an exceptionally strong wireless outfit. Besides
+her commander, Captain Rose, she was manned by three officers and
+thirty-three men.
+
+Early the next morning, October 8, 1916, it became evident what had
+brought the _U-53_ to this side of the Atlantic. At the break of day
+she made her reappearance southeast of Nantucket. The American steamer
+_Kansan_ of the American Hawaiian Company bound from New York by way
+of Boston to Genoa was stopped by her, but after proving her
+nationality and neutral ownership was allowed to proceed. Five other
+steamships, three of them British, one Dutch, and one Norwegian, were
+less fortunate. The British freighter _Strathend_, of 4,321 tons, was
+the first victim. Her crew were taken aboard the Nantucket Shoals
+Lightship. Two other British freighters, _West Point_ and _Stephano_,
+followed in short order to the bottom of the ocean. The crews of both
+were saved by United States torpedo-boat destroyers which had come
+from Newport as soon as news of the _U-53's_ activities had been
+received there. This was also the case with the crews of the Dutch
+ship _Bloomersdijk_ and the Norwegian tanker _Christian Knudsen_.
+
+On December 20, 1916, the German admiralty announced that the total
+losses inflicted on Allied and neutral merchantmen by submarines and
+mines during November, 1916, amounted to 191 vessels of 408,500 tons.
+Of these 138 ships of 314,500 belonged to Great Britain and her
+allies, and 53 ships of 94,000 tons to neutral countries.
+
+On November 13, 1916, the Norwegian steamship _Older_, on passage from
+Newport to Gibraltar, was captured by a German submarine, which placed
+a prize crew on board her. For a time the submarine remained in
+company. Eventually, however, the _Older_ separated from the
+submarine, apparently with the intention of making for a German port.
+She was intercepted by a British ship of war, recaptured, and brought
+into a British port, and the prize crew were made prisoners of war.
+
+The losses of Allied and neutral merchantmen sunk by submarines and
+mines during the month of December, 1916, according to the New York
+"Journal of Commerce," totaled 134 vessels of 251,750 tons, of which
+53 vessels of 157,217 tons belonged to Great Britain and her allies,
+and 81 vessels of 84,533 tons to neutrals.
+
+Among the largest of these were the following British boats: _King
+Malcom_, 4,351 tons; _Reapwell_, 3,417 tons; _Luciston_, 2,948 tons;
+_Moeraki_, 4,392 tons; _King Bleddyn_, 4,387 tons; _Couch_, 5,620
+tons; _Tanfield_, 4,358 tons; _Avristan_, 3,818 tons; _Strathalbyn_,
+4,331 tons; _Ursula_, 5,011 tons; _Bretwalda_, 4,037 tons;
+_Westminster_, 4,342 tons.
+
+The French merchant marine, in addition to a number of smaller boats,
+lost: _Kangaroo_, 2,493 tons; _Emma Laurans_, 2,152 tons. One Belgian
+steamer of 2,360 tons, the _Keltier_, also was sunk.
+
+Of neutrals, the Dutch lost the _Kediri_, 3,781 tons; the Norwegians
+the _Rakiura_, 3,569 tons; _Modum_, 2,942 tons; _Meteor_, 4,211 tons;
+_Manpanger_, 3,354 tons; the Greeks, _Salamis_, 3,638 tons; and the
+Danish, _Michail Ontchonkoff_, 2,118 tons.
+
+The balance of the boats destroyed in December, 1916, was made up of
+vessels of less than 2,000 tons, among which there were Russian,
+Swedish, and Portuguese boats as well as ships belonging to the
+nations already mentioned. One American-owned was also included, the
+_John Lambert_, of 1,550 tons, owned by the Great Britain & St.
+Lawrence Transportation Company.
+
+On December 4, 1916, a German submarine sank in the Mediterranean the
+former Anchor liner _Caledonia_, a steamer of 9,223 tons. The German
+version of this occurrence was as follows:
+
+"On December 4, 1916, in the Mediterranean, the British liner
+_Caledonia_ attempted to ram one of our submarines without having
+previously been attacked by the latter.
+
+"Just before the submarine was struck by the steamer's bows it
+succeeded in firing a torpedo, which hit and sank the _Caledonia_. The
+submarine was only slightly damaged.
+
+"The captain of the steamer, James Blaikie, was taken prisoner by the
+submarine."
+
+In January, 1917, the toll exacted by mines and submarines was
+especially large. The New York "Journal of Commerce" gave on February
+6, 1917, the following figures: 154 vessels of 336,997 tons. Of these
+87, of 229,366 tons, belonged to Great Britain and her allies, and 67,
+of 107,631 tons, to neutrals. No American boats were included.
+
+On January 1, 1917, a German submarine sank the British transport
+_Ivernia_ in the Mediterranean while carrying troops. Four officers
+and 146 men as well as 33 members of the crew were reported missing.
+
+The British battleship _Cornwallis_ was sunk on January 9, 1917,
+likewise in the Mediterranean. Thirteen members of the crew were
+reported missing. The _Cornwallis_, which was launched at Blackwell in
+1901 and completed in 1904, had a displacement of 14,000 tons, length
+of 405 feet, beam of 75-1/2 feet, and draft of 26-1/2 feet. Her
+indicated horsepower was 18,238, developing a speed of 18.9 knots. She
+carried four 12-inch, twelve 6-inch, ten 12-pounder, and two 3-pounder
+guns, as well as four torpedo tubes. The complement of the
+_Cornwallis_ was about 750.
+
+Two days later, January 11, 1917, the British seaplane carrier
+_Ben-Machree_ was sunk by gunfire in Kasteloxizo Harbor (Asia Minor).
+There were no casualties.
+
+Among the larger boats (above 2,000 tons) sunk during January, 1917,
+were the following:
+
+British: _Apsleyhall_, 3,882 tons; _Holly Branch_, 3,568 tons;
+_Baycraig_, 3,761 tons; _Lesbian_, 2,555 tons; _Andoni_, 3,188 tons;
+_Baynesk_, 3,286 tons; _Lynfield_, 3,023 tons; _Manchester Inventor_,
+4,247 tons; _Wragby_, 3,641 tons; _Garfield_, 3,838 tons;
+_Auchencrag_, 3,916 tons; _Port Nicholson_, 8,418 tons; _Matina_,
+3,870 tons; _Toftwood_, 3,082 tons; _Mohacsfield_, 3,678 tons;
+_Tremeadow_, 3,653 tons; _Neuquen_, 3,583 tons; _Tabasco_, 2,987 tons;
+_Matheran_, 7,654 tons; _Jevington_, 2,747 tons.
+
+French: _Tuskar_, 3,043 tons.
+
+Japanese: _Taki Maru_, 3,208 tons; _Chinto Maru_, 2,592 tons;
+_Misagatu Maru_, No. 3, 2,608 tons.
+
+Russian: _Egret_, 3,185 tons.
+
+Norwegian: _Britannic_, 2,289 tons; _Older_, 2,256 tons; _Fama_, 2,147
+tons; _Esperanca_, 4,428 tons; _Bergenhus_, 3,606 tons; _Jotunfjell_,
+2,492 tons; _Myrdal_, 2,631 tons.
+
+Dutch: _Salland_, 3,657 tons; _Zeta_, 3,053 tons.
+
+Greek: _Evangelos_, 3,773 tons; _Demetrios Goulandris_, 3,744 tons;
+_Aristotelis C. Ioannow_, 2,868 tons; _Demetrios Inglessis_, 2,088
+tons; Tsiropinas, 3,015 tons.
+
+Spanish: _Valle_, 2,365 tons; _Manuel_, 2,419 tons; _Parahyba_, 2,537
+tons.
+
+Toward the end of January, 1917, the severity of submarine warfare was
+noticeably increased. Day by day the number of vessels sunk grew
+larger, and some of them were of especially large tonnage. On January
+28, 1917, a French transport, carrying 950 soldiers to Saloniki, the
+_Amiral Magon_, was sunk in the Mediterranean with a loss of about 150
+men.
+
+Then came on January 29, 1917, the official announcement that the
+British Government had decided to lay new mine fields in the North Sea
+in order to cope more successfully with the ever-growing submarine
+menace. According to this announcement the British Government warned
+all neutrals that from this date the following area in the North Sea
+was to be considered dangerous to shipping:
+
+The area comprising all the waters, except the Netherlands and Danish
+territorial waters, lying southwestward and eastward of a line
+commencing four miles from the coast of Jutland in latitude 56 degrees
+N., longitude 8 degrees E.
+
+As a result of this new policy it was announced by Lloyd's that eleven
+vessels of about 15,000 tons were sunk on the first day of the
+blockade. During the first week of the blockade, February 1 to 8,
+1917, according to British figures, which, however, were claimed by
+German officials to be much lower than the actual figures, there were
+sunk 58 vessels of 112,043 tons, of which 1 was American, 20 belonged
+to other neutrals, 32 to Great Britain, and 5 to the other
+belligerents.
+
+
+
+
+PART VI--THE UNITED STATES AND THE BELLIGERENTS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L
+
+THE OLD MENACE
+
+
+A welcome period of quiet in the submarine controversy with Germany
+followed the settlement of the _Sussex_ case recorded in the previous
+volume. But neither the Administration nor the country was deluded
+into resting in any false security. The dragon was not throttled; it
+merely slumbered by the application of a diplomatic opiate. While the
+war lasted the menace of its awaking and jeopardizing German peace
+with the United States was always present.
+
+The achievements of the _Deutschland_, a peaceful commercial submarine
+which inaugurated an undersea traffic between the United States and
+Germany, provided an interesting diversion from the tension created by
+the depredations of her armed sisters. After safely crossing the
+Atlantic and finding a safe berth in an American port in the summer of
+1916, she showed such hesitation in setting out on the return trip
+that doubts were general as to whether the dangers of capture by alert
+Allied cruisers were not too great to be risked. The attempt
+nevertheless was finally made on August 2, 1916, when she darted under
+water after passing out of the three-mile limit at the Virginia Capes
+and was successful. She arrived at Bremen on August 23, 1916, with a
+cargo of rubber and metal, and apparently found no difficulty in
+eluding the foes supposedly in wait for her on the high seas. When she
+left her Baltimore berth, so the story went, eight British warships
+awaited her, attended by numerous fishing craft hired to spread nets
+to entangle her. Near the English coast dense fogs aided by obscuring
+the vision of her foes' naval lookouts, and in rounding Scotland to
+reach the North Sea she had to evade a long line of warships and
+innumerable auxiliary craft extended far north.
+
+Germany found occasion for exultation in her return without mishap.
+The blockade was broken. Berlin was bedecked with flags and the whole
+country celebrated the event as though Marshal von Hindenburg had won
+another victory. The _Deutschland_ again left Bremen on October 10,
+1916, and found her way into New London, Conn., on November 1, 1916,
+leaving for Germany three weeks later with a rubber and metal cargo
+said to be worth $2,000,000 and a number of mail pouches. She was
+reported to have arrived safely off the mouth of the Weser on December
+10, 1916.
+
+A repetition of the _Deutschland's_ exploits was looked for from her
+sister undersea craft, the _Bremen_, about whose movements the widest
+speculation was centered. She was reported to have left Germany for
+the United States on September 1, 1916, but did not appear, nor was
+any trace of her seen en route. She never arrived, and became a
+mystery of the sea. A story circulated that she had been captured by a
+British patrol boat in the Straits of Dover and thirty-three of her
+crew of thirty-five made prisoners, the remaining two having been
+killed when the boat was caught in a steel net. The British admiralty
+preserved its customary silence as to the truth of this report. Her
+German owners finally acknowledged their belief that she had been lost
+probably through an accident to her machinery. At any rate a life
+preserver bearing the name _Bremen_ was picked up off the Maine coast
+about the end of September, 1916.
+
+As the summer of 1916 advanced American contemplation of this
+agreeable trade relation with blockaded Germany by means of a
+commercial submarine service was abruptly switched to a review of the
+manner in which that country was observing its undertaking not to sink
+unresisting vessels without warning. A certain communication credited
+to Admiral von Tirpitz was circulated in Germany urging a return to
+his discarded sea policy. This was nothing more nor less than the
+pursuit of unrestricted and ruthless submarine warfare, the espousal
+of which by him as Minister of Marine, in conflict with the milder
+methods favored by the German Chancellor, forced his resignation
+earlier in the year. Of course such a change would mean an immediate
+clash with the United States and the ending of diplomatic relations.
+
+President Wilson had been watching Germany's behavior since May, 1916,
+when she pledged her submarine commanders to safeguard the lives on
+board doomed vessels. Three months' probation, according to American
+reports, failed to show any evidence that she was not living up to her
+promise; but British reports cited a number of instances pointing to
+an absolute disregard of her undertaking with the United States. She
+had hedged this promise with a condition reserving her liberty of
+action should a "new situation" develop necessitating a change in her
+sea policy, and the question arose whether she was not trying to
+create a new situation to justify such a change. Concurrent with the
+new Von Tirpitz propaganda, at any rate, came a recrudescence of
+submarine destruction without warning, mainly in the Mediterranean.
+This activity lent weight to a fear that the kaiser and Von
+Bethmann-Hollweg were yielding to the pressure exercised by the Von
+Tirpitz party. Germany regarded her submarines as her chief weapons
+for damaging the Allies; but she was embarrassed by the problem of how
+to operate them without clashing with American interests. Her policy
+at length shaped itself to a careful discrimination in raiding
+Atlantic traffic and avoiding attacks on liners altogether.
+
+The leader of the German National Liberals, Dr. Ernest Bassermann,
+echoed the Von Tirpitz cry, in an address to his constituents at
+Saarbruecken. The most ruthless employment of all weapons, he urged,
+was imperative. Besides Von Tirpitz, High Admiral Koester, Count
+Zeppelin, and Prince von Buelow shared this view. He told the world,
+which he was really addressing, that the submarine campaign had not
+been abandoned, but only suspended solely on account of the American
+protest. It was not clear that there had really been any cessation of
+submarine activity, though some abatement had undoubtedly followed the
+undertaking with the United States.
+
+The manifest unrest in Germany provoked by the curb placed upon her
+submarines by President Wilson caused the eyes of Washington to be fixed
+anxiously on the uncertain situation. It was solely a psychological and
+mental condition, but of a character that seemed premonitory of an
+outbreak on Germany's part. Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg, in a cryptic
+remark to the Reichstag on September 28, 1916, succeeded in aggravating
+American concern, though he may not have so intended. "A German
+statesman," he said, "who would hesitate to use against Britain every
+available instrument of battle that would really shorten this war should
+be hanged."
+
+There was no obvious reference to the United States in this utterance;
+but the German press seized upon it as a pretext for an attack on
+American neutrality. The connection was provided by the coincidental
+death of an American aviator named Rockwell, who, with a number of
+compatriots, had served the Allies on the French front. The point made
+was that the active part American airmen were taking in the ranks of
+the Allies, combined with the enormous supply of war materials
+furnished by American firms, indicated the futility of abiding by
+concessions made to the United States controlling the submarine war.
+The United States was charged with taking advantage of restricted
+submarine activity to cover the participation of American citizens as
+aids to the Entente and to expand its war trade. Being simultaneous
+and couched in the same key, the press outbursts bore every indication
+of a common inspiration, probably official.
+
+"Moderation in the use of Germany's undersea craft," said one group of
+journals in effect, "merely serves to further American assistance to
+the Entente Allies in men and munitions."
+
+Another paper, the "Tageszeitung," characterized the American policy
+as one in the pursuance of which President Wilson Was making a
+threatened use of a "wooden sword," and called for a policy of the
+utmost firmness against that country.
+
+It was intimated from Washington that if any faction in Germany--in
+this case the Pan-Germans--succeeded in reviving submarine methods
+whereby ships were sunk without warning or without safeguards against
+loss of American lives, the submarine crisis with Germany would be
+reopened with all its possibilities. At the same time no serious
+importance was attached by official Washington to the German clamor
+for more frightfulness.
+
+It was true that the Pan-Germans were making a powerful onslaught for
+the overthrow of the German Chancellor, Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg, who
+was the only obstacle to a return to ruthless submarine warfare.
+Moreover, as perceived by the "Berliner Tageblatt," "tension in the
+atmosphere of imperial politics has reached such a high point that a
+discharge must follow if the empire is not to suffer lasting damage."
+But Washington looked for development on the high seas, not in the
+political arena of Berlin, where the sound and fury of words did not
+afford a safe barometer of governmental action.
+
+By the end of September, 1916, a "lull" in German submarine activity
+was reported, due, according to Lord Robert Cecil, to a shortage in
+submarines. But reports showed that between June 1, 1916, and
+September 24, 1916, 277 vessels, sixty-six of which were neutral, had
+been sunk by submarines, fifteen of them without warning, and with the
+loss of eighty-four lives. The abatement really took place in June and
+July, 1916, following the American agreement with Germany in May,
+1916. The "lull" may therefore be measured by these figures: Vessels
+sunk in June, 57; in July, 42; in August, 103; in September (to the
+24th), 75.
+
+The only real lull was a cessation in attacks on liners. The British
+view, based on the allegation that fifteen vessels had been sunk
+without warning causing a loss of eighty-four lives, was that German
+frightfulness was already in full swing despite Berlin's promise to
+the United States. The American attitude, however, was that so long as
+American lives were not lost on ships sunk without warning the United
+States had no ground for intervention. Hence Germany could apparently
+sink vessels with impunity so long as the noncombatant victims
+belonged to other nationalities.
+
+The agitation in Germany to break the undertaking with the United
+States was thrashed out between the adherents of Chancellor von
+Bethmann-Hollweg and the Pan-Germanists without shaking the
+Chancellor's strength. He had the support of Field Marshal von
+Hindenburg and the navy chiefs, who, in frowning on an unbridled
+submarine warfare, successfully imposed the weight of their authority
+against any change. The subject divided the Budget Committee of the
+Reichstag, the question being whether its discussion should be
+permitted in open session. The outcome was that the committee decided,
+by a vote of 24 to 4, to smother the agitation by refusing to permit
+its ventilation in the open Reichstag.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI
+
+THE U-53'S EXPLOITS
+
+
+While the German Budget Committee was thus occupied a new and
+startling turn was given to the situation by the unheralded appearance
+at Newport, R. I., on October 7, 1916, of a German submarine, the
+_U-53_. Rising out of the water in the afternoon, it remained long
+enough for its captain to deliver a missive for Count von Bernstorff,
+the German Ambassador, pay a call on Admiral Knight, the American
+commander there, ask for news of the missing _Bremen_, and obtain a
+sheaf of New York newspapers for information regarding Allied
+shipping. Then it left the port, whither it had been piloted, and
+disappeared under the waves. The visit, standing by itself, was an
+interesting episode; but it proved to be much more than a mere social
+call.
+
+The next day revealed the real object of the submarine's presence in
+American waters. Off Nantucket it appeared in its true guise as a
+raider of shipping and sank five vessels--three British, one Dutch,
+and one Norwegian. Having thus brought the submarine war to the very
+threshold of the United States, causing a reign of terror among
+held-up shipping along the Atlantic seaboard--a state of mind which,
+while it lasted, meant a virtual blockade of American ports--it
+disappeared and was not again heard of.
+
+There was no doubt that the exploits of the _U-53_ were intended as a
+demonstration to test American feeling as to whether Germany could
+attack on this side of the water munition and other vessels bound for
+Allied ports. It appeared a bold attempt to create a new precedent by
+overriding one laid down in 1870 by President Grant, who ruled that
+American waters must not be used by other nations for belligerent
+purposes. Outside the three-mile limit, however, German submarines
+could operate with the same impunity as in the Arctic Ocean, so long
+as they observed the requirement of giving warning and allowing people
+on board the intercepted vessels time to save their lives. But the
+manifest point was that the waters outside the three-mile limit were
+contiguous to the American coast, and provided highways for American
+shipping, coastwise and foreign. The proximity of German submarines,
+even though they confined their attention to Allied shipping to and
+from American ports, constituted too great a menace to the free
+movement of the American mercantile marine.
+
+A wolf at a man's door is none the less dangerous because the wolf is
+lying in wait for the appearance of an inmate of the man's house and
+not for the man himself. Informal intimations persuaded Germany that
+she could not safely repeat the experiment of carrying the war to
+America's door.
+
+The innovation, even in its most innocuous form, was contrary to good
+international usage. Great Britain had previously offended in this
+respect by permitting her patrolling cruisers to intercept and examine
+merchant vessels off the port of New York. She desisted at
+Washington's request. But a waiting cruiser, plain to the eye,
+interfering with shipping to prevent communication with Germany, was
+a mild offender compared with an unseen submarine crossing the paths
+of ships and liable to err in its indiscriminate destructiveness.
+
+Fortunately, no American lives were lost. But this was not the fault
+of the submarine. No question could be raised of its behavior in
+sinking four of the five ships, namely, the _Strathdene_ (British
+freighter), bound from New York to Bordeaux; the _West Point_ (British
+freighter), bound from London to Newport News; the _Bloomersdijk_
+(Dutch freighter), bound from New York to Rotterdam; and the
+_Christian Knudsen_ (Norwegian freighter), bound from New York to
+London. The danger, happily averted, to American-German relations lay
+in the sinking of the fifth vessel, the _Stephano_, a British
+passenger liner plying regularly between New York, Halifax, N. S., and
+St. John's, Newfoundland. Among the _Stephano's_ passengers were a
+number of Americans, who, like their companions in misfortune, had to
+seek the doubtful safety of small boats miles offshore.
+
+The situation was saved by the presence of American destroyers in the
+vicinity. Their commanders and crews were actual witnesses of the
+sinking, and afterward interposed as life savers of the shipwrecked
+victims. The _Balch_ rescued the passengers and crew of the
+_Stephano_, numbering 140, and other destroyers took on board the
+crews of the four freighters. The American navy in saving Germany's
+victims had saved Germany from facing the consequences of her behavior
+in jeopardizing the lives of Americans on board the _Stephano_. German
+diplomacy was even capable of pointing to the fact that the prompt
+relief afforded the _Stephano's_ passengers by American destroyers was
+proof that the submarine commander had safeguarded their lives by
+relying upon the American navy as a rescuer. The irony of such a
+contention lay in the implication that if American destroyers had not
+been on the scene the vessels might have been spared.
+
+It was a short-lived panic. The _U-53_ came and went in a flash; but
+amid the scare created by its presence President Wilson found it
+necessary to assure the country that "the German Government will be
+held to the complete fulfillment of its promise to the Government of
+the United States. I have no right now," he added, "to question its
+willingness to fulfill them."
+
+The Administration's deliberations on the subject produced the
+decision that the _U-53_ had not ignored the German pledges. It came,
+saw, and conquered according to formula. It had first warned the
+vessels, gave enough time for the people on board to be "safely"
+transferred to boats, and there were American naval eyewitnesses to
+testify as to the regularity of its proceedings. The incident passed
+as one on which no action could be taken by the United States. But
+Germany saw that it could not well be repeated. American sensibilities
+had to be respected as much as international proprieties. The reproof
+conveyed to the British Ambassador by Secretary Lansing that "the
+constant and menacing presence of cruisers on the high seas near the
+ports of a neutral country may be regarded according to the canons of
+international courtesy as a just ground for offense, although it may
+be strictly legal," applied with double force to the presence of
+German submarines because of their greater danger.
+
+Tart comments on the incident came from Great Britain, though its
+Government did not appear to have protested to the United States
+against the view that the _U-53's_ proceedings were lawful and
+regular.
+
+Lord Robert Cecil, an official spokesman, saw a ruse in the
+submarine's visit:
+
+"German public opinion appears to be obsessed with the idea that the
+way to deal with the Allied blockade is to have a succession of sudden
+crises with neutrals, which may be used for striking diplomatic
+bargains. These bargains, in the mind of Germany, always take one
+form--that Germany is to refrain from violating international law and
+humanity in return for the abandonment by Great Britain as toward
+neutrals of the legitimate military and naval measures of the Allies."
+
+In the House of Lords the United States was accused of a breach of
+neutrality by Lords Beresford and Sydenham. Referring to "the
+activities of the _U-53_ under the very eyes of the American navy"
+and to President Wilson's ultimatum which resulted in the German
+pledge, Lord Sydenham said:
+
+"Even before the exploits of the _U-53_ that pledge was torn to
+shreds. Yet the Government of the United States has made no sign
+whatever that the sinking of neutral ships goes on almost every day.
+What must small neutrals think of their powerful representative?"
+
+No life, he said, was lost because of the presence of American
+warships. Lord Sydenham took the position that the presence of
+American warships actually enabled Germany to defy what President
+Wilson had described as a sacred and indisputable rule of
+international law.
+
+Lord Beresford expressed a similar view:
+
+"The United States are really aiding and abetting this rather serious
+state of affairs. If the United States had not sent their ships, which
+for some extraordinary reason happened to be on the spot, to save
+life, the Germans would no doubt have broken the pledge to which their
+attention had been called. I think we are bound to take notice of a
+fact which does not appear to be quite within the bounds of neutrality
+as far as the United States are concerned."
+
+Lord Grey, Foreign Secretary, declined to commit the Government to
+such an attitude. He held that the American-German undertaking was no
+affair of Great Britain's.
+
+It was left for the spectator to be truly prophetic, as the later
+peace movement showed, in seeking a motive for the _U-53's_
+proceedings. It considered that Germany sought to force the United
+States to propose peace terms, regardless of whether the Entente
+Allies were agreeable or not:
+
+"Thus, with unrestricted submarine warfare as a settled policy,
+Germany gives America warning of what is likely to happen unless the
+United States is prepared to declare that the war has reached a point
+where it is dangerous for neutrals. If the United States is willing to
+play this role, the Germans will hold their hands from an extra dose
+of unlimited submarine frightfulness."
+
+The _U-53_ had no sooner gone when an exchange of communications
+between the American and Allied governments regarding the status of
+foreign submarines in neutral ports became public. The question
+related to the hospitality accorded the _Deutschland_ in Baltimore and
+New London; but as it arose in the midst of the hubbub occasioned by
+the _U-53_, the American view appeared to determine that such craft
+could call at an American port like any other armed vessel, so long as
+it did not stay beyond the allotted time.
+
+The Allied governments besought neutrals, the United States among
+them, to forbid belligerent submarine vessels, "whatever the purpose
+to which they are put," from making use of neutral waters, roadsteads,
+and ports. Such craft could navigate and remain at sea submerged,
+could escape control and observation, avoid identification and having
+their national character established to determine whether they were
+neutral or belligerent, combatant or noncombatant. The capacity for
+harm inherent in the nature of such vessels therefore required, in the
+view of the Allied governments, that they should be excluded from the
+benefit of rules hitherto recognized by the laws of nations governing
+the admission of war or merchant vessels to neutral waters and their
+sojourn in them. Hence if any belligerent submarine entered a neutral
+port it should be interned. The point was further made that grave
+danger was incurred by neutral submarines in the navigation of regions
+frequented by belligerent submarines.
+
+The American answer was brusque, and resentful of the attempt of the
+Allies to dictate the attitude neutrals should take toward submarines
+which visited their harbors. The governments of France, Great Britain,
+Russia, and Japan were informed that they had not "set forth any
+circumstances, nor is the Government of the United States at present
+aware of any circumstances, concerning the use of war or merchant
+submarines which would render the existing rules of international law
+inapplicable to them." Moreover, "so far as the treatment of either
+war or merchant submarines in American waters is concerned, the
+Government of the United States reserves its liberty of action in all
+respects and will treat such vessels as, in its opinion, becomes the
+action of a power which may be said to have taken the first steps
+toward establishing the principles of neutrality."
+
+Finally, as to the danger to neutral submarines in waters frequented
+by belligerent submarines, it was the duty of belligerents to
+distinguish between them, and responsibility for any conflict arising
+from neglect to do so must rest upon the negligent power.
+
+This caustic exchange of views on harboring submarines took place
+before the appearance of the _U-53_. Had the Allies deferred
+approaching the United States until after that event, the situation
+favored the belief that the submarine's behavior would have dictated a
+different reply from Washington. Indeed, there was a strong
+presumption that if another German armed submarine had the temerity to
+visit an American port it might have been promptly interned, not under
+international law, but at the behest of public opinion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII
+
+GATHERING CLOUDS
+
+
+The conduct of the country's foreign policy became hampered by the
+presidential campaign. President Wilson was frankly uncertain of
+reelection and embarrassed by the feeling that any determination he
+made of a policy toward Germany might be overturned by his successful
+opponent. So American domestic politics perceptibly intruded at this
+stage in the country's foreign policy.
+
+In fact, that policy was practically in suspension. Germany eagerly
+availed herself of the hiatus, and, satisfying herself that President
+Wilson would be defeated, and that his successor would adopt a
+different attitude to her (she had no real ground for this
+supposition), embarked upon a submarine activity that was in strange
+contrast to the moderation which the German Chancellor had stubbornly
+fought for in its conduct.
+
+The point to be remembered was that Germany's pledge to President
+Wilson was the only curb on frightfulness. Germany rashly assumed that
+the defeat of President Wilson would nullify it. At any rate, his
+uncertain outlook in the preelection period opened the way for a
+submarine outbreak which would be extended with impunity owing to the
+Administration's hesitation in taking action that might not be
+sustained by the President's presumed successor, on the theory that
+Mr. Wilson's defeat would be tantamount to a popular repudiation of
+his policies.
+
+Light was thrown on the German submarine policy by a Berlin dispatch,
+dated October 26, 1916, which indicated that the submarines were at
+least placating the extremists:
+
+"While the silence of the German press and public on the subject of
+sharpened submarine warfare may be attributed in some measure to the
+stand of Hindenburg and Ludendorff against it, much more significant
+is the growing popular realization that sharpened submarine warfare is
+actually in force. And the public is beginning to regard it as
+efficient and highly satisfactory. The fact is that it is successful
+as never before, for it is sharpened not qualitatively, but
+quantitatively."
+
+The British admiralty later reported that between May 4 (the date of
+the German pledge) and November 8, 1916, thirty-three vessels had been
+sunk by German submarines without warning, resulting in the loss of
+140 lives. In the same period 107 ships, all of British registry, had
+been sunk and "the lives of the crews and passengers imperiled through
+their being forced to take to the sea in open boats while their ships
+were a target for the enemy's guns."
+
+President Wilson's success at the polls, which hung in the balance
+several days after the election, was the signal for a change of
+attitude on Germany's part. The Berlin Government realized that his
+foreign policy had received the indorsement of a majority of American
+citizens, and the assurance was communicated that the German admiralty
+was again on its good behavior.
+
+But many depredations had been committed which Germany would be hard
+put to explain satisfactorily. No less than ten pressing American
+inquiries regarding sunk ships were sent to the Berlin Foreign Office
+as soon as the President, assured that his tenure of office was no
+longer in doubt, returned to the consideration of foreign affairs. The
+submarine outbreak showed an undoubted disposition on Germany's part
+to violate her pledge, and if the Administration was satisfied that
+she had done so, its expressed attitude was that no more protests
+would be sent. The American answer to Germany's defiance could only be
+the dismissal of Count von Bernstorff from Washington and the recall
+of Ambassador Gerard from Berlin.
+
+The outstanding cases on which the United States called for an
+adequate defense from Germany were:
+
+The _Rowanmore_, British freighter, bound from Baltimore to Liverpool,
+sunk off Cape Clear on October 25, 1916. Two Americans and five
+Filipinos were on board. No lives were lost.
+
+The _Marina_, a British horse carrier, bound from Glasgow to Newport
+News, sunk without warning off the southwest coast of Ireland on
+October 29, 1916. She carried a mixed crew of British and Americans.
+Six Americans lost their lives.
+
+The _Arabia_, a Peninsular and Oriental passenger liner, sunk in the
+Mediterranean without warning on November 6, 1916. One American was on
+board. No lives were lost.
+
+The _Columbian_, an American steamer, sunk off the Spanish coast on
+November 8, 1916, after being held up for two days under surveillance
+by the submarine during a storm.
+
+Germany charged that the _Rowanmore_ attempted to escape on being
+ordered to stop. Her steering gear was shot away after an hour's
+chase, when the captain hove to and lifeboats were lowered. The crew
+complained that the submarine shelled the boats after they had cleared
+the ship. This the commander denied. The flight of the _Rowanmore_
+appeared to deprive her of the consideration due to an unresisting
+vessel under cruiser warfare.
+
+The _Marina_ carried a defensive gun, as did the _Arabia_. This fact
+alone, Germany contended, entitled her submarines to sink both vessels
+without warning, in addition to the commander's belief in each case
+that the vessel was a transport in the service of the British
+admiralty. The American Government was satisfied that neither vessel
+was engaged in transport service on the voyage in question. In the
+_Arabia's_ case, 450 passengers were on board, including women and
+children, who were only saved because the Administration had already
+held that the gun's presence on a vessel did not deprive her of the
+right to proper warning before being sunk. Germany admitted liability
+for sinking the _Columbian_ and agreed to pay for the value of the
+vessel and the contraband cargo she carried.
+
+The _Marina_ case stood out, in the view of the State Department, as a
+"clear-cut" violation of Germany's pledges to the United States. Her
+gun was not used, and no opportunity was afforded for using it. The
+"presumption" on the part of a German submarine commander that a
+vessel was a transport was a favorite defense of Germany's and
+disregarded the American ruling on armed merchantmen, which held that
+"the determination of warlike character must rest in no case upon
+presumption, but upon conclusive evidence."
+
+Berlin was looking for trouble. A period of complications in
+American-German relations was frankly predicted. The Administration
+was plainly concerned by the situation; but no decision to take action
+was forthcoming. Its hesitation appeared to be due to the apparent
+need for a further note to dispose of new interpretations Germany had
+ingeniously woven in her various excuses by way of evading the letter
+and spirit of the _Sussex_ agreement. One view of her submarine
+"rights" which Germany insisted on upholding was that armed
+merchantmen were not legally immune from attack on sight.
+
+Herr Zimmermann, the German Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs, defined
+anew his Government's attitude:
+
+"As the armament of several British ships has been used for attack,
+and has therefore endangered the lives of crew and passengers, of
+course armed ships cannot be considered as peaceful trade boats."
+
+The cases of the _Marina_ and _Arabia_ put the German pledges to a
+test. Neither vessel attempted to escape nor offered resistance,
+though armed with a solitary gun. The issue therefore resolved itself
+into these considerations:
+
+First. Since the German submarine commanders have pleaded extenuating
+circumstances on which they based their presumption that the _Marina_
+and _Arabia_, were transports, and not passenger vessels, were these
+circumstances sufficient to have justified the commanders in mistaking
+the two steamers for transports?
+
+Second. If there were such extenuating circumstances, were they such
+as to warrant the commanders in departing from the general rule laid
+down by the American Government in the _Sussex_ note, calling forth
+the pledges given by Germany in May, 1916, in which it was guaranteed
+that "in accordance with the general principles of visit and search
+and destruction of merchant vessels recognized by international law,
+such vessels, both within and without the area declared as naval war
+zone, shall not be sunk without warning and without saving human
+lives, unless these ships attempt to escape or offer resistance?"
+
+Whatever intimation was made to Germany by the United States did not
+become public. By December, 1916, the whole question appeared to have
+been suddenly shelved by the peace proposals Germany hurled at the
+Allies in loud tones of victory, coupled with an invitation to the
+United States to interpose as a mediator. Peace, of course, would
+dispose of further friction with the United States. While the
+proposals were pending, moreover, American action on German violations
+of her submarine agreement was suspended. What was the use of a
+diplomatic rupture with Germany on the eve of peace? But Germany knew
+that her official "peace kite" was making an abortive flight. Peace
+she really did not expect, knowing it was not within reach; but she
+was anxious to preserve friendly relations with the United States,
+although daily flouting it in her conduct of the submarine war. Her
+peace move was therefore shown to have had a double edge. It
+postponed, but did not avert, a final crisis with the United States,
+and that, indeed, might well have been its initial aim in view of the
+foredoomed futility of its ostensible object. Certainly President
+Wilson espoused the peace proposal for the same reason; but, as shown
+in the following chapter, the efforts of both were in vain. The real
+climax was to come after all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII
+
+RUPTURE WITH GERMANY
+
+
+The movement for peace was at its crest, and President Wilson was
+apparently sanguine that his efforts in furthering it were on the eve
+of bearing fruit, when Great Britain planned to extend her blockade of
+the German coast in the North Sea. She enlarged the dangerous area
+which hitherto only barred the entry of German naval forces south into
+the Straits of Dover and the English Channel by cutting off the German
+North Sea coast altogether, in order to prevent the egress and ingress
+of German sea raiders by the northward route and to curtail the
+chances of the kaiser's warships making successful forays on the
+English coast. The significance of this action was not seen until it
+became known that Great Britain had discovered that Germany, while
+seemingly occupied with peace, was preparing a warning to neutrals of
+her intention to establish a deep-sea blockade of the entire British
+and French coasts. By extending the mined area round the German coast
+Great Britain sought to counteract and anticipate the new German
+project, the aim of which was to starve the British Isles by a bitter
+and unrestrained submarine war on all ships. The British warning of
+the extended dangerous area came on January 27, 1917. Germany
+announced her new policy four days later, proclaiming that it was in
+retaliation of Great Britain's latest attempt to tighten her strangle
+hold on German food supplies. But there was overwhelming evidence--the
+German Chancellor himself provided it--that the German plan had been
+matured long in advance of Great Britain's course, and that the peace
+overtures had really been made by Germany in order that their certain
+rejection could be seized upon as a justification for the ruthless
+sea warfare projected.
+
+The Wilson Administration, round whose horizon mirages of peace still
+appeared to linger, was not prepared for the blow when it came. The
+President could scarcely credit the news brought by a note from
+Germany on January 31, 1917, that she had withdrawn her pledges to the
+United States not to sink ships without warning. But the situation had
+to be faced that a crisis confronted the country in its relations with
+the German Empire.
+
+Germany found occasion in her note of renunciation to link its purport
+with that of the President's address delivered to the Senate nine days
+previously. (See Part VI, Chapter LVIII, "Peace Without Victory.") In
+its exalted sentiments she gave a perfunctory and manifestly insincere
+acquiescence by way of prefacing familiar reproaches to the Allies for
+refusing to accept her peace overtures. In rejecting them, she said,
+the Allies had disclosed their real aims, which were to "dismember and
+dishonor Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria."
+
+Germany was poignantly grieved by the continuance of the war, not
+solely because of fear of this supposititious dismemberment, but
+because "British tyranny mercilessly increases the sufferings of the
+world, indifferent to the laws of humanity, indifferent to the
+protests of the neutrals whom they severely harm, indifferent even to
+the silent longing for peace among England's own allies. Each day of
+the terrible struggle causes new destruction, new sufferings. Each day
+shortening the war will, on both sides, preserve the lives of
+thousands of brave soldiers and be a benefit to mankind."
+
+Anything to end the war, was Germany's slogan. Because of the
+sufferings of the German people "a new situation" had been created
+which forced her to "new decisions." Because of the sufferings of
+other nations, and the Entente Powers' refusal to make peace at her
+bidding, she thus announced her resolve: "... The Imperial Government,
+in order to serve the welfare of mankind in a higher sense and not to
+wrong its own people, is now compelled to continue the fight for
+existence, again forced upon it, _with the full employment of all the
+weapons which are at its disposal_."
+
+The Imperial Government furthermore hoped that the United States
+would "view the new situation from the lofty heights of impartiality,
+and assist on their part to prevent further misery and unavoidable
+sacrifice of human life."
+
+[Illustration: New German Submarine War Zone of February 1, 1917.]
+
+The "new situation" as presented to the United States was that within
+a barred zone Germany had drawn round the British and French coasts,
+extending from the Shetlands as far south as Cape Finisterre, and to
+the west some 700 miles into the Atlantic, and also in the
+Mediterranean, all sea traffic would be stopped on and after February
+1, 1917, and that neutral vessels navigating the proscribed waters
+would do so at their own risk. The only exception made was a "safety
+lane" permitted for one American vessel a week with identifiable
+markings to sail to and from Falmouth through the Atlantic zone (the
+United States Government to guarantee that it did not carry
+contraband) and another safety lane admitting sea traffic through the
+Mediterranean to Athens. All other vessels would be sunk without
+regard to the pledges Germany made to the United States. Germany thus
+practically shut off American traffic with Europe in pursuance of her
+new sea warfare against her enemies.
+
+The edict was extended to hospital ships on the charge that the Allies
+used them for the transportation of munitions and troops. The charge
+was denied by the British and French Governments; but frightfulness
+admitted of no truth nor acceptance of denials of German charges,
+obviously made deliberately to justify barbarities, and so hospital
+ships, with their medical and nursing staffs and wounded, were to be
+sunk whenever found by submarines.
+
+The real attitude of Germany toward her withdrawn pledges to the
+United States was betrayed by the German Chancellor in addressing the
+Reichstag Committee on Ways and Means. He revealed that the pledges
+were merely a temporary expedient, made to fill up a gap until more
+submarines were available. It appeared that in March, May (when
+Germany surrendered to the American demands), and in September, 1916,
+the question of unrestricted warfare was not considered ripe for
+decision--that is, Germany was not ready to defy the United States.
+Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg thus defined the situation:
+
+"I have always proceeded from the standpoint of whether U-boat war
+would bring us nearer victorious peace or not. Every means, I said in
+March, that was calculated to shorten the war constitutes the most
+humane policy to follow. When the most ruthless methods are considered
+best calculated to lead us to victory, and swift victory, I said then
+they must be employed. This moment has now arrived.... The moment has
+come when, with the greatest prospect of success, we can undertake the
+enterprise."
+
+What changes, he asked, had come into the situation? A firm basis for
+success had been established by a considerable increase in submarines;
+poor harvests confronted England, France, and Italy, who would find
+their difficulties unbearable by an unrestricted submarine war; France
+and Italy also lacked coal, and the submarines would increase its
+dearth; England lacked ore and timber, her supplies of which would be
+diminished by the same means; and all the Entente Powers were
+suffering from a shrinkage in cargo space due to the submarines. With
+the bright prospect of success afforded by the supposed plight of the
+Allied Powers, Germany, he indicated, was prepared to accept all the
+consequences that would flow from the unrestricted submarine warfare
+decided upon.
+
+So was President Wilson. The German Chancellor made it clear that
+after Germany gave her solemn pledge on May 4, 1916, not to sink ships
+without warning, she had occupied the intervening months in feverish
+preparations to break it and to tear up the pledge like a scrap of
+paper and throw it to the winds. On the Chancellor's own words Germany
+had been convicted of a breach of faith.
+
+The President considered the crisis for three days. There was no
+question of the United States tolerating Germany's disavowal of her
+unlawful blockade of American trade with the belligerent countries.
+The only questions to be decided were whether to warn Germany that a
+rupture would follow her first act hurtful to American life or
+property; to demand the withdrawal of her decree by an ultimatum; to
+wait until she committed some "overt act" before taking action; or
+whether to cease diplomatic relations without any parley at all.
+
+The last-named course was determined upon. On February 3, 1917,
+President Wilson addressed the two Houses of Congress in joint
+session, informing them that the United States had severed its
+relations with Germany. The President reviewed the circumstances which
+led to the giving of the German undertaking to the United States
+following the sinking of the _Sussex_ on March 24, 1916, without
+warning. He reminded Congress that on the April 18 following the
+Administration informed the German Government that unless it "should
+now immediately declare and effect an abandonment of its present
+methods of submarine warfare against passenger and freight-carrying
+vessels, the Government of the United States can have no choice but to
+sever diplomatic relations with the German Empire altogether." The
+German Government consented to do so with reservations. These the
+United States brushed aside, and committed Germany to the plain pledge
+that no ships should be sunk without warning unless they attempted to
+escape or offered resistance. In view of Germany's new declaration
+deliberately withdrawing her solemn assurance without prior
+intimation, the President told Congress that the Government had no
+alternative consistent with the dignity and honor of the United States
+but to hand Count von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador, his
+passports, and to recall Ambassador Gerard from Berlin. But the
+President refused to believe that the German authorities intended to
+carry out the decree.
+
+"I cannot bring myself to believe," he said, "that they will indeed
+pay no regard to the ancient friendship between their people and our
+own or to the solemn obligations which have been exchanged between
+them and destroy American ships and take the lives of American
+citizens in the willful prosecution of the ruthless naval program they
+have announced their intention to adopt. Only actual overt acts on
+their part can make me believe it even now."
+
+But in the event of such overt acts the duty of the United States was
+clear:
+
+"If this inveterate confidence on my part in the sobriety and prudent
+foresight of their purpose should unhappily prove unfounded, if
+American ships and American lives should in fact be sacrificed by
+their naval commanders in a heedless contravention of the just and
+reasonable understanding of international law and the obvious dictates
+of humanity, I shall take the liberty of coming again before the
+Congress to ask that authority be given me to use any means that may
+be necessary for the protection of our seamen and our people in the
+prosecution of their peaceful and legitimate errands on the high seas.
+I can do nothing less. I take it for granted that all neutral
+governments will take the same course."
+
+Should Germany compel the United States to declare war, the President
+repudiated that any aggressive attitude would dictate such a course:
+
+"We do not desire any hostile conflict with the Imperial German
+Government. We are the sincere friends of the German people, and
+earnestly desire to remain at peace with the Government which speaks
+for them. We shall not believe that they are hostile to us unless and
+until we are obliged to believe it, and we purpose nothing more than
+the reasonable defense of the undoubted rights of our people. We wish
+to serve no selfish ends. We seek merely to stand true alike in
+thought and in action to the immemorial principles of our people which
+I have sought to express in my address to the Senate only two weeks
+ago--seek merely to vindicate our right to liberty and justice and an
+unmolested life. These are the bases of peace, not war. God grant that
+we may not be challenged to defend them by acts of willful injustice
+on the part of the Government of Germany!"
+
+War was apparently inevitable. Submarine warfare on Atlantic shipping
+made certain some "overt act" offensive to the United States. The
+German attitude was that the new decree would be remorselessly acted
+upon; it could not and would not be modified; it was absolute and
+final; and the only security for American shipping was to avoid the
+prohibited zone by abandoning its trade with Europe.
+
+Germany frankly discounted the effect of the entrance of the United
+States, as a belligerent opposed to her. Measuring her estimated gains
+from the pursuit of an unbridled sea war, she decided that they would
+more than outweigh the disadvantage of American hostility.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV
+
+NOTHING SETTLED
+
+
+With the Allied Powers the American Government's relations continued
+to be friendly under certain diplomatic difficulties, due to a group
+of unadjusted issues relating to the blockade of German ports, mail
+seizures, and the blacklist. Popularly, overwhelming pro-Ally
+sympathies and an enormous trade due directly to the war more than
+offset commercial irritation arising from Allied infractions of
+American rights; but while they continued they intruded as obstacles
+to the preservation of official amity. If the Administration was
+content to enter its protests and then let matters rest, its inaction
+merely meant that the Allies' sins were magnanimously tolerated, not
+condoned. The Allies, on the other hand, maintained that they were not
+sinning at all, that they were only doing what the United States
+itself had done when engaged in war and would do again if it ever
+became a belligerent. Diplomacy failed to reconcile the differences,
+and so nothing was settled.
+
+Great Britain, as the chief offender in trampling roughshod over
+American privileges of trade in war time, added to her manifold
+transgressions, in August, 1916, by placing further curbs on neutral
+trade with the Netherland Overseas Trust. Under a scheme to ration the
+neutral countries of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Holland--that is,
+restricting their imports to their estimated domestic needs--further
+licenses granted to British exporters to trade with these countries
+were discontinued. Here was a check on British exports for fear of the
+surplus reaching Germany through neutral channels. A check on
+American exports followed by Great Britain forbidding the Overseas
+Trust to accept further consignments of certain commodities from the
+United States for Holland, and by her refusal to grant letters of
+assurance safeguarding the delivery of American shipments destined for
+the three other countries. By these devices Great Britain controlled
+supplies to these countries at the source. The effect was that certain
+American consignments predestined for Holland were stopped altogether,
+while the shipping companies trading between the United States and
+Scandinavia could not take cargoes without British assurances of safe
+discharge at their ports of destination. The British official view was
+that excessive exports from Great Britain to these countries could not
+very well be forbidden while permitting them from the United States
+and other neutral sources. The veto had to be general to be effective.
+
+One measure passed by Congress, providing for the creation of a
+Shipping Board, empowered the Secretary of the Treasury to forbid
+clearance to any vessel whose owner or agents refused to accept
+consignments offered for transport abroad by an American citizen for
+reasons other than lack of space or inadaptability of the vessel to
+carry the cargo offered. Another measure, the Omnibus Revenue Law,
+made similar provisions in a more drastic form, aiming specifically at
+retaliation for the Allies' blacklist of German-American firms, and
+the various blockades and embargoes in operation against American
+products. It provided that the owners or agents of vessels affiliated
+with a belligerent engaged in a war to which the United States was not
+a party must neither discriminate in favor of nor against any citizen,
+product, or locality of the United States in accepting or refusing
+consignments on pain of clearance being refused.
+
+The same penalty attached to vessels of any belligerent which denied
+to American ships and citizens the same privileges of commerce which
+the offending belligerent accorded to its own vessels or to those of
+any other nationality. An alternative penalty, to be exercised by the
+President in his discretion, denied to such offending belligerents'
+ships and citizens the privileges of commerce with the United States
+until reciprocal liberty of trade was restored. A third provision
+aimed at penalizing a belligerent who prohibited the importation at
+its ports of any American product, not injurious to health or morals,
+by barring importation into the United States from the offending
+country similar or other articles.
+
+The prevailing view was that the exercise of such reprisals by the
+President would virtually mean nonintercourse in trade and involve
+serious international complications. An isolated English impression,
+only of moment because it placed the aspects of the legislation in a
+nutshell, recognized that while it might be merely a "flourish" having
+a special virtue on the eve of a presidential election, the reprisals
+were aimed at the Allies, primarily against Great Britain, and were
+popular in the United States as a commercial club that could be
+wielded instead of having recourse to the threats that brought Germany
+to respect American demands. But the British official attitude as
+taken by Lord Robert Cecil was unmoved. "It is not likely," he said,
+"that Great Britain will change her blacklist policy at the request of
+the United States. The idea that Great Britain is adopting a
+deliberate policy with which to injure American trade is the purest
+moonshine, since outside of our own dominions our trade with the
+United States is the most important. Of course, natural trade rivalry
+exists, but no responsible statesman in this country would dream of
+proposing an insane measure designed to injure American commerce."
+
+The blacklist was the last straw which provoked the retaliatory
+legislation. But, alone of the seemingly unadjustable disputes pending
+between the United States and Great Britain, it was on the blacklist
+issue that the latter had an unanswerable defense. The British stand
+left official Washington's complaint bereft of foundation under
+international law. The only ground on which the American protest could
+be justified was by contending that the blacklist violated
+international comity. In other words, if it was not illegal--there was
+no doubt of its legality--it was an incivility.
+
+There had been the usual diplomatic exchange between the two
+governments on the subject prefacing a lengthy communication sent by
+Lord Grey--the new title of the British Foreign Secretary upon his
+promotion to the peerage--on October 10, 1916. Therein he repeated
+that the blacklist was promulgated in pursuance of the Trading with
+the Enemy Act (a war measure explained in a previous volume), and was
+a piece of purely municipal legislation. Moreover, the American
+Government was assured, "the Government of Great Britain neither
+purport nor claim to impose any disabilities or penalties upon neutral
+individuals or upon neutral commerce. The measure is simply one which
+enjoins those who owe allegiance to Great Britain to cease having
+trade relations with persons who are found to be assisting or
+rendering service to the enemy."
+
+Nor were the steps taken confined to the United States:
+
+"With the full consent of the Allied Governments, firms even in Allied
+countries are being placed on the statutory list, if they are firms
+with whom it is necessary to prevent British subjects from trading.
+These considerations may, perhaps, serve to convince the Government of
+the United States that the measures now being taken are not directed
+against neutral trade in general. Still less are they directed against
+American trade in particular; they are part of the general belligerent
+operations designed to weaken the enemy's resources."
+
+The burden of the note was that Great Britain maintained the right,
+which in the existing crisis she also deemed a duty, to withhold
+British facilities from those who conducted their trade for the
+benefit of her foes. This right Lord Grey characterized as so obvious
+that he could not believe the United States Government seriously
+contested the inherent privilege of a sovereign state to exercise it
+except under a misconception of the scope and intent of the measures
+taken. It would appear that the American Government gracefully
+surrendered, by default, its earlier contention that Great Britain had
+no right to forbid her subjects from trading with American firms
+having Teutonic affiliations.
+
+The American objections to detentions and censorship of mails by the
+Allied Powers, which were bent on preventing German sympathizers from
+using the postal service to neutral countries as a channel for
+transmitting money, correspondence, and goods for the Central Powers,
+brought a further communication from Lord Grey on October 12, 1916. It
+threw no new light on the subject, the bearings of which were dealt
+with in a previous volume. The American contentions, so far from being
+conceded, were themselves attacked in an argument intended to refute
+them. The Allied governments were only prepared to give assurances
+that they would continue to lessen the annoyances caused by the
+practice and were "ready to settle responsibility therefor in
+accordance with the principles of law and justice, which it never was
+and is not now their intention to evade."
+
+Lord Grey thus defined the Allied position:
+
+"The practice of the Germans to make improper use of neutral mails and
+forward hostile correspondence, even official communications, dealing
+with hostilities, under cover of apparently unoffensive envelopes,
+mailed by neutrals to neutrals, made it necessary to examine mails
+from or to countries neighboring Germany under the same conditions as
+mails from or to Germany itself; but as a matter of course mails from
+neutrals to neutrals that do not cover such improper uses have nothing
+to fear."
+
+Germany's treatment of mails, Lord Grey pointed out, went much further
+than mere interception:
+
+"As regards the proceedings of the German Empire toward postal
+correspondence during the present war, the Allied governments have
+informed the Government of the United States of the names of some of
+the mail steamers whose mail bags have been not examined, to be sure,
+but purely and simply destroyed at sea by the German naval
+authorities. Other names could very easily be added. The very recent
+case of the mail steamer _Hudikswall_ (Swedish), carrying 670 mail
+bags, may be cited."
+
+The discussion was as profitless as that arising from the blacklist.
+As to the blockade issue, involving interference with American
+commerce on the high seas, both sides appeared to epistolarily bolt,
+and the question remained in suspended animation. The blacklist and
+mail disputes acquired a similar status.
+
+
+
+
+PART VII--WESTERN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV
+
+THE GERMAN RETREAT ON THE ANCRE
+
+
+In January, 1917, the British forces in France captured 1,228 Germans,
+of whom twenty-seven were officers. The first month of the new year
+passed unmarked by any striking gains for either side. The Allies had
+maintained and strengthened their old positions, made slight advances
+at some points, and continued to harass and destroy the enemy in
+trench raids, artillery duels, and in battles in the air.
+
+Some record of the principal minor operations in France and Belgium at
+this time is necessary, as every offensive movement had a set purpose
+and was a part of the Germans' or Allies' plans.
+
+On February 1, 1917, in the neighborhood of Wytschaete, parties of
+Germans dressed in white attempted two surprise assaults on British
+trenches, but were rolled back with severe losses before they could
+get within striking distance. In these encounters the British took
+prisoners without losing a man or incurring the slightest casualty.
+
+On the same date the French were engaged in lively artillery actions
+at Hartmannsweilerkopf and east of Metzeral. Around Altkirch and to
+the east of Rheims they were successful in spirited encounters with
+enemy patrols. In Lorraine during the night the Germans attacked
+trenches south of Leintrey, but were shattered by French fire. In the
+sector of St. Georges in Belgium a surprise attack also failed.
+
+On the British front in the course of the same night a dashing raid
+was carried out against German trenches northeast of Guedecourt (Somme
+sector) in which two officers and fifty-six men were taken prisoners.
+
+The British carried out another successful operation on February 3,
+1917, north of the Ancre, pushing forward their line east of Beaucourt
+some 500 yards on a front of about three-quarters of a mile. Over a
+hundred prisoners and three machine guns were captured. On the same
+night southeast of Souchez German trenches were penetrated and
+twenty-one prisoners and some guns were taken. Several dugouts
+containing Germans were bombed and an enemy shaft was destroyed.
+
+While the British continued to make slight gains and to harass the
+enemy, the French were engaged in minor operations no less successful.
+A surprise attack in the region of Moulin-sous-Toutvent resulted in
+the capture of a dozen prisoners. A similar operation in the region of
+Tracy-le-Val between the Oise and the Aisne was also a victory for
+French arms. The Germans fought with determination, but were unable to
+make any headway against the indomitable French spirit. The number of
+casualties incurred by the Germans was not known, but the French took
+twenty-two prisoners.
+
+During February 4, 1917, the Germans displayed intense activity, as if
+determined to retrieve their frequent failures since the month opened.
+
+Three hostile raids were attempted by strong German forces during the
+night and early morning of February 4-5, 1917, on the British lines on
+the Somme front. The Germans in each attack were thrown back in
+disorder, leaving a number of prisoners in British hands.
+
+Northeast of Guedecourt during the night of the 4th the British
+occupied 500 yards of a German trench, capturing a machine gun and
+seventy prisoners, including two officers.
+
+In the space of twenty-four hours (February 4-5, 1917) the Germans
+made four successful counterattacks against the new British front east
+of Beaucourt. The British continued the work of consolidating their
+new positions undisturbed by the frantic efforts of the Germans to
+oust them, and in raids and counterattacks captured forty prisoners,
+including one officer.
+
+British airmen registered a number of victories during February 4,
+1917. Three German machines were destroyed and six others driven to
+earth seriously damaged. Only one British machine was counted missing.
+
+During the evening on this date the French south of the Somme defeated
+a German raid near Barleux, inflicting heavy casualties and taking
+some prisoners. Incursions into German lines in Alsace and the
+Chambrette and Pont-a-Mousson sectors were carried out with
+satisfactory results. They captured a considerable amount of war
+material and brought back one officer and a number of prisoners.
+
+The British on the Somme front were now determined to push on to the
+capture of Grandcourt. On February 6, 1917, they occupied 1,000 yards
+of German trench in the neighborhood of that place. Artillery activity
+on both sides of the Somme front and in the Ypres sector continued
+during the day and night. The British brought down ten German machines
+in aerial battles and lost two of their own flyers.
+
+On February 5-6, 1917, the French continued to raid German lines with
+good results. In Alsace near Anspach they penetrated three German
+positions, wrecking enemy works and bombing shelters and returned to
+their own lines without losing a man.
+
+The continuous pressure which the British brought to bear on both
+sides of the Ancre River forced the Germans to evacuate Grandcourt on
+February 6, 1917. The capture of the village was regarded as
+important, marking a notable advance for the British on the forts of
+Miraumont and Grandcourt, which covered Bapaume from the west.
+
+In Lorraine on this date the Germans succeeded in piercing a salient
+in the French lines, but were driven out by a spirited counterattack.
+Three German planes were brought down during the night, Lieutenant
+Huerteaux scoring his twentieth victory.
+
+[Illustration: The Entire Western Front, August 1, 1917.]
+
+The British followed up their success in capturing Grandcourt by
+advances on both sides of the Ancre. On the morning of February 8,
+1917, they drove the Germans out of a position of importance on the
+highest point of Sailly-Saillisel hill, gaining all their objectives
+and capturing seventy-eight prisoners, of whom two were officers. In
+the operations along the Ancre a German officer and eighty-two men
+were made prisoner.
+
+South of Dixmude a strong German raiding party attempted to attack a
+Belgian outpost. They were received by such a hurricane of infantry
+and machine-gun fire that the field was strewn with dead, and few of
+the raiders succeeded in making their escape.
+
+During February 9-10, 1917, the French and British continued to
+register minor successes in daring raids, bombarding enemy positions
+and capturing in one way or another several hundred prisoners.
+
+An advance worthy of special note was made by British troops in the
+night of February 10, 1917, when they captured a strong system of
+German trenches on a front of more than three-quarters of a mile in
+the Somme line. This was on the southern front just north of Serre
+Hill. The German prisoners taken during this operation numbered 215,
+including some officers.
+
+On the same date French raiders penetrated German trenches in the
+Forest of Apremont, destroying defenses and capturing prisoners. In
+the neighborhood of Verdun a German plane was shot down, and in other
+sectors French aviators during fiercely fought combats in the air
+brought down in flames two other machines.
+
+North of the Ancre the British continued to make progress, occupying
+without difficulty a German trench some 600 yards long and taking a
+good number of prisoners. The Germans tried to force the British out
+of their recently won positions south of Serre Hill, but, caught in
+artillery barrage and machine-gun fire, were driven off with serious
+losses. On this date also the French carried out successful raids
+during the night on the Verdun front in the neighborhood of the
+famous Hill 304, and another in the Argonne which resulted in the
+destruction of enemy works and the capture of a number of prisoners.
+
+The small gains made by the French and British during the first weeks
+of February, 1917, were not especially important in themselves, but
+each slight advance brought the Allies nearer to important German
+positions. The daily trench raids served to harass and bewilder the
+common enemy, and while the number of prisoners taken were few in each
+instance, in the aggregate the number was impressive. The British and
+French were not disposed to squander lives recklessly in these minor
+exploits, and it was only when they were within striking distance of
+an important objective that they operated with strong forces and the
+most powerful guns at their command.
+
+The Canadians, who always displayed a special liking for trench raids,
+and were uncommonly successful in such operations, engaged in one on
+the morning of February 13, 1917, which merits description in some
+detail. The attack was made on a 600-yard front between Souchez and
+Givenchy. The Germans under the shell storm that shattered their
+trenches had retreated to the depths of their dugouts, and while it
+lasted few ventured forth to oppose the raiders. The British
+bombardment had been so effective that the German machine-gun
+emplacements must have been destroyed or were buried under debris, for
+only a few guns spoke out as the Canadians "went over." The Germans in
+the dugouts could not be coaxed out. Explosives thrown into their
+hiding places must have produced appalling consequences. The sturdy
+Canadians did not relish this kind of work, but there was no
+alternative. For an hour they searched the mine shafts and galleries
+around Givenchy and destroyed them. Some Germans in the depths were
+killed before they could explode certain mines they had prepared under
+British positions. About fifty prisoners of the Eleventh Bavarian
+Regiment were captured who had fought in Russia, at Verdun, and on the
+Somme.
+
+Five hours later the same Canadian troops, unwearied by this strenuous
+experience, were carrying out another raid farther south, where they
+obtained good results.
+
+On this date, February 14, 1917, the steady pressure maintained by
+the British forced the Germans to abandon advanced positions between
+Serre and the Somme and to fall back on their main fighting position.
+
+[Illustration: One of the strange armoured automobiles or "tanks" with
+which the British surprised the Germans in September, 1916. Their
+caterpillar trucks and peculiar form make it possible for them to
+advance easily over obstructions and trenches.]
+
+On the following day, February 15, 1917, the troops of the German
+Crown Prince achieved a success of some importance. After intense
+artillery fire they stormed four French lines south of Ripont in the
+Champagne, on a front of about a mile and a half, gaining ground to a
+depth of half a mile. They captured twenty-one officers and 837 men of
+other ranks, and a considerable quantity of war material. On the same
+date the British carried out a successful raid southeast of Souchez,
+penetrating enemy positions and taking prisoners. In air combats in
+different sectors British airmen disposed of nine German machines and
+lost four of their own.
+
+The British made important gains on both banks of the Ancre when in
+the morning of February 17, 1917, they attacked German positions
+opposite the villages of Miraumont and Petit Miraumont on a front of
+about two miles. North of the river a commanding German position on
+high ground north of Baillescourt Farm was carried on a front of about
+1,000 yards. In these operations along the Ancre the British captured
+761 prisoners, including twelve officers.
+
+During the preliminary bombardment of the German positions a British
+artillery sergeant slipped out of the trenches with a telephone, and,
+establishing himself in a shell hole in a forward position, directed
+the gunfire which shattered the German barbed-wire defenses.
+
+The Germans made a courageous attempt to oust the British from their
+newly won positions on the spur above Baillescourt Farm in the morning
+of February 18, 1917. Their infantry, advancing in three waves with
+bodies of supporting troops in the rear, were swept by the
+concentrated fire of the British artillery. The storm of fire
+shattered the attack and the German forces were rolled back in
+confusion. At no point were they able to reach the British lines.
+
+During the night the British carried out four successful raids on
+German positions southwest and northwest of Arras, south of
+Fauquissart and north of Ypres, during which nineteen prisoners were
+taken and great damage was wrought to hostile defenses.
+
+The British continued their successful minor operations during the
+succeeding days. On February 20, 1917, New Zealand troops penetrated
+German lines south of Armentieres to a depth of 300 yards, where they
+wrecked dugouts and trench works. The intense preliminary bombardment
+which preceded the raid had proved so destructive that the New
+Zealanders found the German support lines filled with dead. The raid
+resulted in the capture of forty-four prisoners. In an attack
+southeast of Ypres the British, advancing on a front of 500 yards,
+reached the German support line after desperate fighting. They
+destroyed dugouts and mine shafts and took 114 prisoners, including an
+officer and a number of machine guns.
+
+The steady pressure of the British on the German positions along the
+Ancre since the beginning of the month brought results that surpassed
+Field Marshal Haig's most sanguine expectations. The Germans were
+forced to abandon their front on the Ancre, escaping to a new line of
+defenses along the Bapaume ridge. Their retreat covered about three
+miles and the British were able to occupy a number of German
+strongholds which they expected to win by hard fighting. Serre, the
+two Miraumonts, and Pys were occupied without a struggle. The Germans
+succeeded in saving their guns during the retirement, but were forced
+to destroy ammunition dumps and military stores. In the night of
+February 24, 1917, British troops, advancing south of Irles and toward
+Warlencourt, occupied the famous butte which had been the scene of
+intense fighting in the previous month.
+
+The foggy, misty weather which prevailed at the time in this region
+had greatly facilitated the German retreat, as the keen eyes of the
+British airmen were unable to study their movements. It was surmised
+that some important operation was under way owing to the reckless
+expenditure of shells which had been going on for some days. The
+Germans were shooting up stores of ammunition which they found
+impossible to take with them in their retreat.
+
+During February 25-26, 1917, the British continued to harass the
+retiring Germans, pressing forward over the newly yielded ground and
+forcing back the rear guards of the enemy. In these actions the
+Germans depended chiefly on their heavy guns mounted on railway
+trucks, which in case of necessity could be rushed away at the last
+moment.
+
+Early in the morning of February 26, 1917, heavy explosions were heard
+in the direction of Bapaume, where the Germans were engaged in
+destructive work to prevent the British entry. Along their lines of
+retreat large trees had been felled across the roads, forming lofty
+barriers, on the other side of which great mine craters had been
+opened up.
+
+Despite desperate rear-guard actions, and the strenuous efforts made
+by the Germans to hinder the advance, the British continued to press
+forward. The village of Ligny about a mile and a half west of Bapaume
+was occupied, as well as the village of Le Barque. North of the Ancre
+the western and northern defenses of Puisieux were wrested from the
+Germans.
+
+On February 27, 1917, the British pushed forward all along the
+eleven-mile line stretching from south of Gommecourt to west of Le
+Transloy. The British objective at this time was a crest overlooking
+the high ground running between Achiet-le-Petit and Bapaume. At every
+stage of the British advance fresh evidences were found of the German
+destructive methods before retiring. The carefully built dugouts which
+they had so long occupied had been reduced by explosives to heaps of
+rubbish.
+
+The Germans had left certain bodies of men behind with machine guns to
+hinder the British pursuit. As they had carefully chosen their
+positions they were enabled to work considerable damage. The British
+had encounters with some of these outposts on the 27th in the
+neighborhood of Box and Rossignol Woods. The Germans, having found
+that their machine-gun fire did not restrain the advance, tried a
+shrapnel barrage which proved more effective, but only delayed the
+pursuers for a short time.
+
+The British troops were so elated over the fact that the Germans were
+retreating that they made light of the ingenious obstacles thrown in
+their way. The great advance continued, the British occupying
+Rossignol Wood, Rossignol Trench, and considerable ground to the
+northeast of Puisieux. The latter place was partly occupied by Germans
+who fought as if determined that the British should pay a high cost
+for possession of the village. The British had worked their way into a
+corner of the line, and other parties were engaged in driving out the
+defenders, who fought from house to house.
+
+Southeast of the village the British line was being pushed out above
+Miraumont and Beauregard Dovecote. The Germans in the Gommecourt
+salient shelled Miraumont and bombarded the neighborhood with high
+explosives in reckless fashion as if eager to consume their supplies.
+
+During the night of February 27, 1917, the German troops abandoned
+Gommecourt and the British took possession. Here on July 1, 1916, the
+Londoners had fought with desperate valor in assaulting an almost
+impregnable position, and in the storm of massed gunfire were
+threatened with annihilation.
+
+To the northeast of Gommecourt the British advanced their line more
+than half a mile, and also captured the villages of Thilloy and
+Puisieux-le-Mont. A successful raid carried out in the night by the
+British in the neighborhood of Clery resulted in the capture of
+twenty-two prisoners.
+
+There was sharp fighting among the ruins of Puisieux, where the
+Germans had to be hunted from their hiding places. After this
+clearing-out process the British line now ran well beyond Gommecourt
+on the left and down to Irles on the right. The Germans concentrated
+heavy shell fire on Irles, and showered high explosives on Miraumont
+and upon other places on the front from which they had withdrawn. The
+British were now less than a mile from Bapaume, in the rear of which
+the German guns on railway mountings were firing incessantly on
+British positions.
+
+On March 1, 1917, British headquarters in France, summarizing the
+operations during February, stated that the British had captured 2,133
+German prisoners and occupied either by capture or the withdrawal of
+the Germans eleven villages. Some of the positions captured were of
+the highest importance, to which the Germans had clung as long as they
+could with desperate energy, and from which the British had tried
+vainly to conquer. The Germans had retired on the Ancre on a front of
+twelve miles to a depth of two miles.
+
+The first stage of the German retirement plan was completed on March
+2, 1917, when they made a definite stand, their line now running from
+Essarts through Achiet-le-Petit to about 1,000 yards southeast of
+Bapaume. The Loupart Wood occupying high ground along this line had
+been transformed into a strong field fortress after German methods,
+and here it was evident every preparation was made for a stiff
+defense.
+
+The British had an enormous task before them in building roads through
+the recovered ground. The Germans had carefully timed their retirement
+when the ground was hard, but now owing to a week's thaw most of the
+Somme and Ancre area was transformed into liquid mud. In addition to
+the difficulties presented by the terrain, the British patrols in the
+evacuated territory constantly encountered isolated bodies of German
+defensive troops who, obedient to their instructions, fought bravely
+to hold the positions they had been assigned to. Everything that
+cunning could devise was resorted to to delay the British advance. An
+Australian patrol discovered in one place a chain stretched across a
+ravine which was connected with a mine at either end.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI
+
+THE GERMAN RETREAT CONTINUES--FRENCH RECOVER 120 TOWNS
+
+
+The British troops continued to advance in the Ancre area in spite of
+the difficult terrain and the desperate defense of the Germans who had
+been left behind in the retirement and who occupied positions where
+they might work the greatest damage to the pursuers. East of
+Gommecourt on March 3, 1917, the British gained two-thirds of a mile
+along a two-mile front. They were also successful east of
+Bouchavesnes, where they captured the enemy's front and support lines
+on a front of two-thirds of a mile. In these operations they captured
+190 prisoners and five machine guns.
+
+On March 4, 1917, the Germans made a violent attack on the Verdun
+front which was repulsed by the French. North of Caurieres Wood the
+Germans gained a footing in French advanced positions. They were
+driven out on the following day in a spirited counterattack, leaving
+many of their comrades dead on the field.
+
+Thaws, fogs, and snows continued to hamper military operations in all
+sectors of the fighting area. On March 8, 1917, the French won a
+decided victory over the Germans in Champagne. Notwithstanding the
+snow, which rendered any military movement difficult, French troops
+operating between Butte du Mesnil and Maisons de Champagne carried
+German positions on a front of 1,680 yards to a depth varying from 650
+to 865 yards. As the French crossed no-man's-land, preceded by a
+complete curtain of fire which raised and dropped mechanically, the
+German artillery was everywhere active, but their massed fire could
+not check the attackers' steady advance. As the French reached the
+first lines of German trenches the occupants offered little
+resistance, but came running out with uplifted hands in token of
+surrender. At some points, however, the Germans had converted their
+positions into regular fortresses, and here there was desperate
+fighting with grenade and rifle. The French cleared out these
+strongholds and made their way slowly up the slopes toward the
+objective. During the fight French aeroplanes circled overhead
+watching the movements of the Germans behind the points attacked. Not
+a German machine was visible, but some were hidden among the snow
+clouds, for the rattle of machine guns, heard at times, denoted their
+presence above the battle field.
+
+On the following day, March 9, 1917, the Germans launched three
+violent attacks in this sector in an attempt to force the French out
+of their newly won positions. The Germans did not lack bravery, and
+pressed forward in the face of a strong barrage and machine-gun fire.
+The French guns, however, wrought such destruction in their ranks that
+they were finally forced to retire, their number shattered and
+depleted. In the two days' fighting in this sector the French took 170
+prisoners, of whom four were officers.
+
+The British captured Irles in the morning of March 10, 1917. Previous
+to the attack their howitzers had deluged the place with shells. The
+infantry followed closely, one force advancing from the south and
+another turning north, to head off any attempt of the Germans to
+retreat. In a sunken ravine the British found a small garrison of old
+men with machine guns. Here thirty prisoners were taken and the rest
+killed. The British swept on over the German trenches, meeting with
+very little opposition. About 150 Germans were taken in this main
+attack and quite as many more were gathered in by troops working west
+and north. The prisoners were all Prussians, belonging chiefly to the
+Second Guards Reserve. The Germans succeeded in withdrawing without
+very heavy losses, leaving their rear guard to bear the brunt of the
+British attack. The evacuation of Irles, which had become untenable,
+had been fixed by the Germans for the 10th at 7.30 a. m., but the
+British caught them napping by striking two hours earlier, with the
+result that they captured three officers and 289 men.
+
+In the night of March 10, 1917, the French carried out successful
+surprise attacks on the German trenches in the Lassigny and
+Canny-sur-Matz regions, and in the neighborhood of the Woevre north of
+Jury Wood, destroying defensive works in these operations and taking
+fifteen prisoners and some machine guns.
+
+In the afternoon of March 12, 1917, the French troops operating on the
+Champagne front recaptured all the trenches on Hill 185. These lines
+lay west of the Maisons de Champagne Farm which the Germans had won
+in the previous month. The attack was made over a front of nearly a
+mile. During the night of March 11, 1917, French troops had crawled
+forward and by the use of grenades prepared the way for the general
+assault on the German positions which were carried on the following
+day. All the German trenches were taken on the hill and a fortified
+work on the slopes north of Memelon. In the course of the action the
+French captured about 100 prisoners and a considerable number of
+machine guns.
+
+On March 12, 1917, the British advance was resumed on a front of
+nearly four miles to the west of Bapaume. The Germans, retreating,
+left only a strong screen of rear guards to oppose, but they avoided
+contact with British patrols as far as possible. It was evident that
+the Germans were reserving their strength for some important
+operation.
+
+The British, pushing onward, advanced their line north of Ancre Valley
+on a front of over one and a half miles southwest and west of Bapaume.
+South of Achiet-le-Petit the British made important progress and
+occupied 1,000 yards of German trenches west of Essarts. On March 13,
+1917, Haig's troops had won the coveted ridge overlooking Bapaume from
+the northwest. For the first time since the struggle began on this
+front the British had the advantage of the highest ground. Bapaume,
+which the Germans had been blasting and piling up with the wreckage of
+stores and the trunks of fallen trees, was now within easy striking
+distance and the next point to be captured in the British advance.
+
+Grevillers was occupied by the British during the night, their line
+now stretching along the ridge which runs northwest from that point to
+the outskirts of Achiet-le-Petit, where the Germans were in
+possession.
+
+In the course of this latest advance Loupart Wood was occupied. It is
+situated on the shoulder of a high ridge which overlooks the entire
+Somme battle front. The British were highly elated over the capture of
+the wood, where for eight months German batteries had rained shells
+upon the British positions. It was regarded as one of the strongest
+artillery posts which the Germans held on the western front.
+
+The Germans had made desperate efforts to hold this strong position,
+but thirty hours of incessant bombardment by British guns leveled
+their defenses and crushed in the dugouts, and they withdrew, a
+shattered remnant.
+
+In the Champagne region the Germans continued their attacks during
+March 13-14, 1917, on the French positions on Hill 185. The loss of
+the hill a few days before, and of positions around Maisons de
+Champagne were regarded as important by the Germans, for they
+persisted in their attacks though every attempt made was repulsed with
+appalling losses. They were unable to reach the French line at any
+point, though concentrating strong artillery fire on the lost
+positions and attacking with grenades throughout the night. The French
+continued to hold their own despite these desperate onslaughts and
+were even able to increase their gains in this sector.
+
+In the region of St. Mihiel the French by a dashing operation captured
+Romainville Farm with its garrison of thirty Germans. At four
+different points French detachments penetrated German trenches between
+the Meuse and Apremont Forest, pushing as far as the second line of
+defenses and bringing back a number of prisoners.
+
+On March 15, 1917, French forces south of the Somme in the
+neighborhood of Roye after an intense shelling of the German lines
+penetrated east of Canny-sur-Matz to a depth of about half a mile.
+British troops between Peronne and Bapaume made important gains about
+this date. Pushing forward on a front of two and a half miles they
+occupied German trenches running from the south of St. Pierre Vaast
+Wood to the north of the village of Saillisel, a stretch of about
+3,000 yards.
+
+On March 17, 1917, the Germans were forced to abandon the whole line
+of about fifteen miles between the Oise and Andechy, owing to the
+pressure of French forces. These lines were strongly fortified and had
+been occupied by the Germans for about two years. The French continued
+their advance movement on the following day. Their advance guard
+entered Roye in pursuit of a German contingent that had blown up
+streets in the interior of the town. About 800 of the civil population
+which the Germans had not had time to remove received their
+liberators with a wild enthusiasm that was pathetic to witness.
+
+North and northeast of Lassigny the French made further gains,
+occupying the town and a number of points beyond, and pushing forward
+past the road between Roye and Noyon. During the night of March 17,
+1917, French air squadrons bombarded German organizations in the
+region of Arnaville, and the factories and blast furnaces at
+Voelkingen, where a great fire was seen to break out. Stations and
+roads in the region of Ham and St. Quentin were also bombarded with
+good results, and all the French aeroplanes returned undamaged.
+
+On March 18, 1917, the Germans were in retreat over a front of
+approximately eighty-five miles from south of Arras on the north to
+Soissons on the Aisne. They evacuated scores of villages, and the
+important towns of Peronne, Chaulnes, Nesle, and Noyon. Evidently the
+Germans had been forced to leave somewhat hurriedly, for many of the
+places evacuated were only slightly damaged as the result of military
+operations.
+
+British and French troops, keeping in close touch with the German rear
+guard during the advance, pushed forward to a depth of from ten to
+twelve miles, and their cavalry entered Nesle about the same time. The
+occupation of Noyon on the Oise was of special importance, as the
+nearest point to Paris held by the Germans. The famous Noyon elbow or
+salient, from which it was expected the Germans would launch an attack
+on the French capital, now ceased to be a source of anxiety and
+apprehension to the French fighting forces in this region.
+
+Peronne, for which the French had fought desperately for nearly two
+years, was entered by the British on March 18, 1917, after a brief
+action with the German rear guard. East of the place the Germans had
+fired a number of villages as they retreated. Athies, a town of some
+importance, was reduced to a smoldering ruin and the smoke of its
+burning buildings could be seen for miles. The Germans displayed their
+"thoroughness" as they retired by poisoning the wells with arsenic,
+and setting high-explosive traps into which they hoped the British
+advance guards would blunder. Bridges over all the waterways were
+burned and the crossroads carefully mined.
+
+[Illustration: The German Retreat on the Western Front, March 18,
+1917.]
+
+The capture of Bapaume, that quaint Picardy town which the Germans had
+transformed into an almost impregnable stronghold and fortress, was a
+special cause for rejoicing by the British troops. It was a prize they
+had longed for through many weary months. There was no waving of flags
+or beating of drums when the British patrols entered the town, for
+there was stiff fighting ahead, and the place was filled with
+underground strongholds. Soon the welcome message came over the wire
+that all the enemy rear guard had been accounted for, and the British
+were free to survey their new acquisition. Fires were smoldering in
+many parts and not a house was left intact. Shells had wrought a great
+deal of the ruin, but it was evident that many of the buildings had
+been dynamited. The statue of General Louis Faldeherbe, who defended
+Bapaume against the Germans in 1870, was missing, and had evidently
+been carried off by the kaiser's troops.
+
+The defensive works around Bapaume were of the most elaborate
+description, and the highest ingenuity had been employed in making the
+place impregnable. In addition to a splendid trench system forming a
+network around the place, there were acres of barbed wire stretched
+upon iron posts firmly planted in the earth, and intricate systems of
+wires spread over the ground to hamper an enemy attack. In addition to
+strong redoubts at different points fitted up with every defensive
+device, the cellars under the houses had been consolidated in many
+places, forming great underground galleries that could shelter
+thousands of German troops.
+
+The British were not permitted to occupy Bapaume in peace, for while
+the enemy could no longer be seen, he was heard from constantly and
+destructively. All day long and during the night the town was shelled
+and great damage was wrought in such sections which the enemy had
+registered before leaving.
+
+The German forces were still retiring, hastened on their way by the
+British troops, who were pressing them closely. From captured Germans
+it was learned that fresh divisions, including one that had fought in
+Rumania, had been thrown in as a screen to shield the retiring troops.
+
+The Germans had devised so many traps to catch the Allies and delay
+the pursuit that the advance was necessarily slow. The French found
+less opposition than the British, and were able to push forward more
+rapidly, covering twenty-two miles in the three days since the
+retirement began. Over 120 towns and villages were recovered by the
+French alone. The joy of the inhabitants who had been for thirty-two
+months in the hands of the Germans was a deeply moving spectacle.
+Every French soldier was embraced amid smiles and tears. Many of the
+women declared that they owed their own lives as well as the lives of
+their children to American relief in the occupied territory.
+
+The mayors, assistant mayors, and other officials of Candor and Lagny
+had been carried off by the Germans, but owing to the rapidity of
+retirement many women and children had been left behind. All over
+thirteen were compelled to work without payment. Boys were driven to
+dig ditches or small trenches for telephone wires under fire. Those
+who refused for religious reasons to work on Sunday were fined. The
+Germans had closed all schools during their occupation of the French
+towns. The destruction of property was carried out in the most
+thorough fashion and according to systematized plans. Captured orders
+on the subject directed the blowing up of houses, wells, and cellars
+except those held by rear-guard outposts. Farm implements were burned
+and destroyed. Orders were given to collect filth in the neighborhood
+of wells to contaminate the water. All the fruit trees with rare
+exception in the evacuated territory were girdled or otherwise killed.
+
+The use of cavalry by the French and British seemed to have taken the
+Germans by surprise and interfered with their plans. In one village
+they were forced to hurriedly depart without touching the supper which
+was laid out on the table. In other places the Allies found newly
+opened boxes of explosives with which the Germans had planned to
+destroy the villages before leaving.
+
+The famous castle and stone village of Coucy-le-Chateau on the road
+from Paris to Namur, and one of the show places of the Laon region,
+were reduced to ruins. The village and castle date back to the
+thirteenth century and were regarded by art critics as architectural
+gems of medieval France. The castle had been spared from destruction
+during the French Revolution, and millions had been expended since on
+its preservation. This splendid monument of feudal Europe is no more.
+
+The German retreat was continued more slowly on March 19, 1917, when
+all northern France was swept by fierce equinoctial gales, and rain
+squalls were frequent in the battle area. Despite weather conditions,
+which hampered military operations, the British troops made good
+progress, and on the 20th held the line of the Somme in strength from
+Peronne southward to Canizy. British patrols were active as far east
+as Mons-en-Chaussee, and in several sectors between Bapaume and Arras
+British cavalry were engaged in skirmishes with the enemy.
+
+In the course of the following week the British forces restored eleven
+villages to France, and the whole department of the Somme was now
+cleared of invaders. The capture of Savy, which was held by a garrison
+of 600 Prussians of the Twenty-ninth Siegfried Division, brought the
+British within four miles of St. Quentin, and near to the Hindenburg
+line, where the Germans were strongly concentrated. St. Quentin had in
+part been destroyed and its picture galleries and museums looted of
+their contents. The outer bastion of the Hindenburg or Siegfried line
+was protected by barricades of tree trunks and swathed about with
+barbed wire. The Siegfried division holding the new German line of
+defense was busy during the last days of March, 1917, in building
+concrete emplacements, trenches, and dugouts.
+
+On April 1, 1917, the British troops were within three miles of St.
+Quentin, while the French threatened the place from the south.
+
+During the month of March, 1917, the British captured 1,239 Germans,
+of whom sixteen were officers, and large quantities of war material,
+including twenty-five trench mortars and three field guns. During the
+first three months of the year they had taken prisoner a total of
+seventy-nine officers and 4,600 of other ranks.
+
+On April 2, 1917, General Haig's troops drove a wedge into the German
+line on the ridge protecting St. Quentin on the west, capturing the
+villages of Holnon, Francilly, and Selency. With the occupation of the
+last village the British had a footing on the ridge overlooking St.
+Quentin, which lies in a hollow. If they could maintain their hold on
+this position the capture of St. Quentin was certain.
+
+At the northern end of the British line of advance their success was
+no less important. Attacking on a front of about ten miles they
+captured an important series of German positions defending the
+Arras-Cambrai highroad. Six villages were occupied by the British
+after heavy fighting. A town of some importance, Croisilles, was also
+captured during the course of these operations. This was considered a
+valuable gain, as a section of the Hindenburg line lies behind it.
+Longatte and Ecourt St. Mien, two villages below Croisilles also fell
+to the British. The Germans defended themselves with reckless bravery
+acting on Hindenburg's orders that the position must be saved at all
+costs.
+
+The French launched a concerted attack on the following day, April 3,
+1917, over a front of eight miles on both sides of the Somme, storming
+the heights south and southwest of St. Quentin and advancing within
+two miles of the city, General Nivelle's forces were now in a position
+to begin the final attack on the place.
+
+Haig's troops on the British front west of St. Quentin had extended
+their hold on Holnon Ridge and occupied Ronssoy Wood farther to the
+north, while in the region of Arras they captured after stiff fighting
+the village of Henin.
+
+South of the Ailette River the French fought their way forward foot by
+foot. On the 3rd they drove the Germans out of their positions around
+Laffaux and brought increasing pressure to bear against the enemy's
+line south of Laffaux Mill.
+
+On this date the Germans threw more than 2,000 shells into the open
+city of Rheims, killing several of the civilian population.
+
+General Nivelle's troops continued to advance on April 4, 1917,
+through violent snow squalls and over sodden ground, and the Germans
+were pushed back along the whole front from the Somme to the Oise.
+
+A dashing attack carried out near La Folie Farm, about a mile and a
+half north of Urvillers, threw the Germans in such disorder that they
+fled precipitately, abandoning three lines of strongly fortified
+trenches, leaving behind the wounded and much war material, including
+howitzers. The French had now gained the foot of a ridge 393 feet high
+on the southern outskirts of St. Quentin. By the capture of La Folie
+they cut the railroad connecting St. Quentin with the Oise, leaving
+only one line on the north by which the Germans could escape from the
+doomed city. On the west bank of the Somme French patrols had pressed
+forward to the outskirts of St. Quentin. On the British front west of
+the city the Germans made a violent attack, but were driven off with
+heavy losses. Farther to the north the British succeeded in
+straightening their line between the Bapaume and Peronne highway
+converging on Cambrai.
+
+The most important event during April 5, 1917, was a powerful attack
+made against the French by picked German troops to the northwest of
+Rheims along a mile and a half front. The purpose was to clear the
+left bank of the Aisne Canal. They succeeded in gaining a foothold at
+certain points in the French first-line trenches, but were thrust out
+later by counterattacks.
+
+The only other important event on this date was the strong
+bombardment by the Germans of the new French positions south of St.
+Quentin. The British and French troops, despite occasional checks
+occasioned by the frantic efforts of the Germans to stay their
+victorious progress, continued to steadily advance their lines, which
+now extended in a semicircle two miles from St. Quentin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII
+
+THE BRITISH TROOPS CAPTURE VIMY RIDGE AND MONCHY--FRENCH VICTORIES ON
+THE AISNE
+
+
+The steady pressure maintained by the Allied troops on German
+positions culminated on April 9, 1917, when the British launched a
+terrific offensive on a twelve-mile front north and south of Arras.
+German positions were penetrated to a depth of from two to three
+miles, and many fortified points, including the famous Vimy Ridge,
+were captured. The line of advance extended from Givenchy, southwest
+of Lens, to the village of Henin, southwest of Arras. For a week
+British guns had been bombarding this sector without cessation, and
+during the night preceding the attack the fire had increased in
+intensity to a degree that surpassed any previous bombardments. The
+British literally blasted their way through the German front and
+rearward positions. Vimy Ridge, dominating the coal fields of Lens,
+where thousands of French had fallen in the previous year, was
+captured by the Canadians. The terrific bombardment by British guns
+during many days had not depressed the Germans' spirit and the advance
+was hotly contested. The British, however, were in excellent fighting
+trim, and forced their way onward in spite of the fiercest opposition.
+They took a famous redoubt known as "The Harp," virtually an entire
+battalion defending it. Here three battalion commanders were captured.
+Over 6,000 prisoners were taken by the British, including 119
+officers. The majority of these belonged to Bavarian regiments, which
+since the fighting began in France had suffered the most heavily.
+Wuerttembergers and Hamburgers were also represented. An enormous
+quantity of war material fell into British hands, including guns,
+trench mortars, and machine guns.
+
+[Illustration: Taking of Vimy Ridge by the Canadians, April 9 and 10,
+1917.]
+
+In making their retreat in the Somme sector the Germans had announced
+that they had completely disarranged by so doing the British offensive
+plans. The smashing blow delivered on April 9, 1917, was the answer.
+
+At other points on the line the British had also made substantial
+gains, capturing by storm, on the road to Cambrai, Boursies,
+Demicourt, and Hermies. Progress was also made in the Havrincourt Wood
+south of the Bapaume-Cambrai railway. To the south, in the
+neighborhood of St. Quentin, General Haig's troops captured three
+villages, bringing forward their lines to within two miles of the St.
+Quentin Canal.
+
+As a result of the first two days' fighting in the Arras region the
+number of German prisoners captured by the British had increased to
+over 11,000, including 235 officers, 100 guns of large caliber, 60
+mortars, and 163 machine guns.
+
+The British troops did not rest to enjoy their first day's victories,
+but pushed on along the greater part of the twelve-mile front from
+Givenchy to Henin. They penetrated as far as the outskirts of
+Monchy-le-Preux, five miles east of Arras. On the way they captured a
+high hill which protects Monchy, thus threatening the entire German
+line south of the Arras-Cambrai highroad.
+
+More to the north the British troops took Fampoux and its defenses on
+both sides of the Scarpe River. The fiercest fighting on April 10,
+1917, was on the northern part of Vimy Ridge, where from isolated
+positions to which they still clung, the Germans attempted a
+counterattack. They were driven out of these positions and from the
+slopes of the ridge which was now strongly held by the British.
+
+Vimy village was one of the vaunted German field fortresses, and was
+strongly defended. Here the Canadians gathered in over 3,000 prisoners
+garrisoning the stronghold and 100 officers. The final British
+bombardment had sent most of the German defenders into the deepest of
+the dugouts from which they did not venture forth until the British
+called upon them to surrender. Among the officers captured on the
+ridge were seven lieutenant colonels and several doctors, who
+surrendered with all their staffs. They blamed their predicament to
+the failure of supports to come up as promised.
+
+The British had carried out their successful onward sweep in the face
+of unfavorable weather conditions. During April 10, 1917, when the
+last German was being cleared out of the Vimy area, the snow fell
+heavily.
+
+Throughout the day following the weather continued unfavorable,
+impeding the operation of troops and making observation impossible. In
+the morning the Germans attempted two counter attacks on the new
+British positions in the neighborhood of Monchy-le-Preux, but were
+beaten off with heavy losses. Prisoners reported that they had been
+ordered to hold the village at all costs.
+
+To the south bodies of British troops penetrated a German position
+near Bullecourt, where they gained a number of prisoners and damaged
+the enemy's defenses. This small success was forfeited at midday when
+the Germans, attacking with strong forces, drove the British back to
+their lines.
+
+The village of Monchy was captured by the British in the morning of
+April 12, 1917. Throughout the previous day this tiny village perched
+on a hill had been the storm center around which the battle raged.
+
+The attack was made by British and Scottish troops, who fought for
+three hours to clear the Germans out of the railway triangle. Having
+dispersed the enemy, they fought on to the Feuchy Redoubt, only to
+find that the entire German garrison there had been buried by the
+British bombardment so that not a man escaped alive.
+
+At 5 o'clock in the morning of April 12, 1917, British troops on the
+right, linking up with the Scots and supported by cavalry on the left,
+with Hotchkiss and machine guns swept forward to the capture of
+Monchy.
+
+The cavalry dashed into the village on the north side, meeting with
+few Germans, for as they pressed forward the enemy was retreating on
+the southern side, hoping to escape that way. Here they encountered
+Scots and Midlanders and fierce fighting ensued. The Germans were well
+provided with machine guns, and from windows and roofs sent a
+withering fire upon the British as they swarmed into the streets of
+the village. The Germans made a brave resistance, but the British
+continued to press them hard, fighting their way into houses and
+courtyards and capturing or killing the defenders. Some of the
+garrison of the place succeeded in escaping to a trench in the valley
+below, where they had a redoubt and machine guns.
+
+By 8 o'clock in the morning the British had a number of guns in
+position for the defense of the village against counterattacks which
+were sure to follow. It was found that the Germans had prepared in the
+village an elaborate system of dugouts that could provide shelter from
+the heaviest shell fire. Under the chateau there were great rooms
+luxuriously furnished and provided with electric lights, where British
+and Scotch officers regaled themselves with German beer.
+
+An hour after the occupation of the village it was heavily shelled by
+big German guns, German airmen from above directing the fire. The
+British held on determinedly in spite of heavy losses, and their
+courage never flagged. In the afternoon the Germans made some
+determined counterattacks, but their advancing waves were mowed down
+by the British machine guns and eighteen pounders, and finally they
+were thrown back in confusion. The British now advanced beyond the
+village, while the Germans were forced to retreat from the trench
+below.
+
+In the opinion of the German press the battle of Arras was an event of
+only local importance which did not affect in any degree the strategic
+situation. The plan of the Anglo-French command to deliver a
+shattering blow on the Somme front and roll up the new Hindenburg line
+by assaults on both flanks at Soissons and Arras, they contended, had
+been foiled.
+
+With better weather conditions the British were able to push forward
+more rapidly and to make further breaches in the Hindenburg line.
+Advancing over a wide front, they were drawing nearer to the coveted
+line of German communications running north and south through Douai
+and Cambrai. On the northern horn the British captured Lievin, the
+southwest suburb of Lens, and Cite St. Pierre, northwest of that
+place. On the southern horn they advanced within 400 yards of St.
+Quentin. Some idea of the extent of the British advance within a week
+may be gained from the fact that the British were now three miles
+beyond the famous Vimy Ridge.
+
+It was expected that the Germans would stubbornly defend St. Quentin
+and Lens, which were now the British objectives, and on which the
+heaviest British gunfire was now concentrated. In the course of the
+day advances were made south and east of Fayet to within a few hundred
+yards of St. Quentin. On the way the village of Gricourt was carried
+at the point of the bayonet and over 400 Germans were captured.
+
+Lens, an important mining center, had been in possession of the
+Germans since the autumn of 1914. It stretches for several miles and
+the surrounding district is rich in mineral wealth. Throughout the day
+of April 14, 1917, the British poured heavy high-explosive shells into
+the city, using for the first time guns that had been recently
+captured from the Germans. The continued bombardment caused fires and
+explosions in the city. It was believed that some of these
+conflagrations were the work of the enemy, who were preparing to
+abandon the place.
+
+In the course of the day, April 14, 1917, the British pushed their way
+through Lieven, a straggling suburb of Lens, meeting with stubborn
+defense in every street, where the Germans had posted machine guns at
+points of vantage and rear-guard posts that gave the British
+considerable trouble. Soon a body of British troops had penetrated
+Lens itself and were working their way slowly forward. From the
+western side other troops were advancing through Lievin, slowly and
+cautiously. The main German forces were in retreat, but the
+machine-gun redoubts, skillfully manned, were a constant source of
+danger and wrought considerable destruction.
+
+From prisoners captured the British learned of wild scenes that had
+taken place in Lens while the Germans were attempting to get away
+their stores and guns and begin the retreat. Frantic efforts were made
+to blow up roads and to carry out orders to destroy the mine shafts
+and flood the galleries, so that property of enormous value should not
+be left to France. The occasion for this mad hurry was because the
+Germans believed that the British might be upon them at any moment.
+
+During the evening they had sufficiently recovered from their first
+panic to send supporting troops back into Lens to hold the line of
+trenches and machine-gun forts on the western side and check the
+British advance while they prepared for themselves positions on the
+Drocourt-Queant line, the Wotan end of the Hindenburg line, from which
+the British were forcing them to withdraw. It was learned from German
+prisoners that there were still about 2,000 persons, principally old
+men, women, and children, still in the Lens district waiting for a
+chance to break through to the British lines. The condition of these
+poor creatures can be imagined, surrounded by destruction from all
+sides and hiding in holes in the ground with death always hovering
+near.
+
+The British continued to close in around Lens from three directions,
+their progress being slow owing to the stubborn attacks made by German
+rear guards and the fierce fire of cunningly placed machine guns.
+
+Field Marshal Haig's chief purpose in advancing on Lens was to turn La
+Bassee from the south. La Bassee and Lens form the principal outworks
+of Lille, which is the key to the whole German position in Flanders.
+If the British succeeded in capturing these two places, Lille would be
+seriously threatened.
+
+On the 15th the British continued to gain ground in the direction of
+St. Quentin and east and north of Gricourt, to the north of the city.
+
+In the morning the Germans delivered a powerful attack over a front of
+six miles against the new British position, which extended from
+Hermies to Noreuil. In the face of a terrific fire from British
+artillery they forged ahead, but lost so many men that they were at
+last forced to retreat, gaining no advantage except at Lagnicourt
+village, to one part of which they clung tenaciously. Immediately the
+British organized a counterattack, which was carried out with dash and
+spirit. The Germans were driven out of the village and 300 prisoners
+were taken. Some 1,500 dead were left in front of the British
+positions.
+
+April 16, 1917, was a day of glory for French arms, when General
+Nivelle launched a great attack on a front of about twenty-five miles
+between Soissons and Rheims. The French were everywhere successful,
+capturing the German first-line positions along the entire front and
+in some places penetrating and holding second-line positions.
+
+The scene of General Nivelle's great victory was the historic line of
+the Aisne, to which the Germans had retreated after the battle of the
+Marne. Ever since that epoch-making event in the history of the Great
+War the Germans had held the line despite every effort of the Allies
+to dislodge them. The Germans had ample warning that a great offensive
+was in preparation, for the French had been bombarding their positions
+for ten days before. On their part they had made every effort to repel
+the threatened attack, and had massed a great number of men and guns
+in that region. In justice to the Germans it must be said that they
+fought with courage and desperation along the whole front. They
+realized the importance of holding the line at all costs, for if the
+French advance proved successful, it would mean the isolation of Laon,
+upon which the Hindenburg line depended.
+
+North of Berry-au-Bac, where the old line of battle swings to the
+southeast toward Rheims, the French forces gained their greatest
+advance. To the south of Juvincourt they succeeded in penetrating the
+German second-line positions and held on. Every effort made by the
+Germans during the day failed, the French artillery literally tearing
+their ranks to pieces. Further advances were made by the French to the
+banks of the Aisne Canal at the villages of Courcy and Loivre.
+
+General Nivelle reported that over 10,000 prisoners were captured
+during this offensive together with a vast amount of war material.
+
+Meanwhile the British in the Lens area were constantly engaged with
+the Germans, who again and again launched counterattacks to recover
+lost positions, to impede the advance and to gain time to strengthen
+their defenses on the line of retreat.
+
+During the night of April 15, 1917, the British captured Villeret,
+southeast of Hargicourt, which served to further widen the second gap
+in the Hindenburg line north of St. Quentin. The British were
+successful in all these minor struggles in making prisoners, and owing
+to the Germans' hurried retreat vast quantities of military stores
+fell into their hands. Since April 9, 1917, the British had captured
+over 14,000 prisoners and 194 guns.
+
+In the midst of a driving rain and flurries of snow that hampered
+military operations the French struck another blow on the 17th, on a
+new eleven-mile stretch of front east of Rheims from Prunay to
+Auberive. They carried the entire front-line German positions. From
+Mt. Carnillet to Vaudesincourt support positions seven miles in extent
+also were captured. During this push 2,500 German prisoners were
+taken.
+
+The French advance on both sides of Rheims now left that city in a
+salient that would prove a great source of danger to the Germans. The
+French having captured the German second-line position northwest of
+Rheims, smoothed the way for an advance that might force the enemy out
+of the forts that held the cathedral city in subjection.
+
+The French continued their offensive with undiminished vigor and dash
+on April 18, 1917, driving the Germans in disorder from their
+positions north of the Aisne and securing a firm hold on high ground
+commanding the river. The number of German prisoners had now increased
+to 20,730. Great quantities of war material fell to the French,
+including 175 guns, 412 machine guns, and 119 trench mortars.
+
+On the front from Soissons to Rheims General Nivelle's troops captured
+four villages, which brought them to the outskirts of Courtecon, an
+advance of about two miles for the day.
+
+Another successful French attack was delivered to the west, where the
+old German line stood on the south bank of the Aisne, which resulted
+in the capture of the important town of Vailly and a strong bridgehead
+near by. On the western leg of the German salient, whose apex was at
+Fort Conde on the Aisne, the French struck another decisive blow which
+gave them the village of Nanteuil-le-Fosse, and endangered the Germans
+in the fort, who were now in the position of being cut off.
+
+East of Craonne a French contingent surrounded the forest of La
+Ville-au-Bois and forced the surrender of 1,300 Germans.
+
+In the afternoon of April 18, 1917, the Germans delivered a strong
+counterattack in which 40,000 men were employed, in an attempt to
+recover their lost second-line positions to the east of Craonne which
+had been seized by the French in the first onslaught. Though vastly
+outnumbered in man power, the French were well supplied with
+artillery, and the attackers were rolled back in confusion with heavy
+losses before they could reach the French lines at any point. During
+the day's fighting in this area the French captured three cannon and
+twenty-four guns, together with a number of shell depots. Most of the
+guns were immediately turned against the Germans and proved effective
+in assisting in their destruction.
+
+Undeterred by heavy losses and constant failure the Germans with
+stubborn courage continued to press counterattacks south of St.
+Quentin. One of these was successful in seizing a number of French
+positions. But the gain was only temporary, when the French came
+dashing back in force, regained the positions, and captured or killed
+the occupants to the last man.
+
+The double offensive of the British north of Arras and of the French
+on the Aisne had disarranged the German plans, according to reliable
+information that reached the Allied command. Hindenburg was preparing
+an offensive against Riga and another against Italy; attempts on Paris
+and on Calais were also projected, but the Allied western offensive
+forced him to bring back the greater part of his forces intended for
+these fronts.
+
+For several days the fighting in the Arras region slowed down. The
+Germans had brought forward new batteries and stationed them around
+Lens and Loos, replacing those captured by the British during the
+first day's battle. These guns were now constantly active, sending
+heavy shells into Lievin, Bois de Riaumont, and into the suburbs of
+Lens and Monchy. The neighboring ridge and slopes were also subjected
+to machine-gun fire.
+
+Beyond bombarding German positions, the British made no important
+advance, though preparations were going forward for the next stage in
+the great battle of Arras.
+
+The French continued to make gains along the Oise, pressing back the
+Germans toward the Chemin-des-Dames, which runs along the top of the
+heights north of the river. On April 20, 1917, General Nivelle's
+troops occupied Sancy village and gained ground east of Laffaux. The
+French front in this sector now faced the fort of Malmaison, which
+crowns a range of high hills protecting the highroad from Soissons to
+Laon. The Germans launched a heavy attack on April 19, 1917, in which
+large forces of troops were employed in the region of Ailles and
+Hurtebise Farm. The French artillery and machine guns delivered such a
+withering fire against the attackers that they were thrown back in
+disorder with appalling losses.
+
+In Champagne the French continued to make progress, capturing
+important points in Moronvilliers Wood.
+
+British troops south of the Bapaume-Cambrai road slowly advanced on
+Marcoing, a place of considerable importance and an outpost to
+Cambrai. In this push, begun on April 20, 1917, they captured the
+southern portion of the village of Trescault, which lies about nine
+miles from Cambrai. They also surrounded on three sides Havrincourt
+Wood, which from its high position constitutes a formidable barrier in
+the way of advance, and which the Germans will eventually be forced to
+evacuate. Ground was also gained by the British between Loos and Lens,
+and every attempt made by the Germans to regain lost positions was
+repulsed.
+
+On the French front in western Champagne the Germans on the 21st made
+desperate efforts to recapture the positions on the heights which they
+had lost in the previous week. Mont Haut, the dominating position in
+this region, was the principal objective against which they launched
+repeated attacks, all of which came to naught. There were numerous
+minor operations on the Rheims-Soissons front during the night of the
+21st. Rheims was repeatedly bombarded, the Germans paying particular
+attention to the cathedral, which received further damage from
+shells.
+
+What might be termed the second phase of the battle of Arras was begun
+in the morning of April 23, 1917, when the British resumed the
+offensive. At 5 o'clock in the morning the British advance started
+east of Arras on a front of about eight miles, capturing strong
+positions and the villages of Gavrelle and Guemappe. The occupation of
+these places and of strongholds south of Gavrelle as far as the river
+Scarpe broke the so-called Oppy line, defending the Hindenburg
+positions before Douai. The British were successful in clearing the
+enemy out of the neighborhood of Monchy, which commands the region for
+forty miles. The Germans appreciating the value of this position had
+launched twenty counterattacks against it in the ten previous days. It
+proved to them the bloodiest spot in all this war-ravaged region, and
+when the British advanced at early dawn on the 23d, thousands of dead
+in field-gray uniforms littered the approaches to the position. During
+the day the British took over 1,500 prisoners.
+
+On this date, April 23, 1917, the Germans attacked the French lines in
+Belgium at several points in the course. Bodies of Germans succeeded
+in penetrating some French advanced positions, but after spirited
+hand-to-hand struggles were killed, captured, or driven off. In most
+cases the Germans never got in touch with the French, but were rolled
+back by the concentrated fire of the French artillery. Fighting
+continued in the Champagne, where the Germans renewed again and again
+their efforts to capture the new French positions on Mont Haut.
+
+On the second day of the offensive the British had made gains east of
+Monchy, and had pushed on between that village and the river Sensee to
+within a short distance of Cherisy and Fontaine-les-Croisilles,
+holding all their newly won positions against attack.
+
+It was noted by the British command that the Germans during this
+second phase of the battle of Arras had fought with exceptional
+ferocity, which even the heavy losses they incurred did not weaken. On
+the front of about eight miles seven German divisions were employed.
+British guns were effective in shattering massed counterattacks, and
+there was considerable hand-to-hand fighting in which the British were
+sometimes badly handled, but at the close of the day the British had
+recovered all the positions they had been forced out of temporarily.
+The fighting continued on the 24th, but was less ferocious, the
+opponents having exhausted themselves in the previous day's efforts.
+In the second and third day of the offensive the British captured
+2,000 prisoners.
+
+During the night of April 23, 1917, the British advancing on a wide
+front south of the Arras-Cambrai road captured the villages of
+Villers-Plouich and Beaucamp and pressed forward as far as the St.
+Quentin Canal in the vicinity of Vendhuille.
+
+The second phase of the offensive in the Arras region was especially
+notable for the victories won by the British in the air. In one day
+forty German machines were brought down, while the British lost only
+two.
+
+The British advance was now necessarily slow, for they were no longer
+engaged in rear-guard actions as in the first phase of the offensive,
+but faced strong bodies of troops whose valor was unquestioned. Thus,
+as in the first days of fighting in the Somme, there was desperate
+fighting to gain or regain a few hundred yards of trenches. With
+varying fortunes the opponents fought back and forth over the same
+ground without either side gaining any distinct advantage, though both
+were losers in precious lives. By early morning of April 25, 1917,
+Scottish and British troops had reestablished the line on the Bois
+Vert and Bois de Sart.
+
+A striking incident in connection with the fighting in this area was
+the recovery of parties of British soldiers who had been given up as
+lost. They had been cut off from rejoining their regiments and had
+come through the most ghastly perils, being swept by a British barrage
+that preceded an infantry attack and subjected to the deadly and
+constant shelling of the German guns. They had clung to their isolated
+positions in the face of all these terrors and not a man was killed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII
+
+FRENCH VICTORIES IN THE CHAMPAGNE--THE BRITISH CAPTURE BULLECOURT
+
+
+During the night of April 25, 1917, the Germans renewed their attempts
+to recover lost positions on the high ground near the Chemin-des-Dames,
+and especially west of Cerny. West of Craonne they hurled masses of men
+against Hurtebise Farm with disastrous results. Eastward in the vicinity
+of Ville-aux-Bois the French artillery dropped shells with mathematical
+precision on the German lines. The regiment that was detailed to capture
+the village of Ville-aux-Bois, which formed with Craonne one of the
+pillars of the German line in this area, carried out the difficult
+operation with complete success. It was necessary to capture two heavily
+garrisoned woods before the place could be assaulted. At the end of the
+first day's fighting the French had taken hundreds of prisoners and
+several dozen machine guns. The prisoners alone numbered more than the
+French troops who made the attack.
+
+Fighting continued in this region during the 26th. The French repulsed
+all attempts made by the Germans to recover lost ground, and extended
+their gains.
+
+During the desperate fighting along the Aisne in this offensive the
+French captured about 20,000 prisoners and 130 guns. The German losses
+in killed, wounded, and prisoners were estimated at over 200,000--one
+of the most formidable totals of the Great War.
+
+North of the Scarpe River and in the vicinity of Catelet the British
+continued to improve their positions. Thirteen German aeroplanes and
+one balloon were brought down on the 26th by British aviators.
+
+On April 28, 1917, the British attacked on a front extending in an
+easterly direction from Vimy Ridge at its northern hinge and southward
+to the Scarpe River. Gains were made at all points attacked, and the
+so-called Oppy-Mericourt line which protects the Drocourt switch to
+the Hindenburg line was pierced again. An eyewitness stated that he
+saw no less than five gray waves of Germans blindly facing the British
+fire in an attempt to regain the lost positions. Torrents of British
+shells tore gaps in the German ranks, and those who succeeded in
+forcing their way through the barrage were mowed down by sprays of
+machine-gun bullets. Under this storm the German attack broke down.
+There was bayonet fighting at different points, and many Germans were
+killed by blows from rifle butts.
+
+The Canadians, who had been resting since their brilliant work on
+Easter day, when they swept the Germans from Vimy Ridge, were in fine
+fighting trim. By a brilliant assault they captured Arleux-en-Gobelle
+and held the village securely against all attempts made by the Germans
+to recapture it.
+
+Southeast of Oppy, the British took Greenland Hill, which overlooks
+the Scarpe Valley. There was fierce fighting north of the village of
+Roeux, at the chemical works on the Arras-Douai railway, which changed
+hands several times. The character of the fighting on the 28th did not
+result in the taking of many prisoners, for almost everywhere it was a
+struggle to the death.
+
+The loss to the Germans of Monchy-le-Preux was regarded by them as a
+serious matter, and they were prepared to sacrifice any number of men
+to retake it. Late in the night of April 28, 1917, they launched two
+violent attacks against the British positions east of the town. Two
+new divisions had been brought up and were hurled into the struggle
+only to be literally torn to fragments before they could reach even an
+outpost. On this date also Gavrelle was violently attacked from the
+north. This was the fourteenth or fifteenth counterattack the Germans
+had made against the village, which failed as all the previous ones
+had done.
+
+On the same date there were violent outbursts in the Champagne and
+Aisne regions on the French front, in which the Germans made no
+progress. The French gained ground and prisoners near Ostel in the
+Chemin-des-Dames area. German lines were invaded in the sector of Hill
+304 on the left bank of the Meuse and a considerable number of
+prisoners were taken. At Auberive after a violent bombardment the
+Germans attacked in force, but were repulsed by the French artillery.
+
+South of the village of Oppy, where the fighting had raged for several
+days, the British captured a German trench system on a front of about
+a mile. Here the Germans offered the most stubborn resistance, and
+after the position was won they launched furious counterattacks in the
+hope of smashing the British before they had opportunity to organize
+their gains.
+
+The results of the fighting in this region could not be estimated by
+the number of prisoners taken or the amount of ground gained. The
+British had a difficult task to perform in assaulting positions
+protected by natural defenses, and held in strength with quantities of
+machine guns. After forcing the enemy out of the positions, and when
+their strength was well-nigh spent, the British troops were forced to
+beat off repeated counterattacks preceded by barrage fire and to
+destroy the enemy again and again. They encountered no more formidable
+conditions in the course of the war than in this region, for the
+Germans had machine redoubts on the slopes commanding fields of fire
+on both sides of the Scarpe River, and each advance made by the
+British exposed their flanks to enfilading fire. In the face of such
+deadly opposition the British still continued to press onward, forcing
+the Germans to pay a fearful price for Hindenburg's strategic plans.
+
+On the last day of the month French troops in the Champagne made a new
+attack on both sides of Mont Carnillet, a commanding peak southeast of
+Mauroy. To the west the French captured several fortified lines of
+trenches from the heights as far south as Beine. East of the mount
+General Nivelle's men forced their way up the northern slopes of Mont
+Haut; and northeast of this position to the approaches of the road
+from Mauroy and Moronvilliers. This advance widened on the west and
+deepened the salient driven into the German lines between Prunay and
+Auberive, rendering exceedingly precarious their hold on ground east
+of Rheims.
+
+There was no important fighting on the British front on April 30,
+1917, and General Haig's troops were not ungrateful for the brief
+respite afforded them. The Germans did not attempt any important
+attacks owing to a shortage of ammunition and military supplies. From
+documents found on prisoners the British learned that there was a
+dearth in all war material and that the supply of new guns to replace
+those worn out was very limited. During the night General Haig's
+troops improved their positions between Monchy-le-Preux and the Scarpe
+River, repulsing a feeble German attack on the new positions.
+
+While comparative quiet reigned in the fighting area on the last day
+of April, 1917, British airmen were active, and in the course of
+twenty-four hours a number of highly dramatic battles were fought in
+which the British brought down twenty German aeroplanes and lost
+fifteen machines themselves.
+
+During the night of May 1, 1917, the French consolidated their new
+positions on the wooded hills east of Rheims. In the course of the
+following day the Germans delivered two strong attacks against French
+lines northeast of Mont Haut, but were rolled back by the French
+barrage fire and machine-gun fire which broke the waves of assault and
+scattered the attackers.
+
+The report for the month of April, 1917, issued by the British War
+Office stated that in the course of the offensive operations in France
+19,343 prisoners had been taken, including 393 officers. In the same
+period the British had captured 257 guns and howitzers, 227 trench
+mortars, and 470 machine guns. The French during the same period had
+captured over 20,000 prisoners. It was estimated that the Germans had
+143 divisions in France, but only ninety-nine of these were in the
+actual line, the rest being held in strategic reserve.
+
+During the month of April, 1917, more aeroplanes were lost by the
+combatants than in any month since the fighting began. A careful
+compilation from British, French, and German communiques shows a
+total loss of 717 during this period. The Germans lost 369, the French
+and Belgians 201, and the British 147.
+
+On May 2, 1917, the French in the Champagne began to push their way
+slowly through the great forest south of Beine, which covers
+considerable territory from south of Mont Carnillet to La Pompelle
+Fort, the most easterly fortification of Rheims.
+
+On May 3, 1917, General Haig's troops struck a fourth blow against the
+German front east and southeast of Arras, penetrating the Hindenburg
+line west of Queant. The British push toward Cherisy, Bullecourt, and
+Queant was at the southern end of the day's major operation, which
+covered a range of nearly eighteen miles. At the north Fresnoy was the
+chief objective. It lies just east of Arleux, taken a few days before
+by the Canadians.
+
+These two villages were strongly organized for defense with
+complicated trench fortifications, forming one of the strongest points
+on the Mericourt-Oppy-Gavrelle line. Fresnoy was carried by the
+Canadians after the most furious fighting, in which the German
+positions changed hands a number of times, but at last remained
+securely in possession of the troops from oversea. North and south of
+Fresnoy a two-mile front was won by the British, who also secured a
+grip on the German trench system north of Oppy.
+
+While the British were dealing hammer blows on the enemy's lines the
+French had been preparing another coup, which was carried out on May
+4, 1917. By this operation they captured the village of Craonne on the
+Soissons-Rheims front, several fortified points north and east of the
+village, and German first-line positions on a front of about two and a
+half miles.
+
+Craonne was an especially valuable capture, for it stands on a height
+at the east end of the Chemin-des-Dames, protecting not only the
+plateau north of the Aisne, but the low ground between it and
+Neufchatel. The Germans had held the place since the first battle of
+the Aisne, and against its cliffs many gallant French troops had
+vainly flung themselves, only to be thrown back with heavy losses. The
+possession of Craonne gave the French command of an open road through
+the valley of Miette where a few weeks before they had captured the
+German second line south of Juvincourt. They could now, advancing
+through this corridor, outflank the entire German position depending
+on Laon as its center.
+
+[Illustration: The French Offensive on the Craonne Plateau,
+Champagne.]
+
+Throughout May 4, 1917, the British were occupied in organizing and
+strengthening the new positions they had won in and around Fresnoy
+and in the sectors of the Hindenburg line near Bullecourt. Repeated
+German counterattacks were repulsed at all points, except in the
+neighborhood of Cherisy and the Arras-Cambrai road, where the British
+were forced to abandon some of their new positions. In the day's
+fighting the British captured over 900 prisoners. During the night
+General Haig's troops made considerable progress northwest of St.
+Quentin and northeast of Hargicourt, where the Malakoff Farm was
+captured.
+
+By May 5, 1917, the French army was in sight of Laon, and had begun to
+shell the German positions on the steep hill on which the city stands.
+The position of the French was decidedly favorable for important
+operations against the enemy. If they moved up the Rheims-Laon road,
+and pushed north from Cerny with a strong force, it would be possible
+to outflank from the south the whole German line, which here turns to
+the northwest in a wide sweep from Laon, through La Fere to St.
+Quentin and Cambrai. This operation if successful would compel the
+Germans to retire to the Belgian frontier.
+
+The Germans were not satisfied with the way things were going, so the
+Allied command learned from prisoners. It was estimated that they had
+lost thus far in the Anglo-French drive on this front no less than
+216,000 men, of whom the British took 30,000 prisoners and the French
+23,000; about 47,000 were killed on the field and 160,000 were put out
+of action. The British and French casualties had also been very
+heavy--the former numbering about 80,000 and the latter 93,000
+including killed, wounded, and prisoners.
+
+On the British front the Germans continued to make the most desperate
+efforts to regain a section of the Hindenburg line east of
+Bullecourt, which the Australians had won in the advance of May 3,
+1917. From three sides day and night the sturdy defenders were
+assailed by the Germans, but their attacks by day were killed by the
+British artillery, and at night were driven off by bomb and bayonet.
+The Germans had good reason to value this wedge bitten into the
+Hindenburg line, for its possession by the Australians weakened an
+otherwise strong position that ran formerly from Arras to Queant. The
+British were now in touch with the Hindenburg line all the way from
+Queant south to St. Quentin, and were pressing the Germans toward the
+Drocourt switch in the north.
+
+On the new lines east of Mont Haut held by the Germans a position
+garrisoned by 200 men was captured by the French during the night of
+May 5, 1917.
+
+The French continued to make progress, slowly but firmly pressing the
+Germans back from many points, and gaining more ground than they lost
+through counterattacks. By the 6th of May, 1917, they had captured all
+the unconquered positions on the Chemin-des-Dames and were masters of
+the crest over which it runs for more than eighteen miles. The moral
+effect of this victory was to give the French the assurance that they
+could beat the Germans on their chosen battle ground and force them
+out of their deepest defenses into the open field. German
+invincibility had become a shattered myth.
+
+For some days General Haig's troops had been tightening their grip
+around Bullecourt, which lies in the original Hindenburg line due east
+of Croisilles. The Australians who held this front had surrounded the
+village on three sides and its fall was imminent.
+
+On May 8, 1917, Bavarian troops stormed Fresnoy village and wood and
+wrested some ground from the British on the western side. During the
+night the Germans had concentrated large forces for an attack north of
+Fresnoy which were dispersed by British fire. By a strong
+counterattack the British recovered all the ground on the west that
+they had lost on the previous day.
+
+Some idea of the intense fighting in northern France may be gained
+from the fact that since April 1, 1917, over thirty-five German
+divisions (315,000 men) were withdrawn from this front owing to their
+exhausted condition. The French and British had lost heavily, but
+their casualties were from 50 to 75 per cent fewer than they incurred
+in the Battle of the Somme.
+
+Fresnoy, which was held by the Canadians, and which jutted into the
+German lines, was subjected to intense fire and showers of high
+explosives and shrapnel throughout the night of the 7th, and in the
+morning of the following day the Germans attacked in force. The
+British were overwhelmed, but served their machine guns to the last,
+and only fell back from their advanced lines when the village was no
+longer tenable. The greater part of the ground lost by them was
+recovered on the following day.
+
+The French captured first-line German trenches over a front of
+three-quarters of a mile northeast of Chevreux near Craonne, during
+the night of May 8, 1917, capturing several hundred prisoners.
+Vigorous counterattacks made about the same time by the Germans to
+regain lost positions on the plateau of Chemin-des-Dames and on the
+Californie Plateau were shattered by the French artillery. The Germans
+here displayed the most intrepid bravery, sending forward successive
+waves of men again and again until the battle area was strewn with
+dead. Northwest of Rheims the French carried 400 yards of German
+trench, taking prisoner 100 men and two officers.
+
+Severe and continuous fighting went on during May 9, 1917, in the
+neighborhood of Bullecourt, where the Germans tried vainly to shake
+the British hold on the position. East of Gricourt a portion of the
+German front and support lines were captured by the British, also a
+considerable number of prisoners. Counterattacks on the French front
+along the Chemin-des-Dames and in the region of Chevreux resulted in
+heavy losses to the Germans in men and guns.
+
+Toward the close of the day, May 11, 1917, the British after the
+hardest and most sanguinary fighting won two positions at Roeux just
+north of the Scarpe, and at Cavalry Farm beyond Guemappe. The loss to
+the Germans was serious, for these were observation posts of the
+highest value. The British captured about 350 prisoners, mostly of
+Brandenburg regiments, who were found crouching in tunnels waiting for
+a pause in the storm of shell fire to rush out and meet the attackers
+with machine guns. But they waited too long, and Haig's troops were
+upon them before they could use their weapons. At Roeux the Bavarian
+garrison in the tunnels fought ferociously, and being unwilling to
+yield were destroyed.
+
+Around Guemappe, by the Cavalry Farm, which the Scottish troops had
+been forced to abandon in the previous month, the fighting was less
+intense. The Scots went about their task in a businesslike way and
+routed the garrison and took ten guns and a number of prisoners.
+
+Bullecourt, which had been the scene of some of the hottest fighting
+since the offensive began, and where the Australians had repulsed a
+dozen strong counterattacks, was in large part occupied by the British
+on May 12, 1917. North of the Scarpe, British troops established
+themselves in the western part of the village of Roeux, and improved
+their positions on the western slopes of Greenland Hill.
+
+Along the Aisne and south of St. Quentin the French continued to
+bombard enemy lines. A violent attack made by the Germans on the 12th
+against French positions on the Craonne Plateau north of Rheims broke
+down under French artillery and machine-gun fire.
+
+The British continued to hold their own in Bullecourt and to improve
+their position there and at Cavalry Farm and Roeux. In the three days'
+operations the British had captured 700 prisoners, including eleven
+officers and a considerable number of guns and war material.
+
+May 14, 1917, was a successful day for the Germans when they captured
+Fresnoy. Early in the morning they succeeded by strong counterattacks
+in gaining a foothold in the British trenches northeast of the
+village. At a later hour the British attacked and regained the lost
+ground, but were forced to withdraw when the Germans brought forward
+two fresh divisions. The Germans continued their violent attempts to
+regain Roeux and that part of Bullecourt which was firmly held by the
+British. The struggle around these two places which had been raging
+for four weeks grew daily more intense, and the ground around the
+British positions was heaped with dead.
+
+All of Roeux was by the 15th in British hands: the chateau with its
+great dugouts and gun emplacements, the cemetery from which a large
+tunnel ran westward to Mount Pleasant Wood, and the village itself.
+
+After a terrible shell fire during the night of the 15th the Germans
+launched a strong assault in dense numbers, and the ruins were strewn
+with new dead beside the old dead. Despite the intense fire from
+British machine guns some German troops penetrated advanced posts and
+barricades and desperate fighting with bomb and bayonet followed. The
+British fiercely counterattacked, driving the enemy back, and gained
+more ground than they had held before.
+
+At Bullecourt there was the same story to tell. This place, to use the
+expression of an eyewitness, "had become a flaming hell." In twelve
+counterattacks the Germans had only succeeded in destroying a few of
+the British advanced positions. They had only been able to maintain a
+hold on the southwest corner of the village owing to the tunnels in
+which they were protected from the heaviest fire.
+
+A German counterattack of unusual strength was delivered in the
+morning of May 16, 1917. No bloodier struggle was fought during the
+Allied offensive in 1917 than here at Bullecourt. From shell crater
+and from behind bits of broken wall the British with bombs and
+bayonets hung on until relieved by the arrival of fresh troops. In the
+orchards and gardens and in shallow trenches the opponents struggled
+in close combat, springing at each other's throat when the supply of
+bombs was exhausted. The British obtained a grip on Bullecourt for the
+time being, but they knew the respite would be brief, when the Germans
+would return and renew the bloody struggle.
+
+The old Hindenburg line having been breached at Bullecourt and
+Wancourt, the Germans were now busy strengthening their new line of
+defense which ran through Montigny, Drocourt, and Queant.
+
+The British had improved their defenses to the east, and had pushed
+forward a little nearer to Lens. Here the Germans continued to wreck
+and destroy buildings and machinery, so that the great mining center
+would prove of little value to the Allies when they occupied it.
+
+Early in the morning of May 20, 1917, a British attack broke into the
+Hindenburg line between Fontaine-les-Croisilles and Bullecourt,
+southeast of Arras. The Germans made several violent attempts to
+recover their lost positions, but were unable to make any gains during
+the day. The purpose of the British attacks in this sector was to
+capture the last salient on the front southeast of Arras. With this
+accomplished the German support line from Drocourt to Queant would be
+seriously endangered.
+
+The French lines on the Chemin-des-Dames north of the Aisne continued
+to be subjected to attack, the Germans throwing great masses of troops
+against the positions on the heights.
+
+After very heavy artillery bombardment that lasted the greater part of
+the night the Germans in the early morning of the 20th made
+preparations for a general assault, but the French counterfire was so
+heavy that over the greater part of the front the attack could not be
+developed. Northeast of Cerny the Germans succeeded in occupying
+French trenches on a 216-yard front, but at all other points where
+they advanced the French counterattacks and barrage fire rolled them
+back and wrought disaster among their ranks.
+
+During the last week of May, 1917, the French forces along the
+Chemin-des-Dames only fought on the defensive. The Germans attempted
+to regain lost positions, but were unsuccessful in obtaining the
+slightest advantage, while their losses must have been considerable.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX
+
+THE BATTLE OF MESSINES RIDGE--BRITISH SMASH THE GERMAN SALIENT SOUTH
+OF YPRES
+
+
+After an intense bombardment that lasted all day of June 1, 1917, and
+part of the night the Germans on the 2d, employing large forces,
+hurled five attacks on the French Craonne position; three against the
+eastern face of Californie Plateau and two against Vauclerc Plateau.
+It seemed as if the Germans hoped to win the coveted position on the
+heights by sheer weight of numbers. Advancing in dense masses shoulder
+to shoulder they formed an impressive spectacle. But not for long.
+Soon great gaps were torn in the solid lines by the famous French
+artillery.
+
+The ranks quickly closed up and again surged onward in dense gray
+waves, only to be shattered again and again by the splendidly served
+French guns. The same process was repeated, the Germans advancing,
+their ranks depleting, and then as the French fire became even more
+destructive they fell back, leaving the battle ground littered with
+dead.
+
+The French rightly called this a victory, for they maintained all
+their positions and the Germans had not succeeded in gaining a
+foothold at any point. The German headquarters was silent concerning
+the fight on this date.
+
+While the French continued to hold their position on the eastern
+extremity of the Chemin-des-Dames they threatened to turn the right
+flank of the Laon bastion by an advance over the open ground north of
+Berry-au-Bac. For this reason the Germans were desperately anxious to
+recover the Craonne position, which was the key to the whole tactical
+situation in this part of the front.
+
+For about two weeks the British had been bombarding the strong German
+salient south of Ypres. On June 7, 1917, they delivered against this
+position or series of fortifications an overwhelming blow. It was one
+of the most spectacular military operations carried out during the war
+and marked a brilliant victory for the Allied arms. By this startling
+coup the Germans were forced out of one of the strongest positions
+they held on the western front. As far as human ingenuity and military
+skill could make it so, the position was impregnable. From its
+commanding situation the Germans were able to observe with ease all
+the preparations that were in progress in the British lines and
+arrange to checkmate them. The value of the position to the Germans in
+this area was therefore of supreme value.
+
+For two and a half years the Allied armies in this little corner of
+Belgium had held the Germans in check, and during that time they were
+almost at the mercy of the German guns on the Messines-Wytschaete
+Ridge.
+
+The German front defenses of this position consisted of the most
+elaborate trench systems and fortifications, forming a belt of about a
+mile deep. Farms and woods around were garrisoned and machine-gun
+emplacements were set up in every available corner. Concrete dugouts
+of the strongest description were provided for the protection of
+garrisons and machine gunners, and nothing that labor and skill could
+devise was neglected to make the position indestructible. Yet all this
+laboriously constructed defense work that had taken many months to
+complete and the strength and skill of thousands were swept away in a
+few hours' time.
+
+For nearly two years companies of sappers--British, Australians, and
+New Zealanders--had been busily engaged in tunneling under the low
+range of hills upon which the German position stood. In these
+underground passages engineers had planted nineteen great mines,
+containing more than a million tons of ammonite, a new and enormously
+destructive explosive. The secret of the mines was so well kept during
+the time they were preparing that the Germans seemed to have had no
+suspicion of the great surprise in store for them.
+
+At exactly 3.10 in the morning of June 7, 1917, all the nineteen mines
+were discharged by electric contact and the hilltops were blown off
+amid torrents of spouting flames with a roaring sound like many
+earthquakes that could be heard distinctly farther away than London.
+Large sections of the German front, supporting trenches, and dugouts
+went up in debris amid thick clouds of smoke. To add to the terror of
+the defenders of the position the British guns after the explosions
+shelled the salient steadily until preparations were completed for
+attack. Then the British infantry under Field Marshal Haig and General
+Sir Herbert Plumer advanced with a rush to the assault and the German
+front line for ten miles was captured in a few minutes.
+
+[Illustration: The Taking of Messines Ridge, June 7, 1917.]
+
+Less than three hours after the first attack the Messines-Wytschaete
+Ridge was stormed. The British pushed their advance along the entire
+sector south of Ypres, from Observation Ridge to Ploegsteert Wood to
+the north of Armentieres. Later in the day the German rear defenses,
+which ran across the base of the salient, were assaulted. Here the
+Germans had concentrated strong forces and the British encountered
+stiff opposition, but by nightfall the whole rear German position
+along a five-mile front to a depth of three miles was secure in
+British hands. The Canadians, who were in the forefront of all the
+fighting, had an enjoyable day of it, unsurpassed since they swept the
+Germans from Vimy Ridge.
+
+In the course of the day's fighting the British captured over 7,000
+prisoners and a large number of guns of all calibers. The Germans, it
+was estimated, had about 30,000 casualties, and the British less than
+a third of that number.
+
+Eyewitnesses to this spectacular and dramatic operation have described
+the shattering effect the terrific explosions had on the Germans
+defending the positions, especially on those protecting the ill-famed
+Hill 60, where so many brave British soldiers had perished in previous
+fights.
+
+When this hill burst open and a dense mass of fiery clouds and smoking
+rocks shot skyward, the British troops assigned to take the position
+and while still some distance away were thrown down by the violence of
+the concussion. But no one was injured, and finding their footing they
+dashed on in the direction of the hill. Below Mount Sorrel and in
+Armagh Wood they encountered groups of Jaegers and Wuerttembergers, who
+crawled out of holes in the still quivering earth, and, shaking with
+terror, weakly raised their hands in token of surrender. There was no
+desire to fight left in these men, but where the dugouts had not been
+shattered by British fire and were partly intact hundreds crouched in
+the dark and could only be persuaded to come into the open when bombs
+were hurled among them.
+
+In other places the explosions had not produced such terrifying
+effects on the Germans, and the British met with stubborn resistance.
+This was the case in the neighborhood of the Chateau Matthieu, to the
+west of Hollebeke, which was strongly held and where the Londoners who
+engaged the Germans had a strenuous time of it before they gained the
+upper hand.
+
+The British had looked for stout resistance from the enemy in a street
+of fortresslike houses built of huge blocks of concrete six feet
+thick, but their shell fire had done its work so thoroughly that most
+of the structures were in ruins, while the occupants of those that
+remained intact were too cowed and panic-stricken to make any but the
+feeblest defense.
+
+For the first time on anything like a large scale the British leveled
+woodlands by spraying them with drums of burning oil, thus laying bare
+hidden trenches and gun emplacements and clearing the way for their
+infantry to advance.
+
+In Dead Wood some German troops of the Thirty-fifth Division attempted
+a counterattack on a body of British South Country troops. It was a
+fierce, close struggle, when bayonets were the favorite weapon. The
+Germans, who are not generally fond of cold steel and hand-to-hand
+fighting, on this occasion did their share in the general thrusting
+and stabbing, and certainly displayed no lack of courage. But the men
+of Kent, who were eager to be on their way, fought with such wild fury
+that the Germans, after they had incurred very heavy losses, were
+eager to drop their rifles and surrender.
+
+The part the armored tanks played in the battle of Messines Ridge was
+not very important, but they would have been missed if they had not
+been present in emergencies to help out the infantry. When there was
+no particular business for the monsters, pilots and crews sallied
+forth and joined in the fight.
+
+Military critics award the principal honors in the battle of Messines
+Ridge to the guns and the gunners who served them. For about a
+fortnight the gunners had worked incessantly with scarcely any sleep
+in the midst of nerve-racking noises and with death constantly
+hovering around them. The number of shells used in this battle by the
+British was incredible. One division alone fired over 180,000 shells
+with their field batteries and over 46,000 with their heavies.
+
+It was a joyous hour for the British in the course of the day's
+fighting when they were able to abandon the old gun positions after
+two and a half years of stationary warfare. They had no longer to fear
+that any more shells would be fired by the Germans from the commanding
+position on the ridge. All danger from that quarter had ceased.
+
+The cheering British troops made way for the gunners, as shouting
+joyously they went up the ridge on a run, the infantry trailing along
+after them. Arrived near the top, the gunners unlimbered and went into
+action for the second phase of the fighting.
+
+British aviators, who performed important scout work for the gunners,
+were deserving of a liberal share in the honors of the day. Some of
+the Royal Flying Corps seemed to have gone battle-mad in the course of
+the fighting, for they engaged in such death-defying adventures as no
+wholly sane person would have attempted.
+
+There was one British aviator in particular whose reckless daring
+shone conspicuously even above that of his fellows, and who on the
+occasion showed an utter disregard for life. One of his major
+operations was to fly over a body of German troops on the march.
+Hovering at a short distance above them, he sprayed the astonished
+troops with machine-gun fire until they scattered and fled. Passing
+joyously on his way, the aviator encountered a convoy and flying low
+poured volleys into the Germans and was gone before they had time to
+recover from their astonishment and retaliate. Near Warneton a large
+force of German troops was massing to attack when down among them
+dashed the aviator, his machine gun crackling, when they dispersed in
+all directions, leaving dead and wounded on the field.
+
+Another daring young flyer belonging to the Royal Flying Corps
+attacked and silenced four machine-gun teams in strong emplacements.
+
+Other British aviators were active in clearing out trenches of their
+German occupants, and when they ran out of ammunition for their Lewis
+guns hurled down on the enemy bombs, explosives, and anything that
+injures or destroys.
+
+By the British capture of Messines Ridge the Germans lost their last
+natural position that commanded the British lines. The victory came as
+a fitting climax to the British achievements in France during the
+preceding three months' campaign. By the capture during that period of
+Bapaume, Vimy Ridge, Monchy Plateau, and now Messines Ridge, the
+British had completely changed the military situation on the western
+front.
+
+The area gained in this vast operation was a front nine miles long to
+an extreme depth of five miles. Owing to strong German pressure
+exerted at this point the advance was checked, but the British
+continued to engage and harass the enemy in minor operations.
+
+During the night of June 8, 1917, the British resumed activities in
+the neighborhood of the great mining center of Lens. An attack was
+launched south of the Souchez River on a front of two miles,
+penetrating to a depth of half a mile.
+
+On the following day the Germans with strong forces delivered a
+determined assault on British lines on a front of six miles east of
+Messines. The attack failed. South of Lens the Canadians on the same
+date pierced the German lines on a front of two miles, destroying
+defensive works and taking a number of prisoners.
+
+Artillery and heavy guns were busy on both sides during the night of
+June 10, 1917, east of Epehy. The Germans assembled strong forces of
+troops in this area to attack, but were scattered by the intense fire
+of British guns. Southeast of La Bassee the British carried out a
+dashing raid on enemy lines, during which they destroyed elaborate
+trench systems and mine galleries and captured eighteen prisoners.
+Successful raids were also made on German positions east of Vermelles
+and south of Armentieres on the same night. The British continued
+these dashing exploits on the following day on both sides of Neuve
+Chapelle, east of Armentieres, and north of Ypres. In each operation
+the German defenses were smashed and a considerable number of
+prisoners were taken.
+
+In the Champagne the French had to defend themselves against
+persistent German assaults made to regain lost positions at Mont Blond
+and Mont Carnillet. The Germans had never renounced the hope of
+recovering these invaluable observation points, and sacrificed
+thousands of men in the vain hope of wearing down the French
+resistance. The region of the Californie Plateau was also subjected to
+furious attacks and violent artillery engagements, and while the
+French lost heavily the Germans were unable to gain the slightest
+advantage.
+
+Early in the morning of June 12, 1917, the British won new and
+valuable positions astride the Souchez River. In the night the Germans
+in force delivered a counterattack to regain the lost ground,
+displaying a disregard for safety and stolid bravery as they pushed on
+in spite of heavy losses. But the British were in a situation where
+they could rake the German lines with their artillery and machine-gun
+fire, and made the most of their advantage. The Germans could not make
+any headway against this storm of fire, and at last when their ranks
+were shattered they gave up hope and retired.
+
+Owing to the British advance east of Messines, and to the continued
+pressure of their troops south of the front of attack, the Germans
+were forced to abandon large and important sections of their
+first-line defensive system in the region between the river Lys and
+St. Yves. Following closely the retreating enemy, the British made
+important advances east of Ploegsteert Wood and also in the
+neighborhood of Gaspard.
+
+While their allies were gaining ground and hastening the German
+retreat on their front, the French in the regions of Braye, north of
+Craonne, northwest of Rheims, and on the left bank of the Meuse, near
+Cumieres, were being hammered continuously by German guns. It seemed
+that defenses and defenders must be destroyed by this hurricane of
+fire and shell. But the soldiers of the Republic had learned many
+lessons concerning German methods of warfare since the fighting began
+in this region and knew how to conserve their strength, and were
+prepared to out-fight the enemy whenever the odds were anything like
+equal. The concentrated fire of the German guns damaged the French
+defenses, but were ineffective in crushing French spirit, so that the
+attacks that followed the bombardments failed in every instance to
+gain any advantage.
+
+Positions the British had captured earlier in the week south of the
+Ypres-Commines Canal were attacked by the Germans on June 15, 1917,
+following heavy artillery preparations. In the first dash a few
+Germans succeeded in approaching the British front trenches, but they
+were killed or driven out and the attack collapsed at all points.
+
+In the night of the 15th the sorely tried French forces continued to
+bear the brunt of German fury around Craonne and Mont Carnillet. Raids
+they made in the region of Hill 304, on the heights of the Meuse,
+broke down with heavy losses. East of Rheims the French were
+successful in minor operations in which they captured a good number of
+prisoners. Artillery duels were almost continuous on the following day
+north and south of the Ailette River, in the Champagne, and in the
+region of the heights of Carnillet and Blond. The Germans won a
+section of trench in neighborhood of Courcy, but later were driven out
+or destroyed by the French in a counterattack.
+
+East of Monchy-le-Preux the Germans after a heavy bombardment of
+British positions made an attack in force that was entirely successful
+in gaining the first-line defenses. The British were driven back with
+considerable losses to their main new position on Infantry Hill.
+
+After the disastrous experience of the German airmen during the battle
+of Messines Ridge their flying forces adopted the familiar tactics of
+mass formation. The British air pilots seldom encountered in these
+June days squadrons of less than fifteen machines, and occasionally
+they met aerial armies of as many as sixty planes. In some battles in
+the second week of June, 1917, between seventy and eighty machines
+were involved. Most of these air fights took place inside German
+territory, and despite superior numbers the British Royal Flying Corps
+continued to prove their superiority in the air over the Teutons. In
+one of these aerial battles, when a large number of planes were
+engaged, the British pilots smashed ten German machines, while only
+two British flyers were compelled to withdraw from the fight, one of
+them making a successful landing within his own lines.
+
+Of the reckless bravery displayed by some of the younger members of
+the Royal Flying Corps many authentic stories are told. One intrepid
+British pilot coolly took up a position over a German aerodrome at a
+considerable distance within the enemy lines. There were seven
+machines in the aerodrome when the British flyer took up his position
+above, and as they issued forth first one and then two at a time he
+attacked and in every instance was successful in smashing or in
+driving out of control the German machine.
+
+On the Arras battle front on June 19, 1917, the British gained some
+ground south of the Cojeul River, capturing during the operation
+thirty-five prisoners.
+
+French positions between the Ailette River and Laffaux Hill in the
+Champagne and northwest of Rheims were on this date the special marks
+for the concentrated fire of German guns. French outposts were
+attacked at Mont Teton and Mont Carnillet (an almost daily occurrence
+this summer), but the Germans were unable to gain any advantage and
+were driven back to their trenches with heavy losses.
+
+The British were successful on June 20, 1917, in regaining the Monchy
+position which had been lost some days before. It was of utmost value
+that this point should be wrested from German hands if the advance was
+to continue, and the British were correspondingly elated that they had
+possession of it again.
+
+South of La Fere the French attacked during the night following the
+21st, and penetrating German lines in the region of Beauton, destroyed
+large numbers of the enemy and brought back prisoners. In the
+Champagne after severe artillery preparation the Germans attacked
+French trenches on Teton Height and to the east of this position on a
+front of 400 yards. The Germans employed strong forces in the
+operation, and in a daring push in which they sacrificed large numbers
+of men they succeeded in penetrating advanced positions. But they were
+unable to hold them long, when the French came back in a dashing
+assault that swept them out and back to their own lines. On the
+following day the French in a brilliant movement made on a 600-yard
+front advanced their line 600 yards nearer to Mont Carnillet.
+
+It was in this region that a unit consisting of only sixty-two French
+Grenadiers and portable machine guns occupied a position that the
+Germans coveted. The Germans attacked with a strong force, but the
+stout-hearted defenders, though vastly outnumbered, not only drove
+them back, but pressed on in pursuit, capturing a considerable length
+of German trenches and killing more than 200.
+
+In the Chemin-des-Dames on June 22, 1917, the Germans launched a
+number of attacks, which led to some desperate engagements. In the
+vicinity of La Royere Farm the ground was covered with the bodies of
+German dead, according to the statements of correspondents on the
+field. The Germans at a heavy cost only succeeded in gaining
+possession of a short section of a French front trench.
+
+Rheims continued to be the mark on which the Germans vented their
+anger when things went wrong, and on the 22d they threw 1,200 shells
+into the cathedral city.
+
+The British had made no sensational advances in France for some time,
+but along the entire 120-mile front occupied they continued to
+maintain strong pressure on the enemy positions. During the night of
+the 24th they carried out a number of successful local operations. One
+of these enterprises was of importance, as it increased the British
+grip around Lens. Attacking by starlight the British troops stormed
+and captured 400 yards of front-line trenches east of Riaumont Wood,
+in the western outskirts of Lens, thus drawing closer the ring of iron
+with which they were hemming in the French mining center.
+
+In numerous raids carried out in the night on enemy trenches in the
+vicinity of Bullecourt, Roeux, Loos, and Hooge, much damage was
+wrought to German defenses and a considerable number of prisoners were
+captured. One daring body of British troops remained for two hours in
+German trenches, blowing up dugouts and inflicting serious casualties
+on the garrison.
+
+In the general advance on Lens the Canadians occupied the strongest
+outpost in the defense of that place and had pushed forward to La
+Coulotte. The object of the British command was to exert extreme
+pressure on the enemy and at the same time keep down the casualties,
+and this they were successful in doing.
+
+Patrols sent out reached the crown of Reservoir Hill without meeting
+opposing forces and pressed on down the eastern slope to occupy the
+strong Lens outpost. South of the Souchez River the Canadians were
+pressing on the very heels of the retreating Germans. Railway
+embankments southeast of the Lens electric station were occupied, and
+the advance was then continued toward La Coulotte.
+
+For several days the Germans had been destroying houses in the western
+part of the mining center, in order to secure a wider area of fire for
+their guns. This movement suggested to the British command that they
+intended to cling as long as possible to the eastern side of the city
+and to prolong the fight to the bitter end by house-to-house fighting.
+
+In the night of June 25, 1917, the French made a brilliant attack
+northwest of Hurtebise on a strongly organized German position. They
+gained all their objectives and the rapidity with which the attack was
+carried out proved a crushing surprise to the Germans who lost in the
+fight and in counterattacks ten officers and over 300 of other ranks.
+
+Among the positions captured by the French in the operations in this
+region was the "Cave of the Dragon," which was more than 100 yards
+wide and 300 yards deep, and had been converted into a strong
+fortress. The cavern had numerous exits and openings through which
+machine guns could be fired. Here the French captured a vast amount of
+war material, including nine machine guns in good condition,
+ammunition depots, and a hospital relief outpost.
+
+In the morning of June 27, 1917, the Canadians, encouraged by their
+recent successes, which had been won at slight cost, decided to attack
+across the open ground sloping upward to Avion and the village of
+Leauvette near the Souchez River. The assaulting troops consisted of
+men from British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, and Nova Scotia, and the
+British army contained no more daring fighters. The attack was a
+success, except at one point, where the Germans were strong in machine
+guns, and were surrounded by barbed-wire entanglements of a peculiarly
+complicated sort. Here the sturdy men from overseas were unable to
+gain their objectives, but at other points they gained valuable
+ground.
+
+In the following night, during a heavy rainstorm, the British attacked
+a number of the southwesterly suburbs of Lens, including the one known
+as Avion. They won all their first objectives, and captured over 200
+prisoners. The fighting was in and out of ruined buildings,
+collieries, pit derricks, and the usual structures of a mining
+settlement. It was continued on the following day, advance being made
+on a total front of about four miles to a depth of over a mile. The
+result of these attacks was to give the British a series of strongly
+organized defensive systems on both banks of the river Souchez
+covering Lens.
+
+On the same night the suburbs of the mining center were attacked, the
+British captured German forward positions south and west of Oppy in
+the Arras sector on a front of about 2,000 yards.
+
+On the 28th and 29th of June, 1917, the Germans launched by night
+powerful attacks in the Verdun sector near Hill 304 and Avocourt Wood.
+They succeeded in piercing French first lines over the whole front
+attacked, but were subsequently driven out, except at one point, on
+the slope of Dead Man Hill, where they clung tenaciously, defying
+every attempt made by the French to regain the position.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX
+
+THE GERMANS DEFEAT BRITISH ON BELGIAN COAST--INTENSE FIGHTING IN THE
+CHAMPAGNE AND AT VERDUN
+
+
+In the first days of July, 1917, the Verdun sector became the scene
+of some of the heaviest fighting on the western front. The Germans
+seemed determined to redeem their failures in this area in the
+previous year and engaged in daily assaults with large numbers of
+picked forces. The German High Command had circulated so many stories
+regarding the declining strength of the French troops and of their
+weakened morale that they must have come to believe their own
+inventions. The soldiers of the Republic certainly did their best to
+convince the German command that they were very much alive and in good
+fighting trim. Most of the German attacks in the Verdun sector were
+repulsed, but they succeeded in retaining some conquered ground on the
+west slope of Dead Man Hill. On the Aisne front during the night of
+June 30, 1917, the Germans attacked near Cerny and Corbeny, when their
+storming detachments were almost annihilated by the devastating fire
+of the French artillery. To the northeast of Cerny the Germans
+succeeded in gaining a small salient which had first been leveled by
+their guns.
+
+South of Lens the British continued to make progress, capturing a good
+portion of the German trench system in this area and taking a number
+of prisoners. British aviators on this front maintained successfully
+their supremacy of the air. In the space of twenty-four hours they
+brought down five German aeroplanes, and four others were driven out
+of control, while only one British machine was missing.
+
+Heavy artillery fighting continued during July 1, 1917, in the sector
+between Cerny and Ailles on the French front. At a late hour French
+troops carried out a spirited attack on both sides of the
+Ailles-Paissy road and ejected the Germans from the trenches they had
+captured in the previous week. In the night of July 2, 1917, the
+Germans made a strong counterattack in an endeavor to oust the French
+from their regained position, but were repulsed. In the course of the
+night several more attacks were made by the Germans, who, thrown back
+in every instance, finally abandoned the effort when day was breaking.
+
+On the left bank of the Meuse, on the Verdun front, violent artillery
+fighting continued the greater part of the night on the same date
+between Hill 304 and Avocourt Wood. Early in the morning following
+the Germans attacked on a front of 500 yards at the southeast corner
+of the wood. The assaults broke down under the devastating French fire
+and no attempt was made to renew the effort.
+
+On the British front no important actions were fought during the first
+week of July, 1917, but everywhere defenses were strengthened and the
+pressure on the German positions became unceasingly intense. Southwest
+of Hollebeke in Belgium the British advanced their lines on a front of
+about 600 yards during the night of July 4, 1917. Successful raids in
+the vicinity of Wieltje and Nieuport resulted in the capture of a good
+number of prisoners.
+
+On the Verdun front the Germans renewed their offensive without
+obtaining any important progress. Heavy artillery fighting continued
+near Moronvilliers in the Champagne and around Hill 304.
+
+German positions west and north of this hill were subjected to a
+destructive fire of French batteries during the day of July 5, 1917,
+and with such good effect that the enemy guns only feebly replied.
+
+Near Louvemont, on the left bank of the Meuse, the French were
+successful in several encounters with German patrols, which they
+dispersed after sharp fighting, killing a number and taking prisoners.
+
+In the Champagne, especially at Le Casque and Le Teton, there was
+active artillery fighting throughout the day. In the region between
+the Miette and the Aisne the Germans attacked three French posts, but
+were driven off by the French artillery fire.
+
+The British now took the offensive and advanced their line on a
+600-yard front south of Ypres, near Hollebeke, and continued to exert
+pressure on the German lines. On the 7th a further push forward was
+made east of Wytschaete in Belgium.
+
+The French sector of the Chemin-des-Dames to the south of Filain was
+menaced at all times because it was dominated by the ancient fort of
+Malmaison in possession of the enemy. In the early morning of July 9,
+1917, the Germans began an intense bombardment of this sector and then
+attempted to rush ten or twelve infantry battalions into the French
+positions. A brigade of the famous Chasseurs-a-pied holding the line
+were forced back by overwhelming numbers. The Germans evidently
+thought that success was certain, for they had brought with them
+quantities of barbed wire, boxes of grenades, and trench mortars, and
+everything that was needed to organize the position whose capture
+would give them the command of a considerable section of
+Chemin-des-Dames.
+
+They failed, however, to consider the indomitable French spirit. The
+Chasseurs had only retreated a short distance when they gathered
+together engineers and reservists who had been working on roads in the
+rear and rushed back, and by a series of brilliant counterattacks
+ejected or killed most of the Germans in spite of their heroic
+resistance, capturing large quantities of their war material and
+reoccupying the line almost to its fullest extent.
+
+The Germans having obtained reenforcements, fought furiously to regain
+the lost position, but the French elated by their success redoubled
+their efforts to destroy the enemy and the shell craters, and
+communication trenches were soon encumbered with German dead. The
+French losses in the fighting here were severe, but as they occupied
+safer positions the Germans' casualties were far greater. The fighting
+was so intense throughout the action that very few prisoners were
+taken by either side. A group of French soldiers who had been made
+prisoners and brought to the German second line attacked their guard
+and fled to their own lines, escaping without hurt the intense fire
+directed against them.
+
+On this date, July 10, 1917, the Germans delivered a smashing blow
+against the British lines north of Nieuport on the Belgian coast. For
+twenty-four hours the Germans had maintained an intense bombardment
+which lasted from 6 o'clock in the morning of the 10th up to midnight
+and was renewed again at dawn on the following day. The firing was on
+such a huge scale that it could be distinctly heard as far as London.
+The effect of this bombardment was to level all the British defenses
+in the dune sector and to destroy their bridges over the Yser.
+According to the Berlin reports 1,250 men were captured by the Germans
+in this battle.
+
+To the southward, in the region, of Lombaertzyde, the Germans only
+obtained a temporary success, the British in a strong counterattack
+driving them out of the positions they had won before they had time to
+organize for defense.
+
+That the Germans were enabled to succeed in this coup was largely
+owing to the weather conditions. A heavy gale was blowing on the
+Belgian coast and British naval support was impossible. The Germans
+enjoyed the advantage of having strong coast batteries all along the
+dunes which they could move about at will from one point to another.
+There was, however, no blinking the fact that a weak point existed in
+the British defenses. Such success as the Germans won was attributed
+by some critics to their superiority in the air, the British at the
+time being short of machines.
+
+The net gains to the Germans in this battle was the capture of British
+positions on a front of 1,400 yards to a depth of 600 yards. The
+British losses in the shelled terrain between the river Yser and the
+sea were estimated at 1,800.
+
+During the night of July 11, 1917, British naval aeroplanes carried
+out successful raids in Flanders in and near five towns, when several
+tons of bombs were dropped with good results. Railway lines and an
+electric power station at Zarren were attacked by gunfire from the
+air, and bombs were dropped on a train near St. Denis-Westrem. The
+British airmen's bombs caused a fire near Ostend, and heavy explosions
+at the Varssenaere railway dump followed by an intense conflagration
+which was still flaming fiercely when the British returned safely to
+their own lines.
+
+On the French front there was increasing aerial activity on July 12,
+1917, on both sides from daybreak to midnight. In some cases as many
+as thirty machines were actively engaged. As a result of these
+encounters fourteen German aeroplanes were brought down and sixteen
+others were driven out of control. Nine British machines were counted
+missing.
+
+Fighting continued daily in the Champagne and at frequent intervals.
+The Germans were paying a high price for every foot of ground gained
+and learned at the cost of heavy sacrifices that the French were as
+strong as ever, notwithstanding a report to the contrary was
+circulated by the German High Command that they were short of men and
+would be unable to fight much longer.
+
+On July 14, 1917, the French scored a double victory when they
+occupied five heights among a clump of hills known as the
+Moronvilliers Massif to the east of Rheims. The positions won were of
+the first importance whereby the Germans lost their principal
+observatories in this region. The French occupied all the crests of
+the hills, but some of the slopes were held by the Germans, from which
+points of vantage they were able to watch the movements of their
+opponents.
+
+The net gains to the French during the day included a network of
+German trenches on a front of over 800 yards to a depth of 300 yards,
+while the prisoners captured numbered 360, including nine officers.
+
+On the left bank of the Meuse, in the Verdun sector, around Hill 304
+and Dead Man Hill, artillery duels were continuous during the night of
+July 13, 1917.
+
+The loss of the strong positions on the Moronvilliers hills, the chief
+observation posts in the region, spurred the Germans on to make
+frequent and frenzied attempts to force the French out. In the night
+of July 15, 1917, the hills were subjected to sustained and violent
+bombardment. It was followed by German attacks on Mont Haut and a
+height known as the Teton. At Mont Haut the Germans succeeded in
+penetrating French positions, but were driven out by a brilliant
+counterattack. The fighting lasted throughout the night, and was of
+the most violent description. By morning the French had thrust the
+Germans back and held all positions on the hills securely. The Germans
+had gained only a short stretch of trench near Mont Haut, which for
+the time they were able to hold possession.
+
+On the left bank of the Meuse, in the Verdun sector, to the west of
+Hill 304, the French carried out a dashing operation early in the
+morning of July 17, 1917. After strong artillery preparation that had
+lasted all through the previous night the French attacked, and
+notwithstanding the stubborn and energetic resistance of the enemy,
+recaptured in a few minutes all the positions that the Germans had
+occupied since June 29, 1917. Following up the advantage thus gained
+the French carried German positions beyond their objectives to a depth
+of 2,000 yards on both sides of the road between Esnes and Malancourt.
+All the first German line was captured, and a little later after the
+most intense fighting the second line was carried. The French gained
+ground in this advance to a depth of over a mile. The number of
+unwounded prisoners captured reached 425, of whom eight were officers.
+
+The loss of such important positions in the Verdun sector stimulated
+the Germans to make repeated endeavors to recapture them, and during
+the night of July 17, 1917, they delivered furious counterattacks
+preceded by intense artillery preparations. The assaults were all
+repulsed by the French, and at no point were the Germans enabled to
+gain even a temporary footing.
+
+In the evening of July 18, 1917, the Germans attacked the French lines
+south of St. Quentin over a front of about half a mile. They succeeded
+in penetrating the first line, and held it for a brief period, when
+they were driven out. A few hours later the Germans made another
+strong attack over a front of about four miles, their objective being
+the same--the hillock known as Moulin-sous-Toutvent. This attack was
+broken up by the French artillery and machine-gun fire.
+
+Throughout the day of July 19, 1917, French and German artillery were
+active along the whole French front, but beyond inflicting some
+casualties for which they paid heavily the Germans gained no
+advantage.
+
+A general assault was launched by the Germans with important forces
+during the night of July 19, 1917, on the line along the plateau
+between Craonne and Vauclerc. Over the whole extent of the front there
+was hand-to-hand fighting, but everywhere the French succeeded in
+holding their positions. An energetic counterattack made between the
+Californie and Casemates Plateaus enabled the French to regain a
+trench line which the Germans had penetrated and held since the
+previous day. Fighting continued in the Hill 304 region, and in the
+Champagne, but the Germans failed to make any progress.
+
+[Illustration: The Somme Battle Front, August 1, 1917.]
+
+During these days of intense fighting on the French front the British
+had not been marking time, but they had far less to contend against
+than their valorous allies. The French had to bear the brunt of German
+fury throughout the week. The whole French line from Verdun to St.
+Quentin in this period had been subjected to almost continuous
+attacks. At the cost of enormous losses that had not been exceeded
+during the war, save at Verdun in the previous year, the Germans had
+only gained a slight advance on a front of 2,000 feet, at the foot of
+the slope leading to the Chemin-des-Dames between Vauclerc and
+Craonne. The French now held all the important heights of the Aisne
+which Hindenburg had declared were impregnable.
+
+The German High Command had given orders that the French positions on
+the heights must be captured at all hazards. Throughout the night of
+July 21, 1917, the high plateaus north of Craonne were shelled by
+German guns of the heaviest caliber. An attack was made at daybreak
+from Hurtebise to the east of Craonne. The two plateaus to the north,
+called the Casemates and Californie positions, are three-cornered in
+shape, projecting toward the north and joined by a narrow saddle. The
+approach to this is not so abrupt from the north as that to the
+plateaus themselves. The French artillery fire broke up the attack
+between Hurtebise and the Casemates Plateau before it could develop.
+
+Assemblages of German troops north of Ailette were dispersed with
+heavy losses by the concentrated fire from French batteries. German
+attacks east of the plateaus led to violent hand-to-hand conflicts in
+which the Germans fought with great courage, but were unable to make
+gains. Throughout the day the battle raged, the Germans hurling great
+masses of men against the French lines, and, thrown back with heavy
+losses, again and again renewed the attacks. On the Californie Plateau
+after repeated repulses they succeeded in gaining a foothold, but
+were only able to hold it for a short time, when the French threw them
+back in an assault that laid many a German low.
+
+Since the 10th of the month the British had done little but repel
+counterattacks, but they had won a little useful ground east of
+Monchy, close to the coast, and around Ypres and Lens theirs and the
+German batteries were busy day and night. From prisoners captured by
+the British it was learned that the Germans were suffering from the
+great wastage of men. Out of one division west of Lens it was stated
+that between seventy and eighty men had been buried every day for some
+weeks past. The British losses were also considerable, but their guns
+did more shooting, and the enemy's casualties were consequently much
+heavier. The British continued to hold the upper hand in air combats,
+few German machines being encountered. During July 23-24, 1917,
+British airmen dropped between four and five tons of bombs on enemy
+aerodromes, ammunition depots, and railway junctions with good
+results. North and east of Ypres the British made several raids during
+the 24th, capturing 114 prisoners, including two officers.
+
+On the French front General Petain, commander in chief of the French
+armies, found time while the battle was still raging to review the
+famous division whose four regiments had won the highest honors at
+Verdun, Nieuport, on the Somme, and in the Champagne. The troops which
+had been fighting for three years showed outwardly no sign of the
+terrible ordeals they had undergone, holding themselves proudly erect
+as they passed the saluting base amid the strains of military music
+and flying colors. General Petain, who believed in treating his men as
+if they were his own sons, commended their bravery and thanked them in
+the name of the Republic for the brilliant example they had set to the
+other soldiers of France.
+
+The loss of the plateaus north of Craonne continued to rankle in the
+mind of the German command, and repeated efforts were made to recover
+these precious positions. In the night of July 25, 1917, a ferocious
+attack was made on the French lines on a front of about two miles
+from La Bovelle Farm to a point east of Hurtebise. In the face of a
+murderous fire from the French artillery that wrought havoc in the
+advancing masses the Germans pressed on and succeeded in occupying
+portions of French first-line trenches south of Ailles. Repeated
+attacks made on Hurtebise Farm broke down under French artillery fire.
+Attacks on Mont Haut, following an intense bombardment that lasted all
+night long, failed to make any progress. North of Auberive the French
+carried out a successful operation during which they penetrated German
+trenches and continued their advance.
+
+In Flanders in the night of the 25th the town of Nieuport, which had
+been in ruins since the first year of the war, was bombarded by the
+Germans with guns of every caliber. The British guns replied with
+equal violence, so that for miles around the air vibrated day and
+night and the ground shook with tremors.
+
+East of Monchy the Germans resumed action, 400 attacking with flame
+throwers the line of British trenches that had already been smashed by
+artillery fire, and succeeded in occupying some posts of no great
+importance.
+
+In the Champagne the sorely tried French troops were allowed no
+respite by the Germans, who would not renounce their hope of regaining
+the important positions on the heights. In the night of July 26, 1917,
+no less than five attacks were made by the Germans in the vicinity of
+the height south and west of Moronvilliers, but all broke down under
+fire of the French artillery. East of Auberive, several groups of
+Germans led by an officer tried a surprise attack which led to close
+fighting and from which hardly one German soldier escaped unwounded.
+The ground around the French position was strewn with dead, including
+that of the officer who led the attack.
+
+[Illustration: Barrage or curtain fire used to protect and clear the
+way for an infantry advance. Here the fire is being used to protect
+French troops for an advance on Fort Vaux.]
+
+From the Flemish coast southward past Lens the great gun duel
+between the British and Germans continued without ceasing. The
+Germans had brought up vast stores of ammunition and poured shells
+into Nieuport, Ypres, and Armentieres, and for miles around sprayed
+the country at large with the hope of smashing hidden British
+batteries. To this wide sweeping storm of fire the British were
+replying with far greater violence, sending two shells to the
+enemy's one, a rivalry of destruction that had not been surpassed on
+any previous occasion since the war began. Except for occasional
+raids the infantry remained quiescent under this gunnery. North of
+Arras and east of Ypres the British raids netted a considerable
+number of prisoners and machine guns. The fury of the British fire
+was not without effect on the generally stolid and imperturbable
+Germans, for at Fontaine-les-Croisilles they ran away without
+firing a shot when a British raiding party rushed forward to attack.
+
+The three weeks' bombardment in Belgium closed on the morning of July
+31, 1917, when British and French troops launched an attack on a
+gigantic scale along a front of nearly twenty miles from Dixmude on
+the north to Warneton on the south. The Allies won a notable victory,
+capturing in the first day of the battle ten towns and over 5,000
+prisoners, including ninety-five officers. The attack began a little
+before 4 o'clock in the morning, just when the first faint light of
+dawn was breaking, German trenches had been either leveled or were
+completely wiped out by the preceding bombardment. The shelling
+increased in violence as the troops of the Allies left their positions
+and rushed forward to attack. The first and second German lines were
+carried almost without opposition, but at some points the Germans held
+up the advance with machine guns from their rear positions. These the
+British stormed, and lost considerable men in the operation, but they
+were comforted with the thought that the German losses were much
+heavier.
+
+As a result of the day's operations the British had advanced their
+line on a front of over fifteen miles from La Basse Ville, on the
+river Lys, to Steenstraete on the river Yser.
+
+The French troops on the extreme left and protecting the left flank of
+the British forces captured the village of Steenstraete, and rushing
+on penetrated the German defenses to a depth of nearly two miles.
+Having won all their objectives at an early hour in the day, the
+French continued to advance, occupying Bixschoote and capturing German
+positions to the southeast and west of the village on a front of
+nearly two and a half miles. In the center and on the left British
+divisions swept the enemy from positions to a depth of two miles, and
+secured crossings at the river Steenbeek, thus gaining all their
+objectives. In carrying out this attack British troops captured two
+powerful defensive systems by assault, and won against fierce
+opposition the villages of Verlorenhoek, Frezenberg, St. Julien, and
+Pilken, together with farms that had been transformed into fortresses
+and other strongholds in neighboring woods.
+
+The victory of the Allies was more remarkable because of unfavorable
+weather conditions. The day was marked by heavy rain and the sky was
+full of heavy sodden clouds, so that observation was well nigh
+impossible for the airmen and kite balloons. Fortunately on the night
+before the attack the rain held off and the many thousands of British
+troops who occupied mudholes and shell holes close to the enemy lines
+had reason to bless the dark since they had a better chance of
+escaping observation. But this was not always possible, for the German
+flares and rockets often revealed their position and a shell would
+pass over them or smash among them, killing some and maiming others.
+Those who escaped these death-dealing visitors were forced to maintain
+silence, lest they betray their position. During the night the German
+aviators were more active than during the day and many times their
+bombs found a mark among the British soldiers crouching on the ground.
+It was a terrible ordeal through which these brave fellows had to
+pass, the forced inaction was maddening, and they were all the more
+eager to fight when at last the welcome signal came in the early dawn
+to go forward to attack.
+
+Despite the discouraging weather conditions, which hindered
+observation, large squadrons of British planes led the advance against
+the German lines and not only maintained constant contact with the
+infantry, but flying low carried on a destructive warfare with their
+machine guns.
+
+There were many air battles fought at a few hundred feet above the
+ground, but the Germans were decidedly outclassed and had to retire
+after they had lost six machines.
+
+One British aviator doing patrol duty, and flying at a height of not
+more than thirty feet, came upon a German aerodrome on which he
+dropped a bomb with careful precision. As the Germans in the sheds
+came tumbling out, the aviator turned his machine gun on them, and
+circling around the field poured such a stream of fire into the
+kaiser's men that they scattered, leaving a number of dead on the
+ground.
+
+The Germans having presently recovered, from their astonishment got a
+machine gun into action and came back to attack the airman, who made a
+dive, and when not more than twenty feet from the ground silenced
+their gun with his own. Then he circled the field, firing through the
+doors of every building he passed on the groups of men within. Leaving
+this scene the British airman next came upon two German officers, and
+his machine-gun working steadily put them to flight. A column of
+several hundred troops encountered after this were dispersed when he
+swept along the line, leaving a number of dead and wounded on the
+field. It was now time to return to the British lines for more
+ammunition and some slight repairs, but the gallant aviator
+encountered two German war planes that engaged him in battle. One he
+disabled by a well-directed shot and the other seized the opportunity
+to hurry from the scene.
+
+On the Aisne front during July 31, 1917, there was violent artillery
+fighting south of La Royere; the French had won all their objectives
+and more. The German advanced trenches were filled with dead and the
+French captured 210 prisoners.
+
+On the same date the Germans after heavily bombarding French lines at
+Cerny and Hurtebise, attacked positions east of Cerny on a front of
+1,500 meters with three regiments. French counterattacks immediately
+carried out, drove the Germans back, their ranks seriously depleted,
+and the French were now enabled to advance along the whole front.
+
+The day was calm on both sides of the Meuse, but farther south, in the
+right center of the French attack, after gaining Hooge village and
+Sanctuary Wood, their first objectives, they fought their way forward
+and carried the village of Westhoek, against very obstinate
+resistance from the enemy. In this neighborhood there was stiff
+fighting throughout the day, and still continued. The French had
+penetrated the German defenses to a depth of about a mile. A number of
+violent counterattacks were repulsed. South of the Zillebeke-Zandvoord
+road, on the extreme right, French troops at an early hour in the day
+had succeeded in winning all of their objectives, capturing the
+villages of La Basse Ville, and Hollebeke. The French claimed to have
+suffered few casualties in these important operations, and by
+nightfall of July 31, 1917, over 3,500 German prisoners had been
+passed behind the lines.
+
+The German Government having industriously circulated reports that
+the French armies had suffered such a wastage of men that in a short
+time they would prove a negligible factor in the war, the French War
+Office announced that there were a million more troops in the fighting
+zone than were mustered to stem the German flood tide at the Battle of
+the Marne. It was also declared that the Republic had more men under
+arms than at any time in her history. Nearly 3,000,000 troops were in
+France alone, exclusive of the interior and in the colonies.
+
+
+
+
+PART VIII--THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI
+
+THE INTERIM
+
+
+The cessation of diplomatic relations between the American and German
+Governments was an inevitable consequence of the latter's submarine
+decree abrogating the undertaking it gave in the _Sussex_ case. The
+world knew it. Germany knew it. Her ambassador at Washington, Count
+von Bernstorff, knew it best of all, and accepted his dismissal in a
+fatalistic spirit. The rupture had to come. He had done his best to
+avert it, and his best had availed nothing.
+
+The long-feared break having become a reality, the American people
+looked wide-eyed at the unexampled international situation. What now?
+When two parties enter into a bargain and one breaks it, there is
+usually a parting of the ways, a personal conflict perhaps, when there
+is not also a lawsuit. But no court could settle the differences
+between the United States and Germany. The nation squarely faced the
+fact that the two countries were officially not on speaking terms;
+they were on the dangerous ground of open enmity, when the least
+provocation would be as a spark to a powder magazine. Sparks there
+were in plenty; but the explosion waited. President Wilson guarded the
+magazine. He waited an "overt act" before giving up his vigil and
+letting events take their course.
+
+Germany began her announced ruthless submarine warfare against neutral
+shipping with caution. Apparently she was loath to precipitate matters
+by acting in the letter and spirit of the new decree which warned that
+any neutral vessel found in the new danger zone "perished." On
+February 3, 1917, when the decree was in operation, one of her
+submarines encountered an American freighter, the _Housatonic_, off
+the Scilly Isles, which came within the proscribed area. It sank her,
+but first gave warning, permitted the crew to take to the boats, and
+actually towed the boats ninety miles toward land. A British patrol
+vessel then appeared; the submarine fired a signal to attract its
+attention and vanished under water, leaving the patrol vessel to
+rescue the _Housatonic's_ crew. According to the new order given the
+submarines the _Housatonic_ ought to have been sunk without warning.
+
+This unwonted chivalry looked promising; but it was deemed to be
+merely an act of grace extended to neutral vessels on the high seas
+which had left their home ports before the date (February 1, 1917)
+when the new policy of ruthlessness went into effect. It was not
+repeated.
+
+No such shrift was accorded British vessels, whether Americans were on
+board them or not. About the same time the merchantman _Eavestone_ was
+sunk by a submarine, which also shelled the crew as they took to the
+boats. The captain and three seamen--one an American--were killed by
+the gunfire. This action was debated as an "overt act," but apparently
+the Administration did not regard isolated fatalities of this
+character as providing ground for a _casus belli_.
+
+What came nearer to a flagrant violation of the _Sussex_ agreement was
+the destruction by submarine torpedoes of the Anchor passenger liner
+_California_ without warning off the Irish coast with 230 persons on
+board. The vessel sailed from New York for Glasgow on January 28,
+1917, and its crew and passengers included a sprinkling of Americans.
+There were no American casualties; but attacks on passenger liners
+without warning, regardless of the menace to American life, formed the
+crux of the various crises between the United States and Germany, and
+the sinking of the _California_, as an "overt act," therefore brought
+the breaking point nearer and nearer. The loss of life was forty-one,
+thirteen passengers and twenty-eight of the crew being drowned. The
+vessel sank in nine minutes and the submarine made no effort to save
+the lives of its victims.
+
+The loss of two British steamers, the _Japanese Prince_ and the
+_Mantola_, sunk without warning, added to the growing indictment
+against Germany in the consequent jeopardizing of American lives.
+There were thirty American cattlemen on board the _Japanese Prince_.
+With the remainder of the crew they took to the boats, and after
+drifting about for several hours were saved by a passing ship. An
+American doctor on board the _Mantola_ was among the latter's
+survivors.
+
+The next attack on American shipping was the sinking of the _Lyman M.
+Law_, a sailing vessel loaded with lumber from Maine to Italy, by a
+submarine off the coast of Sardinia in the Mediterranean. The crew,
+seven of whom were American, were saved. There was no warning; the
+crew were ordered to debark, a bomb was placed on board, and the
+vessel was blown up and sank in flames.
+
+The destruction of the Cunard liner _Laconia_, without warning,
+followed. Three American passengers were lost, two of them women,
+mother and daughter, who died from exposure in one of the boats. The
+vessel was torpedoed in the Irish Sea at 10.30 p. m. on February 25,
+1917, and it was not until 4 o'clock the next morning that the
+survivors, scantily clad, were rescued in a heavy sea.
+
+All these outrages were readily chargeable as overt acts, any single
+one of which could have constituted a cause for war, if the
+Administration was looking for one. But Germany's offenses, viewed
+singly, were passed over; it was their cumulative force that was
+providing the momentum to hostilities.
+
+Two American freighters, the _Orleans_ and the _Rochester_, left New
+York on February 9, 1917, without guns or contraband, bound for
+Bordeaux, France, and were the first craft to leave an American port
+after Germany issued her terrifying order condemning all neutral
+vessels found in the new danger zone.
+
+Meantime the barometer at Washington was ominous. The _California_
+sinking, then the _Laconia_, proved how slender was the thread that
+held the sword of Damocles over the heads of the American people.
+Tension increased. "We are hoping for the best and preparing for the
+worst," came one official view early in the crisis. The President
+became detached and uncommunicative.
+
+Germany indirectly sought to avert the consequences of her conduct. A
+week after the rupture in diplomatic relations Dr. Paul Ritter, the
+Swiss Minister, to whom she had delegated the charge of her interests
+in the United States, approached the State Department with an informal
+proposal to reopen negotiations. Secretary Lansing required him to put
+his request in writing, and the following memorandum was thereupon
+presented by Dr. Ritter on February 11, 1917:
+
+"The Swiss Government has been requested by the German Government to
+say that the latter is now, as before, willing to negotiate, formally
+or informally, with the United States, provided that the commercial
+blockade against England will not be broken thereby."
+
+Secretary Lansing's answer, made the next day, was short and to the
+point. He notified Dr. Ritter, under instructions from the President,
+that "the Government of the United States would gladly discuss with
+the German Government any questions it might propose for discussion
+were it to withdraw its proclamation of the 31st of January [1917], in
+which, suddenly and without previous intimation of any kind, it
+canceled the assurances which it had given this Government on the 4th
+of May last [1916], but that it does not feel that it can enter into
+any discussion with the German Government concerning the policy of
+submarine warfare against neutrals which it is now pursuing unless and
+until the German Government renews its assurances of the 4th of May
+and acts upon the assurance."
+
+No further interchanges took place on the subject. The answer
+clarified the situation and disposed of doubts caused by the veil the
+President had thrown about the workings of his mind. It told the
+country that its Executive was not wavering and would brook no
+compromise.
+
+Little hope prevailed in Berlin that war with the United States could
+be avoided, since the bait offered with a view to formulating a _modus
+vivendi_ for reconciling the divergent attitudes of the two
+governments had failed. It was said that behind Dr. Ritter's overtures
+was a proposal that American vessels would be spared in order to avoid
+actual war if the United States assented to the continuance of the
+extended blockade against England. This implied that all other
+vessels, neutral or belligerent, were marked for destruction. However
+that might be, Berlin, finding its approaches repulsed, boldly denied
+that the German Government had been a party to initiating any
+overtures at all. No recession of the submarine program was thought of
+or proposed; no change of policy was possible In fact, this denial
+brought with it tidings that the periods of grace Germany granted to
+neutral ships entering the prohibited zones had expired and that all
+immunity from attack and destruction had therefore ceased. Then it
+developed that Dr. Ritter's overtures had been traced to pacific
+elements in the United States, represented by William J. Bryan, who
+was said to have been in league with the ex-ambassador, Count von
+Bernstorff, and the Washington correspondent of a Cologne newspaper,
+in a plan to avert hostilities. Part of this propaganda was the
+transmission of dispatches from Washington to the German press stating
+that the President's message to Congress must not be construed
+literally, and that there was no desire for war with Germany. The
+purpose of these dispatches was to prevail on Germany to abate her
+submarine warfare by way of convincing the United States that her new
+policy was not so ruthless as had been described. The pacifists knew
+very well that the President had no intention of yielding to half
+measures, and that the only course Germany could take to obtain a
+resumption of negotiations was the absolute withdrawal of her order
+revoking the _Sussex_ pledge. The Administration resented the
+pacifists' activities as an attempt to undermine the uncompromising
+position it had taken. Their dealings with a foreign government were
+actually unlawful; but no action was taken.
+
+A subsequent announcement from Berlin stated that Dr. Ritter (inspired
+by American pacifists) had telegraphed the German Government offering
+to mediate, whereupon he was told that Germany was agreeable on the
+terms named in the interchanges Dr. Ritter had with the State
+Department. As to a belief which had arisen from Dr. Ritter's action
+that the marine barrier maintained against Great Britain by submarines
+and mines had been or would be weakened out of regard for the United
+States or for other reasons, official Berlin (February 14, 1917) had
+this to say:
+
+"Regard for neutrals prompts the clearest declaration that
+unrestricted war against all sea traffic in the announced barred zones
+is now in full effect and will under no circumstances be restricted."
+
+The United States had spoken: "Withdraw your new submarine decree
+before making any proposal," it had demanded of Berlin. Germany had
+spoken: "Our course cannot be changed."
+
+The situation in Washington drifted along without any definite program
+of future action being disclosed; but the President was not idle. He
+decided--though he held the power himself--to ask Congress for
+authority to protect American shipping on the high seas by providing
+merchantmen with naval guns and gunners. There was a freight
+congestion in Atlantic ports, due to the reluctance of American
+shipowners to sail their vessels without defensive armament. The
+President's decision was a step nearer war, for armed American
+vessels, on encountering German submarines, would be bound to cause
+hostilities, and war would be a reality. Berlin took this view. If the
+United States armed its merchant ships, German opinion was that the
+considerate submarines would be unable to save passengers and crews of
+the vessels they sank. Were the vessels unarmed the submarines could
+perform this kindly service. This sardonic hint was construed as an
+official warning from Germany that the arming of American vessels
+meant war. The Administration, however, was no longer concerned with
+Germany's viewpoint. It realized that so long as it permitted American
+ships to be held in port in fear of attack by submarines if they
+ventured out, its inaction would in effect be viewed as acquiescing in
+the German policy. Such a state of affairs, it was decided, could not
+be allowed to continue indefinitely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXII
+
+BERLIN'S TACTICS
+
+
+Before the armed neutrality stage of the prewar period was reached
+certain events transpired in Berlin which call for inclusion in the
+record.
+
+Immediately upon the rupture of diplomatic relations the State
+Department notified Ambassador Gerard, who was requested to ask for
+his passports. About the same time the German Government acceded to a
+demand made by Secretary Lansing for the release of a number of
+Americans captured from ships sunk by a German raider in the South
+Atlantic and taken to a German port on board one of them, the British
+steamer _Yarrowdale_. Germany had no right to hold these men as
+prisoners at all, since they were neutrals. Yet there was an attempt
+to interject their release into the international crisis as an olive
+branch and a concession to American feeling. The two issues were
+distinct; but Germany, by her subsequent action, managed to link them
+together.
+
+Ambassador Gerard requested his passports on February 5, 1917, while
+the release of the _Yarrowdale_ prisoners was pending. Meantime
+dispatches which came to Berlin from Washington via London were
+blamed for misleading the German Government into thinking that the
+United States was detaining Count von Bernstorff, and had seized the
+German ships, with their crews, lying in American ports. Until it
+received assurances regarding the "fate" of the ex-ambassador and
+learned what treatment was to be meted out to the "captured" crews of
+the German vessels, the kaiser's government detained Ambassador
+Gerard, his staff, a number of Americans, including newspaper
+correspondents, as well as the _Yarrowdale_ men. It practically held
+all Americans in Germany as prisoners for a week.
+
+In view of the readiness of the German Government to seize upon the
+flimsiest excuses for its manifold disgraceful deeds, permissible
+doubts arose as to whether it was willingly or willfully misled by the
+dispatches. Every courtesy was shown to the departing German
+Ambassador by the Washington Government; safe conduct across the ocean
+was obtained for him from Great Britain; and he publicly expressed his
+acknowledgments. As to the German vessels, there were no seizures, and
+the only restraints imposed on the crews were those required by the
+immigration laws. Whatever the motive, the detention of Ambassador
+Gerard was so wanton a violation of law and usage as to constitute in
+itself an act of war.
+
+While Ambassador Gerard was held incommunicado in Berlin, his mail
+intercepted, his telephone cut off, and telegraphic facilities denied
+him, the German Government actually sought to parley with him by way
+of revising an old treaty to apply to existing conditions. Mr. Gerard,
+having ceased to hold ambassadorial powers after the breaking of
+relations, could not enter into any such negotiations; but then the
+German Government had never been concerned with legalities. It blandly
+asked him to sign a protocol, the main purpose of which was to protect
+Germans and their interests in the United States in the event of war.
+
+The proposed protocol, besides containing a formal reratification of
+the American-Prussian treaties of 1799 and 1828 regarding mutual
+treatment of nationals caught in either belligerent country in case of
+war, provided for some remarkable additions as a "special
+arrangement" should war be declared.
+
+Germans in the United States and Americans in Germany were to be
+entitled to conduct their businesses and continue their domicile
+unmolested, but could be excluded from fortified places and other
+military areas. Or if they chose, they were free to leave, with their
+personal property, except such as was contraband. If they remained
+they were to enjoy the exercise of their private rights in common with
+neutral residents. They were not to be transferred to concentration
+camps nor their property sequestered except under conditions applying
+to neutral property. Patent rights of the respective nationals in
+either country were not to be declared void nor be transferred to
+others. No contracts between Germans and Americans were to be canceled
+or suspended, nor were citizens of either country to be impeded in
+fulfilling their obligations arising thereunder. Finally Germany
+required that enemy merchant ships in either country should not be
+forced to leave port unless allowed a binding safe conduct by all the
+enemy sea powers.
+
+In short, Germany asked that in the event of war her nationals and her
+ships and commercial interests in the United States be regarded as on
+a neutral footing and exempt from all military law. They were to be as
+free and unrestricted as in peace time.
+
+Mr. Gerard refused to sign the protocol after he had ceased to
+exercise ambassadorial functions. Thereupon Count Montgelas, chief of
+the American department of the Foreign Office, hinted that his refusal
+to sign it might affect the status of Americans in Germany and their
+privilege of departure. The reference was to American press
+correspondents in Berlin, whose fate was apparently thought to weigh
+with American public opinion. This threat to detain newspaper
+representatives as supposedly important pieces on the diplomatic
+chessboard before war was declared brought a firm refusal from Mr.
+Gerard to yield to such pressure. He also expressed doubt whether the
+newspaper representatives could be utilized to urge acceptance of the
+protocol under pain of detention. Thenceforth nothing further was
+heard of the protocol. Germany was undoubtedly exercising duress in
+requiring Mr. Gerard to sign it, since his passports were withheld and
+a needless guard had been placed round the American Embassy.
+
+It appeared that the protocol had also been submitted to the State
+Department by the Swiss Minister in Washington. Secretary Lansing
+finally disposed of it. In a communication to Dr. Ritter he said the
+United States Government refused to modernize and extend the treaties
+as Germany proposed, and indicated that the Government held the
+treaties null and void since Germany herself had grossly violated her
+obligations under them. The treaty of 1828, for example, contained
+this clause governing freedom of maritime commerce of either of the
+contracting parties when the other was at war:
+
+"The free intercourse and commerce of the subjects or citizens of the
+party remaining neuter with the belligerent powers shall not be
+interrupted.
+
+"On the contrary, in that case, as in full peace, the vessels of the
+neutral party may navigate freely to and from the ports and on the
+coasts of the belligerent parties, free vessels making free goods,
+insomuch that all things shall be adjudged free which shall be on
+board any vessel belonging to the neutral party, although such things
+belong to an enemy of the other.
+
+"And the same freedom shall be extended to persons who shall be on
+board a free vessel, although they should be enemies to the other
+party, unless they be soldiers in actual service of such an enemy."
+
+Secretary Lansing pointed out another clause of equal import in the
+treaty of 1799, providing:
+
+"All persons belonging to any vessels of war, public or private, who
+shall molest or insult in any manner whatever the people, vessel, or
+effects of the other party, shall be responsible in their persons and
+property for damages and interests, sufficient security for which
+shall be given by all commanders of private armed vessels before they
+are commissioned."
+
+Germany was reminded of her violations of these stipulations in strong
+terms. Said Secretary Lansing:
+
+"Disregarding these obligations, the German Government has proclaimed
+certain zones of the high seas in which it declared without
+reservation that all ships, including those of neutrals, will be sunk,
+and in those zones German submarines have in fact, in accordance with
+this declaration, ruthlessly sunk merchant vessels and jeopardized or
+destroyed the lives of American citizens on board.
+
+"Moreover, since the severance of relations between the United States
+and Germany certain American citizens in Germany have been prevented
+from removing from the country. While this is not a violation of the
+terms of the treaties mentioned, it is a disregard of the reciprocal
+liberty of intercourse between the two countries in times of peace and
+cannot be taken otherwise than as an indication of the purpose on the
+part of the German Government to disregard, in the event of war, the
+similar liberty of action provided for in Article 23 of the treaty of
+1799--the very article which it is now proposed to interpret and
+supplement almost wholly in the interests of the large number of
+German subjects residing in the United States and enjoying in their
+persons or property the protection of the United States Government."
+
+In addition to declining to enter into the special protocol Germany
+proposed, Secretary Lansing significantly added:
+
+"The Government is seriously considering whether or not the treaty of
+1828 and the revised articles of the treaties of 1785 and 1799 have
+not been in effect abrogated by the German Government's flagrant
+violations of their provisions, for it would be manifestly unjust and
+inequitable to require one party to an agreement to observe its
+stipulations and to permit the other party to disregard them.
+
+"It would appear that the mutuality of the undertaking has been
+destroyed by the conduct of the German authorities."
+
+The meaning of this passage was that as Germany was deemed to have
+abrogated the treaties by sinking American ships, the German vessels
+immured in American harbors would be under no treaty protection should
+war be declared, and would be immediately seized by the American
+Government. Germany had thus destroyed the protection they would have
+received in case of war.
+
+The intimidation exercised on Ambassador Gerard to obtain his
+signature to the protocol and its submission by Dr. Ritter to
+Secretary Lansing showed that Germany was nervously concerned about
+safeguarding her interests in the United States and feared for the
+safety of her nationals in the pending crisis. Ample assurances
+presently came to Berlin, however, that, during the diplomatic break
+at any rate, the American Government would not resort to Teutonic
+methods. Count von Bernstorff was safe; no ships had been seized; no
+crews arrested; no other German persons or interests molested.
+Thereupon Ambassador Gerard and an entourage of some 120 Americans
+received their passports and left the German capital on February 10,
+1917, for the United States via Switzerland and Spain.
+
+Germany was less ready to release the Americans known as the
+_Yarrowdale_ prisoners. Her Government still appeared to fear that the
+crews of German warships in American ports were in danger, and
+evidently wanted hostages at hand lest any trouble befell them at the
+hands of the American military authorities. Secretary Lansing demanded
+their release on February 3, 1917, when relations were broken. Germany
+assented, then withdrew her assent. A second request for their freedom
+and for an explanation of their continued detention was made on
+February 13, 1917. At this date the men had been held as prisoners of
+war for forty-four days contrary to international law. After being
+captured from Allied vessels sunk by the German raider, they were
+taken before a prize court at Swinemunde, when their status was
+determined. Neutral merchant seamen, according to Germany, must be
+held as prisoners of war because they had served and taken pay on
+armed enemy vessels. Germany disclosed for the first time that she was
+treating armed merchantmen as ships of war and regarded neutral seamen
+found on such vessels as combatants. The German raider had captured
+altogether 103 subjects of neutral states. They were not imprisoned
+because they had committed hostile acts, which would have justified
+their detention. They were penalized for being on enemy vessels. The
+American Government insisted that Germany had no right to hold any
+Americans as war prisoners unless they committed hostile acts. Germany
+had no answer to make to that contention. But she did not free them.
+"They will be released just as soon as we learn of the fate of the
+German crews in American ports," said Herr Zimmermann, Foreign
+Secretary.
+
+[Illustration: Woodrow Wilson was inaugurated President of the United
+States, March 4, 1913; was reelected and began his second term March
+4, 1917. He signed the Declaration of War, April 6, 1917.]
+
+Germany had already been assured that the crews were in no danger. The
+conviction grew that she meant to detain the _Yarrowdale_ seamen as
+hostages pending a determination of the crisis as to peace or war. The
+Administration had been inclined to subordinate all collateral issues
+between the two countries to the major and vital one created by the
+submarine peril; but the plight of these seamen caused their case to
+become one of the chief factors in the crisis. Germany seemed to
+conclude that their continued detention, in view of the indignation
+roused in Washington by such a wanton violation of international law,
+to say nothing of the open insult hurled at the dignity and good faith
+of the United States, would only precipitate war. On February 16,
+1917, came a report that the men had been released. This proved to be
+a false alarm. On February 26, 1917, Berlin notified that their
+release, although ordered "some time ago," had been deferred because
+an infectious disease had been discovered in their concentration camp
+at Brandenburg. They were consequently placed in quarantine "in the
+interest of neutral countries." On March 2, 1917, Dr. Ritter informed
+Secretary Lansing that the transfer of the American sailors to the
+frontier had been arranged but delayed until the quarantine ended. On
+March 8, 1917, they were finally released from quarantine and sent to
+the Swiss frontier. Members of other neutral crews were sent home
+through various frontier towns. All were said to have been penniless
+and in rags. Apart from the necessary quarantine (a Spanish doctor
+found typhus in the camp), the record stands as an example of
+Germany's gift for unscrupulous temporizing and for using
+procrastination as a club to hold the United States at bay when on the
+brink of war.
+
+The Reichstag met shortly after Germany had compulsorily disposed of
+her connections with the United States. An expected address by the
+kaiser's Chancellor, Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg, had been deferred until
+February 27, 1917, when a tardy official recognition was made of the
+American action.
+
+The most deliberate official notice of the course the United States
+would take was served on the German Government in the President's
+ultimatum arising out of the torpedoing of the _Sussex_ early in 1916.
+If Germany continued her ruthless sea warfare, the President warned
+her, "the Government of the United States can have no choice but to
+sever diplomatic relations with the German Empire altogether." Now the
+time had come for the President to go even beyond that step. The day
+before the Reichstag listened to the Chancellor's complaint the voice
+of the American President was again heard in the Capitol at
+Washington.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIII
+
+ARMED NEUTRALITY
+
+
+President Wilson addressed Congress in joint session, February 26,
+1917, asking authority to use the armed forces of the United States to
+protect American rights on the high seas. He desired to establish a
+state of "armed neutrality." This was not a request for a declaration
+of war, nor was it an act of war. It was to prepare the United States
+to resist what might be warlike acts by Germany.
+
+Reviewing the maritime conditions caused by Germany's submarine order
+of January 31, 1917, which produced the diplomatic rupture, the
+President disclosed an unexpected view--that Germany's misdeeds in
+carrying out her new decree had not, in his opinion, so far provided
+the "overt act" for which the United States was waiting.
+
+"Our own commerce has suffered, is suffering," he said, "rather in
+apprehension than in fact, rather because so many of our ships are
+timidly keeping to their home ports, than because American ships have
+been sunk....
+
+"In sum, therefore, the situation we find ourselves in with regard to
+the actual conduct of the German submarine warfare against commerce
+and its effects upon our own ships and people is substantially the
+same that it was when I addressed you on February 3, except for the
+tying up of our shipping in our own ports because of the unwillingness
+of our shipowners to risk their vessels at sea without insurance or
+adequate protection, and the very serious congestion of our commerce,
+which has eventuated, a congestion which is growing rapidly more and
+more serious every day.
+
+"This in itself might presently accomplish, in effect, what the new
+German submarine orders were meant to accomplish, so far as we are
+concerned. We can only say, therefore, that the overt act which I have
+ventured to hope the German commanders would in fact avoid has not
+occurred."
+
+But he felt that American immunity thus far had been more a matter of
+happy accident than due to any consideration of German submarine
+commanders. Nevertheless, he pointed out, it would be foolish to deny
+that the situation was fraught with the gravest possibilities and
+dangers. Hence he sought from the Congress "full and immediate
+assurance of the authority which I may need at any moment to
+exercise."
+
+"No doubt," he proceeded, "I already possess that authority without
+special warrant of law, by the plain implication of my constitutional
+duties and powers, but I prefer in the present circumstances not to
+act upon general implication. I wish to feel that the authority and
+the power of the Congress are behind me in whatever it may become
+necessary for me to do. We are jointly the servants of the people and
+must act together and in their spirit, so far as we can divine and
+interpret it....
+
+"I am not now proposing or contemplating war or any steps that need
+lead to it. I merely request that you will accord me by your own vote
+and definite bestowal the means and the authority to safeguard in
+practice the right of a great people who are at peace and who are
+desirous of exercising none but the rights of peace to follow the
+pursuit of peace in quietness and good will--rights recognized time
+out of mind by all the civilized nations of the world.
+
+"I believe that the people will be willing to trust me to act with
+restraint, with prudence, and in the true spirit of amity and good
+faith that they have themselves displayed throughout these trying
+months, and it is in that belief that I request that you will
+authorize me to supply our merchant ships with defensive arms should
+that become necessary, and with the means of using them, and to employ
+any other instrumentalities or methods that may be necessary and
+adequate to protect our ships and our people in their legitimate and
+peaceful pursuits on the seas."
+
+Even before the President addressed Congress the "overt act" had been
+committed by Germany. News of the sinking of the _Laconia_, already
+mentioned, was published synchronously with the delivery of his
+message and subjected to correction his allusion to the noncommittal
+of any overt act by German submarines. The President, in fact, decided
+later that the destruction of the Cunarder without warning and at
+night, in rough seas, with the loss of American lives, constituted a
+"clear-cut" violation of the pledge the German Government gave to the
+United States after the _Lusitania_ and _Sussex_ sinkings. But it was
+felt that the next step in meeting the situation now rested with
+Congress.
+
+The Senate and House immediately set about framing bills conforming,
+as far as the President's opponents permitted, to his request. There
+was no time to be lost. Congress expired on March 4, 1917, by
+constitutional limitation and the President had delayed submitting his
+message until the last moment, so that Congress had only eight days to
+debate and agree to a measure that excited the pacifists' bitter
+animosity in both Houses, as well as the opposition of other
+legislators who feared that the authority the President sought would
+encroach on Congress's war-making prerogative.
+
+In the House of Representatives the opposition dwindled to negligible
+proportions. Public sentiment had been stirred by the sinking of the
+_Laconia_ and by certain revelations the Administration published
+disclosing German overtures to Mexico in the event of war, the
+character of which will be chronicled later. Sensitive to the public
+pulse, the House was eager to receive the Armed-Ship Bill when it was
+reported on February 28, 1917, by the Foreign Affairs Committee, which
+had occupied a couple of days in shaping it. A stirring debate on the
+bill took place the next day (March 1) under cloture rule, and before
+the House adjourned that night it had passed the measure by a
+substantial vote of 403 to 13. The bill was at once sent to the
+Senate, and was substituted for the Senate Committee's bill, whose
+provisions conferred larger powers on the President. Expecting the
+Senate to pass its own bill as a substitute, it was the intention of
+the House leaders to accept the Senate's measure when it came to them
+for passage. The measure, however, never passed the Senate. Through
+the wide latitude allowed for unlimited debate a handful of Senators
+opposed to any action against Germany succeeded in effectually
+blocking the bill. The Senate sat late into the night of February 28,
+1917, and took up the Armed-Ship Bill the next day. Senator La
+Follette, who led the successful filibuster against the bill, objected
+to its consideration, and, under the rule of unanimous consent, would
+only allow the bill to proceed on condition that no attempt was made
+to pass it before the next day. A precious day was lost, which sealed
+the fate of the measure. The bill came before the Senate for
+continuous debate on March 2, 1917, when it got into a parliamentary
+tangle. Debate was resumed on Saturday, March 3, 1917. Only a day and
+a half of the session now remained. Senator Stone who, though in
+charge of the bill, was opposed to it, found his position untenable
+and surrendered its conduct to Senator Hitchcock. This course enabled
+him to join the opponents of the bill openly by contending for an
+amendment excluding munition ships from armed protection--a revival of
+the arms embargo he had urged before. But the main obstruction to the
+bill came from a group of Western senators, who balked every effort
+for limiting debate or setting a time for a vote. As midnight neared
+the Administration's supporters saw that its chances of passing before
+Congress expired at noon the next day, Sunday, March 4, 1917, were of
+the slightest, and, anxious that the country should know where they
+stood, these senators, to the number of seventy-five, signed a
+manifesto reading as follows:
+
+"The undersigned, United States senators, favor the passage of Senate
+bill 8322, to authorize the President of the United States to arm
+American merchant vessels.
+
+"A similar bill already has passed the House of Representatives by a
+vote of 403 to 13.
+
+"Under the rules of the Senate, allowing unlimited debate, it now
+appears to be impossible to obtain a vote prior to noon March 4, 1917,
+when the session of Congress expires.
+
+"We desire the statement entered in the record to establish the fact
+that the Senate favors the legislation and would pass it if a vote
+could be obtained."
+
+The Senate continued sitting until the stroke of twelve noon on March
+4, 1917. The President was in the Capitol receiving reports of the
+course of his opponents' tactics. A vote not having been reached, the
+Armed-Ship Bill went down to defeat, having been talked to death, and
+the Senate automatically adjourned with the expiration of the last
+session of the Sixty-fourth Congress. The bill was assured of passage,
+had a vote been permitted, by 75 to 12. The twelve obstructionists
+were Senators La Follette of Wisconsin, Norris of Nebraska, Cummins of
+Iowa, Stone of Missouri, Gronna of North Dakota, Kirby of Arkansas,
+Vardaman of Mississippi, O'Gorman of New York, Works of California,
+Jones of Washington, Clapp of Minnesota, Lane of Oregon--seven
+Republicans and five Democrats.
+
+The situation produced an indignant protest from the President, who,
+in a public statement, described the termination of the session by
+constitutional limitation as disclosing "a situation unparalleled in
+the history of the country, perhaps unparalleled in the history of any
+modern government. In the immediate presence of a crisis fraught with
+more subtle and far-reaching possibilities of national danger than any
+other the Government has known within the whole history of its
+international relations, the Congress has been unable to act either to
+safeguard the country or to vindicate the elementary rights of its
+citizens."
+
+"The Senate," he proceeded, "has no rules by which debate can be
+limited or brought to an end, no rules by which dilatory tactics of
+any kind can be prevented. A single member can stand in the way of
+action, if he have but the physical endurance. The result in this case
+is a complete paralysis alike of the legislative and of the executive
+branches of the Government.
+
+"Although, as a matter of fact, the nation and the representatives of
+the nation stand back of the Executive with unprecedented unanimity
+and spirit, the impression made abroad will, of course, be that it is
+not so and that other governments may act as they please without fear
+that this Government can do anything at all. We cannot explain. The
+explanation is incredible. The Senate of the United States is the only
+legislative body in the world which cannot act when its majority is
+ready for action. A little group of willful men, representing no
+opinion but their own, have rendered the great Government of the
+United States helpless and contemptible.
+
+"The remedy? There is but one remedy. The only remedy is that the
+rules of the Senate shall be so altered that it can act. The country
+can be relied upon to draw the moral. I believe that the Senate can be
+relied on to supply the means of action and save the country from
+disaster."
+
+The new Senate of the Sixty-fifth Congress met in extraordinary
+session at noon on March 6, 1917, when both parties took steps to
+frame a revision of the rules for preventing filibustering. Both
+caucuses agreed upon a cloture rule empowering the Senate to bring the
+debate on any measure to an end by a two-thirds vote, limiting
+speeches to one hour each, but sixteen senators must first make the
+request in the form of a signed motion presented two days previously.
+After several hours' discussion this rule passed the Senate on March
+8, 1917. Thus the right to unlimited debate, which had been regarded
+as the most characteristic prerogative of senators, was at last
+restrained after enjoying a freedom of nearly one hundred and ten
+years.
+
+The recalcitrant senators who prevented the passage of the Armed-Ship
+Bill were the subject of bitter criticism from the press and public
+throughout the country, which echoed, but in much stronger terms, the
+President's denunciation of them. There was none to do them reverence
+in the United States. The only meed of praise they received came from
+Germany. The essence of editorial opinion in that country regarding
+their action, according to a Berlin message, was that "so long as
+there are men in the American Congress who boldly refuse to have their
+country involved in the European slaughter merely for the sake of
+gratifying Wilson's vainglorious ambition, there is hope that the
+common sense of the American people will assert itself and that they
+will not permit the appalling insanity to spread to the new world that
+holds the old world in a merciless grip."
+
+The German press, like the senators whom it eulogized, was mistaken in
+supposing that the President had been thwarted by the failure of the
+Armed-Ship Bill. Certainly he remained in doubt as to his next course.
+He had told Congress that he believed he had the power to arm merchant
+ships without its authority, but did not care to act on general
+implication. Now he was faced with the duty of ascertaining definitely
+where his freedom of action lay, since Congress had impeded, instead
+of facilitating, his conduct of the crisis with Germany. An old act,
+passed in 1819, governing piracy at sea, had been unearthed, and at
+first sight its terms were read as preventing the President from
+arming merchant ships. The law advisers of the Government, Secretary
+Lansing and Attorney General Gregory, examined this act and decided
+that it was obsolete. They were of opinion that it did not apply to
+the existing situation. The statute forbade American merchantmen from
+defending themselves against the commissioned vessels of a nation with
+which the United States was at "amity"; but they could resist by force
+any attacks made on them by any other armed vessels. In short, it
+legalized resistance to pirates. The word "amity" pre-supposed
+friendly diplomatic relations as well as a normal condition of
+traffic and commerce on the high seas in its application to the armed
+vessels of other nations. The provision forbidding conflict with them
+by American traders was intended primarily to prevent private citizens
+from embarrassing the Government's foreign relations. Now it was held
+that Germany's denial to Americans of the rights of the high seas was
+inconsistent with true amity, and caused her war vessels to lose, so
+far as the United States was concerned, their right to immunity from
+attack, both under international law and under this municipal act,
+which was viewed as superseded and void in its application to German
+war craft.
+
+This decision disposed of an obstacle which had placed the President
+in a dilemma. It was true he could go to Congress again; but immediate
+action was imperative. Armed neutrality, under the President's powers
+as commander in chief of the army and navy, was thereupon determined.
+Every merchant ship which so desired would be provided with guns and
+naval gunners to operate them. Foreign governments were notified of
+this action in an executive memorandum which read:
+
+"In view of the announcement of the Imperial German Government on
+January 81, 1917, that all ships, those of neutrals included, met
+within certain zones of the high seas, would be sunk without any
+precaution taken for the safety of the persons on board, and without
+the exercise of visit and search, the Government of the United States
+has determined to place upon all American merchant vessels sailing
+through the barred areas an armed guard for the protection of the
+vessels and the lives of the persons on board."
+
+The President meantime was also confronted with the necessity of
+calling the new Congress into extra session, not so much to gain its
+assent to armed neutrality (since he had determined to act without
+it), but as a war expedient to support the measures projected against
+Germany. Owing to the Senate filibuster the previous Congress had been
+unable to pass appropriations exceeding $500,000,000, more than half
+of which was needed for the army. The new Congress was accordingly
+convened, to meet on April 16, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIV
+
+GERMANY'S BID TO MEXICO
+
+
+While Congress was in the midst of its consideration of the Armed-Ship
+Bill, the Administration amazed the country by revealing through the
+press that Germany had made overtures to Mexico for an alliance with
+that country in the event of war with the United States, and also
+sought to involve Japan.
+
+This disclosure was due to American secret service agents, who had
+intercepted a communication addressed by Herr Zimmermann, the German
+Foreign Secretary, to Herr von Eckhardt, the German Minister at Mexico
+City, reading as follows:
+
+ "BERLIN, January 19, 1917.
+
+ "On the 1st of February we intend to begin submarine warfare
+ unrestricted. In spite of this, it is our intention to endeavor
+ to keep neutral the United States of America.
+
+ "If this attempt is not successful, we propose an alliance on the
+ following basis with Mexico: That we shall make war together and
+ together make peace. We shall give general financial support, and
+ it is understood that Mexico is to reconquer the lost territory
+ in New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona. The details are left to you
+ for settlement.
+
+ "You are instructed to inform the President of Mexico of the
+ above in the greatest confidence as soon as it is certain that
+ there will be an outbreak of war with the United States, and
+ suggest that the President of Mexico, on his own initiative,
+ should communicate with Japan suggesting adherence at once to
+ this plan. At the same time, offer to mediate between Germany and
+ Japan.
+
+ "Please call to the attention of the President of Mexico that the
+ employment of ruthless submarine warfare now promises to compel
+ England to make peace in a few months.
+
+ "ZIMMERMAN."
+
+The Administration was in possession of this document, and achieved a
+dramatic coup in exposing its contents just as important war
+legislation was pending in Congress. The immediate effect of the
+revelation was that the Armed-Ship Bill passed the House of
+Representatives by the overwhelming majority recorded in the previous
+chapter. The Senate was no less astonished; but its attitude was one
+of incredulity and produced a demand to the State Department vouching
+for the document's authenticity and demanding other information.
+Secretary Lansing assured it that the letter was _bona fide_, but
+declined to say more.
+
+The letter was transmitted to Von Eckhardt through Count von
+Bernstorff, then German Ambassador at Washington, and now homeward
+bound to Germany under a safe conduct obtained from his enemies by the
+country against which he was plotting war. It came into the
+President's hands a few days before it was published on March 1, 1917,
+and provided a telling comment on Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg's
+declaration that the United States had placed an interpretation on the
+new submarine decree "never intended by Germany" and that Germany had
+promoted and honored friendly relations with the United States "as an
+heirloom from Frederick the Great." Its disclosure was viewed as a
+sufficing answer to the German Chancellor's plaint that the United
+States had "brusquely" broken off relations without giving "authentic"
+reasons for its action.
+
+The bearings of the proposal to Mexico were admirably stated by the
+Associated Press as follows:
+
+"The document supplies the missing link to many separate chains of
+circumstances which, until now, have seemed to lead to no definite
+point. It sheds new light upon the frequently reported but indefinable
+movements of the Mexican Government to couple its situation with the
+friction between the United States and Japan.
+
+"It adds another chapter to the celebrated report of Jules Cambon,
+French Ambassador in Berlin before the war, for Germany's world-wide
+plans for stirring up strife on every continent where they might aid
+her in the struggle for world domination which she dreamed was close
+at hand.
+
+"It adds a climax to the operations of Count von Bernstorff and the
+German Embassy in this country, which have been colored with passport
+frauds, charges of dynamite plots, and intrigue, the full extent of
+which never has been published.
+
+"It gives new credence to persistent reports of submarine bases on
+Mexican territory in the Gulf of Mexico. It takes cognizance of a fact
+long recognized by American army chiefs, that if Japan ever undertook
+to invade the United States it probably would be through Mexico, over
+the border and into the Mississippi Valley to split the country in
+two.
+
+"It recalls that Count von Bernstorff, when his passports were handed
+to him, was very reluctant to return to Germany, but expressed a
+preference for an asylum in Cuba. It gives a new explanation to the
+repeated arrests on the border of men charged by American military
+authorities with being German intelligence agents.
+
+"Last of all, it seems to show a connection with General Carranza's
+recent proposal to neutrals that exports of food and munitions to the
+Entente Allies be cut off, and an intimation that he might stop the
+supply of oil, so vital to the British navy, which is exported from
+the Tampico fields."
+
+A series of repudiations followed. The Mexican Government, through
+various officials except President-elect Carranza himself, denied all
+knowledge of Germany's proposal. The German Minister at Mexico City
+protested that he had never received any instructions from Secretary
+Zimmermann, which appeared to be the case, since they were
+intercepted. From Tokyo came the assurance of Viscount Motono,
+Japanese Foreign Minister, that Japan had received no proposal from
+either Germany or Mexico for an alliance against the United States. He
+scouted the idea as ridiculous, since it was based on the "outrageous
+presumption that Japan would abandon her allies." Secretary Lansing
+did not believe Japan had any knowledge of Germany's overtures to
+Mexico, nor that she would consider approaches made by any enemy, and
+was likewise confident that Mexico would not be a party to any
+agreement which affected her relations with the United States.
+
+The Berlin Government impenitently admitted the transmission of the
+Eckhardt letter and justified the alliance with Mexico it proposed.
+The Budget Committee of the Reichstag, unequivocally and by a
+unanimous vote, indorsed the initiation of the ill-starred project as
+being within the legitimate scope of military precautions. Addressing
+the Reichstag, Herr Zimmermann thus defended his action:
+
+"We were looking out for all of us, in the event of there being the
+prospect of war with America. It was a natural and justified
+precaution. I am not sorry that, through its publication in America,
+it also became known in Japan.
+
+"For the dispatch of these instructions a secure way was chosen which
+at present is at Germany's disposal. How the Americans came into
+possession of the text which went to America in special secret code we
+do not know. That these instructions should have fallen into American
+hands is a misfortune, but that does not alter the fact that the step
+was necessary for our patriotic interests.
+
+"Least of all are they in America justified in being excited about our
+action. It would be erroneous to suppose that the step made a
+particularly deep impression abroad. It is regarded as what it
+is--justifiable defensive action in the event of war."
+
+The Mexican Government, despite its denials, remained under the
+suspicion that it had secret dealings with Germany. Toward the close
+of 1916 circumstantial rumors were afloat that German sea raiders,
+who were then roaming the South Atlantic, had a base somewhere on the
+coast of Mexico. The Allied Powers were persuaded that if this was
+true the raiders could not obtain supplies from such a source without
+the knowledge or connivance of the Mexican authorities. The British
+charge at Mexico City thereupon presented a note to the Carranza
+Government stating that if it was discovered that Mexican neutrality
+had thus been violated, the Allies would take "drastic measures" to
+end the situation. The retort of the Mexican Foreign Minister, Senor
+Aquilar, almost insolent in tone, was to the effect that it was the
+business of the Allies to keep German submarines out of western
+waters, and that if they were not kept out Mexico would adopt whatever
+course the circumstances might dictate.
+
+An allusion has previously been made to a peace proposal submitted by
+General Carranza. Its character was such as to point to the presence
+of German influences in Mexico, and the impression was created that it
+was made solely to embarrass the United States. Shortly after the
+American severance of relations with Germany, General Carranza
+circulated an identical note to the neutral powers, including the
+United States, asking them to join Mexico in an international
+agreement to prohibit the exportation of munitions and foodstuffs to
+the belligerents in Europe. Such an embargo, General Carranza piously
+pointed out in florid terms, would compel peace. The inference was
+plain. Only the Central Powers would benefit by such a step. If the
+note was not directly inspired by German intrigue it certainly
+suggested to the other neutrals a practical union against the Entente
+Allies. The proposal was contrary to international law and to the
+principles of neutrality as laid down by the United States to the
+German and Austro-Hungarian Governments.
+
+The suspected complicity of Mexico as a tool of Germany, however,
+faded before the inconceivable folly of the latter in gravely
+proposing that Mexico should attempt to regain the "lost territories"
+of New Mexico, Arizona, and Texas. The American press was almost
+united in declaring that Germany had committed an act of war against
+the United States. Certainly her exposed machinations brought
+hostilities perceptibly nearer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXV
+
+A STATE OF WAR
+
+
+Armed neutrality proved to be a passing phase in a rapidly developing
+situation. When the President on March 9, 1917, called on the new
+Congress to assemble on April 16, his course was solely dictated by
+existing conditions, which required legislative support, by the
+passage of adequate appropriations, for carrying out the defensive
+measures decided upon. But armed neutrality never became a reality. As
+a certain foretoken of war it could not be sustained. Not a naval gun
+had found its way on to the bow or stern of a merchant ship before the
+depredations of Germany forced the United States to reconsider its
+predetermined course of defensive armament.
+
+"We make absolutely no distinction in sinking neutral ships within the
+war zone," Herr Zimmermann had warned. "Our determination is
+unshakable since that is the only way to end the war."
+
+This was an intimation that American vessels, like those of other
+neutrals, must comply with the U-boat rulings or take the
+consequences. Hence more American vessels were sunk, Germany pursuing
+her evil way regardless of the American attitude.
+
+On March 12, 1917, the unarmed steamer _Algonquin_, with a crew of
+twenty-seven, of whom ten were Americans, was shelled and sunk without
+warning by a German submarine. The crew succeeded in escaping.
+
+A few days later the sinking of three unarmed American vessels, the
+_City of Memphis_, _Illinois_, and _Vigilancia_, was announced. The
+first and second named ships were returning to the United States in
+ballast; hence their destruction could not be justified on the ground
+that they were carrying freight for the Allies. The _City of Memphis_
+was first shelled and then torpedoed off the Irish coast on March 17,
+1917. Her crew of fifty-seven escaped in five boats and were picked up
+by a steamer. The _Illinois_ was torpedoed the next day. The
+_Vigilancia_ was similarly sunk on March 16, 1917, by a submarine
+which did not appear on the surface. Fifteen of the crew, including
+five Americans, were lost.
+
+These sinkings occasioned gratification in Germany. Count Reventlow, a
+notable German publicist, thus welcomed them in the "Deutsche
+Tageszeitung":
+
+"It is good that American ships have been obliged to learn that the
+German prohibition is effective, and that there is no question of
+distinctive treatment for the United States. In view of such losses,
+there is only one policy for the United States, as for the small
+European maritime powers, namely, to retain their ships in their own
+ports as long as the war lasts."
+
+Another German press comment was that the sinkings were certain to
+produce special satisfaction throughout the empire.
+
+German contempt for American feeling could no further go. A cabinet
+meeting held on March 20, 1917, disclosed that the President's
+colleagues, even reputed pacifists like Secretaries Daniels and Baker,
+were a unit in regarding a state of armed neutrality as inadequate to
+meet the serious situation. The President was confronted with the
+necessity of immediately taking more drastic action rather than
+continuing to pursue measures of passive defense against the submarine
+peril represented by arming ships. The cabinet's demand was for an
+earlier convocation of Congress and a declaration that a state of war
+existed between the United States and Germany. The President listened,
+and that evening attended a theater supposedly to divert and prepare
+his mind for coping with the gravest of problems. Events proved that
+he had already determined his course.
+
+Armed neutrality was a delusive phrase and misrepresented actual
+conditions; it merely glozed over a state of undeclared hostility and
+deceived no one. Yet it had its adherents; they wanted to give it a
+fair trial before discarding the pretense that it existed. The
+Government, they said, should wait and see how armed ships fared at
+the hands of German submarines. If they proved equal to encounters
+with U-boats, or, better still, if the U-boats did not dare to attack
+them, there would be no occasion for further action. The proposal
+would not bear scrutiny since it was now known that Germany regarded
+armed merchantmen as ships of war and their crews as combatants.
+
+The next day, March 21, 1917, the President issued a proclamation
+calling upon Congress to assemble on April 2, instead of April 16, "to
+receive a communication concerning grave matters of national policy."
+The national emergency which had been in existence since Germany began
+sinking American ships in pursuance of her unrestricted submarine
+policy was now acknowledged. It would be the function of Congress, if
+the President so advised, to declare that a state of war existed
+between the Government of the United States and that of the German
+Empire. And a waiting and willing nation was left in no doubt that war
+there would be. The cabinet had become a war cabinet and the country
+warlike, goaded to retaliatory action by the wanton deeds of the most
+cruel government of this or any other age.
+
+As the spokesman of an imperialistic regime preserving its accustomed
+role of a wolf in sheep's clothing, the German Chancellor addressed
+the Reichstag on March 29, 1917, and took cognizance of the critical
+situation in the United States in these terms:
+
+"Within the next few days the directors of the American nation will be
+convened by President Wilson for an extraordinary session of Congress
+in order to decide the question of war or peace between the American
+and German nations.
+
+"Germany never had the slightest intention of attacking the United
+States of America, and does not have such intention now. It never
+desired war against the United States of America, and does not desire
+it to-day. How did these things develop?
+
+"Why, England declined to raise her blockade, which had been called
+illegal and indefensible even by President Wilson and Secretary
+Lansing," said the Chancellor. "Worse than that, she had intensified
+it. Worse than all, she had rejected Germany's 'peace' offers and
+proclaimed her war objects, which aimed at the annihilation of the
+Teutonic Powers. Hence unrestricted sea warfare followed.
+
+"If the American nation considers this," concluded the Chancellor, "a
+cause for which to declare war against the German nation, with which
+it has lived in peace for more than one hundred years, if this action
+warrants an increase of bloodshed, we shall not have to bear the
+responsibility for it. The German nation, which feels neither hatred
+nor hostility against the United States of America, shall also bear
+and overcome this."
+
+The march of events went on irresistibly. At 8.35 o'clock on the
+evening of Monday, April 2, 1917, President Wilson appeared before a
+joint session of the Senate and House of Representatives. He had
+addressed the Congress in person several times during his terms of
+office, but never under circumstances or in a setting more dramatic.
+The streets leading to the Capitol were packed with vast throngs.
+White searchlights etched the dome and the pillars against the sky,
+revealing the Stars and Stripes waving in the breeze on the flagstaff
+above the dome. Two troops of United States cavalry in dress uniform,
+with sabers drawn, formed a guard round the House approaches. Hundreds
+of police, in uniform and in plain clothes, were scattered along the
+route followed by the President's automobile from the White House.
+Inside the House, which had been in almost continuous session all day,
+the members assembled to receive the President. The senators appeared
+carrying little American flags. The Diplomatic Corps, the whole
+Supreme Court--in fact, the entire personnel of the Government,
+legislative, judicial, and executive--gathered to hear the head of the
+American nation present its indictment against the Imperial Government
+of Germany.
+
+The President was visibly nervous. He was pale. His voice was neither
+strong nor clear. He appeared to be deeply affected by the epochal and
+awesome character of his task. His distinguished audience listened in
+profound silence as he stated America's case without bluster and
+without rancor. The burden of his address was a request that the House
+and Senate recognize that Germany had been making war on the United
+States and that they agree to his recommendations, which included a
+declaration that a state of war existed, that universal military
+service be instituted, that a preliminary army of 500,000 be raised,
+and that the United States at once cooperate with the Allied Powers as
+a belligerent in every way that would operate to effect the defeat of
+Germany as a disturber of the world's peace.
+
+In adopting ruthless submarine warfare, the President told Congress,
+Germany had swept every restriction aside:
+
+"Vessels of every kind, whatever their flag, their character, their
+cargo, their destination, their errand, have been ruthlessly sent to
+the bottom without warning and without thought of help or mercy for
+those on board, the vessels of friendly neutrals along with those of
+belligerents. Even hospital ships and ships carrying relief to the
+sorely bereaved and stricken people of Belgium, though the latter were
+provided with safe conduct through the proscribed areas by the German
+Government itself and were distinguished by unmistakable marks of
+identity, have been sunk with the same reckless lack of compassion or
+of principle.
+
+"It is a war against all nations. American ships have been sunk,
+American lives taken, in ways which it has stirred us very deeply to
+learn of, but the ships and people of other neutral and friendly
+nations have been sunk and overwhelmed in the waters in the same way.
+There has been no discrimination.
+
+"The challenge is to all mankind. Each nation must decide for itself
+how it will meet it."
+
+Here the President referred to the short-lived expedient of armed
+neutrality adopted to meet the challenge:
+
+"When I addressed the Congress on the 26th of February last I thought
+that it would suffice to assert our neutral rights with arms, our
+right to use the seas against unlawful interference, our right to keep
+our people safe against unlawful violence. But armed neutrality, it
+now appears, is impracticable.
+
+"The German Government denies the right of neutrals to use arms at all
+within the areas of the sea which it has proscribed, even in the
+defense of rights which no modern publicist has ever before questioned
+their right to defend. The intimation is conveyed that the armed
+guards which we have placed on our merchant ships will be treated as
+beyond the pale of law and subject to be dealt with as pirates would
+be. Armed neutrality is ineffectual enough at best; in such
+circumstances and in the face of such pretensions it is worse than
+ineffectual; it is likely only to produce what it was meant to
+prevent; it is practically certain to draw us into the war without
+either the rights or the effectiveness of belligerents. There is one
+choice we cannot make, we are incapable of making; we will not choose
+the path of submission--"
+
+The President's audience had listened in silence up to this point.
+There was more of the sentence; but Congress did not wait to hear it.
+At the word "submission," Chief Justice White of the Supreme Court
+raised his hands in a resounding clap, which was the signal for a
+deafening roar of approval alike from congressmen, senators, and the
+occupants of the crowded galleries.
+
+"We will not choose the path of submission," repeated the President,
+"and suffer the most sacred rights of our nation and our people to be
+ignored or violated. The wrongs against which we now array ourselves
+are no common wrongs; they cut to the very roots of human life."
+
+Then came the presentation of the only alternate course the United
+States could take:
+
+"With a profound sense of the solemn and even tragical character of
+the step I am taking and of the grave responsibilities which it
+involves, but in unhesitating obedience to what I deem my
+constitutional duty, I advise that the Congress declare the recent
+course of the Imperial German Government to be in fact nothing less
+than war against the Government and people of the United States, that
+it formally accept the status of belligerent which has thus been
+thrust upon it, and that it take immediate steps not only to put the
+country in a more thorough state of defense, but also to exert all its
+power and employ all its resources to bring the Government of the
+German Empire to terms and end the war."
+
+Now what did this involve? The President thus answered the question:
+
+"It will involve the utmost practicable cooperation in counsel and
+action with the governments now at war with Germany, and, as incident
+to that, the extension to those governments of the most liberal
+financial credits, in order that our resources may so far as possible
+be added to theirs.
+
+"It will involve the organization and mobilization of all the material
+resources of the country to supply the materials of war and serve the
+incidental needs of the nation in the most abundant and yet the most
+economical and efficient way possible.
+
+"It will involve the immediate full equipment of the navy in all
+respects, but particularly in supplying it with the best means of
+dealing with the enemy's submarines.
+
+"It will involve the immediate addition to the armed forces of the
+United States, already provided for by law in case of war, of at least
+500,000 men, who should, in my opinion, be chosen upon the principle
+of universal liability to service, and also the authorization of
+subsequent additional increments of equal force so soon as they may be
+needed and can be handled in training.
+
+"It will involve also, of course, the granting of adequate credits to
+the Government, sustained, I hope, so far as they can equitably be
+sustained by the present generation, by well-conceived taxation."
+
+The President asked his countrymen to undertake a herculean task. But
+it was a necessary task--he deemed it an imperative one, and he knew
+it would be borne by willing shoulders. Without any object of gain, it
+was to vindicate the principles of peace and justice in the world as
+against selfish and autocratic power.
+
+Neutrality was no longer feasible when the menace to the world's peace
+and freedom lay in the existence of autocratic governments backed by
+organized force and controlled solely by their own will, not by the
+will of their peoples. The United States had seen the last of
+neutrality in such circumstances. The age demanded that the standards
+of conduct and responsibility for wrong done which were respected by
+individual citizens of civilized states should also be observed among
+nations and their governments.
+
+He acquitted the German people of blame. The United States had no
+quarrel with them. They were the pawns and tools of their autocratic
+rulers.
+
+"Self-governed nations," said the President, "do not fill their
+neighbor states with spies or set the course of intrigue to bring
+about some critical posture of affairs which will give them an
+opportunity to strike and make conquest. Such designs can be
+successfully worked out only under cover and where no one has the
+right to ask questions."
+
+What hope was there of a steadfast concert of peace with an autocratic
+government which could not be trusted to keep faith within it or
+observe its covenants? The President pointed out the futility of
+looking for any enduring concord with Germany as she was now governed:
+
+"One of the things that have served to convince us that the Prussian
+autocracy was not and could never be our friend is that from the very
+outset of the present war it has filled our unsuspecting communities,
+and even our offices of government, with spies and set criminal
+intrigues everywhere afoot against our national unity of counsel, our
+peace within and without, our industries and our commerce. Indeed, it
+is now evident that its spies were here even before the war began; and
+it is unhappily not a matter of conjecture, but a fact proved in our
+courts of justice, that the intrigues which have more than once come
+perilously near to disturbing the peace and dislocating the industries
+of the country, have been carried on at the instigation, with the
+support, and even under the personal direction of official agents of
+the Imperial Government accredited to the Government of the United
+States.
+
+"The selfish designs of a government that did what it pleased and told
+its people nothing," continued the President, "have played their part
+in serving to convince us at last that that government entertains no
+real friendship for us, and means to act against our peace and
+security at its convenience. That it means to stir up enemies against
+us at our very doors the intercepted note to the German Minister at
+Mexico City is eloquent evidence."
+
+The President then delivered the most striking passage of an oration
+that will rank as one of the greatest ever addressed to a listening
+world:
+
+"We are accepting this challenge of hostile purpose because we know
+that in such a Government, following such methods, we can never have a
+friend; and that in the presence of its organized power, always lying
+in wait to accomplish we know not what purpose, can be no assured
+security for the democratic governments of the world. We are now about
+to accept the gage of battle with this natural foe to liberty and
+shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of the nation to check and
+nullify its pretensions and its power. We are glad, now that we see
+the facts with no veil of false pretense about them, to fight thus for
+the ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation of its peoples,
+the German peoples included; for the rights of nations, great and
+small, and the privilege of men everywhere to choose their way of life
+and of obedience.
+
+"The world must be made safe for democracy. Its peace must be planted
+upon the tested foundations of political liberty. We have no selfish
+ends to serve. We desire no conquest, no dominion. We seek no
+indemnities for ourselves, no material compensation for the sacrifices
+we shall freely make. We are but one of the champions of the rights of
+mankind. We shall be satisfied when those rights have been made as
+secure as the faith and the freedom of nations can make them."
+
+The following morning, April 3, 1917, the Foreign Affairs Committees
+of both houses met at 10 o'clock to consider war resolutions
+introduced the previous evening in the House and Senate immediately
+after the President's address. They were identical in form and were
+submitted to textual alterations by the committees. That adopted by
+the Senate committee, and accepted by the House leaders, read as
+follows:
+
+"_Whereas_, The Imperial German Government has committed repeated acts
+of war against the Government and the people of the United States of
+America, therefore be it
+
+"_Resolved_, By the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
+States of America in Congress assembled, that the state of war between
+the United States and the Imperial German Government, which has thus
+been thrust upon the United States, is hereby formally declared and
+that the President be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to
+employ the entire naval and military forces of the United States and
+the resources of the Government to carry on war against the Imperial
+German Government; and, to bring the conflict to a successful
+termination, all of the resources of the country are hereby pledged by
+the Congress of the United States."
+
+Senator Stone, chairman of the Senate committee, alone opposed its
+adoption. It was at once reported to the Senate, only to meet
+objection from Senator La Follette, who demanded the "regular order,"
+that is, that the resolution, under the rule any member could invoke
+in order to postpone the consideration of important legislation, be
+withheld for one day. His objection came when Senator Hitchcock, who
+was in charge of the resolution, asked for unanimous consent to a
+suspension of the rules for its immediate consideration. The Senate
+was obliged to submit to the Wisconsin senator's obstructive tactics;
+but Senator Martin, the Senate Democratic leader, rather than permit
+any other business to be transacted, promptly obtained an adjournment
+till the next day. It was determined that the Senate, on reassembling,
+should sit without rest, recess or intermission, and without
+considering any other matter until the war resolution was passed.
+Senator La Follette and other pro-German pacifists in the chamber were
+barred from interposing further obstacles, especially as the new
+cloture rule was now operative.
+
+The Senate assembled on April 4, 1917, in serious mien to carry out
+its task of passing the resolution before it could adjourn. It was a
+day of speechmaking and of historic utterances characterized by a
+moving earnestness of conviction. Orators of patriotic fervor came
+from senators who had before condemned any declaration of war as the
+greatest blunder the United States could commit. Others recounted the
+crimes of Germany against civilization, and, in face of these deeds,
+condemned any national unwillingness and cowardice to retaliate as
+showing a national degeneracy that was much worse than war.
+
+The debate ended shortly after 11 o'clock that night, having lasted
+thirteen hours. The resolution was thereupon put to the vote and
+passed by 82 to 6. The actual alignment was 90 to 6, as eight absent
+senators favored the resolution. The six opponents were Senators La
+Follette of Wisconsin, Gronna of North Dakota, Norris of Nebraska,
+Stone of Missouri, Lane of Oregon, and Vardaman of Mississippi. They
+all belonged to the group of twelve who had prevented a vote on the
+Armed-Ship Bill. Three of this group, Senators O'Gorman, Clapp, and
+Works, had already retired into private life. The remaining three,
+chastened by the contumely their attitude had occasioned, deserted the
+pacifists and voted for the resolution.
+
+The House had been waiting for the Senate's action and immediately
+proceeded to debate the resolution when it came before it on April 5,
+1917, at 10 o'clock a. m. Following the Senate's example, it resolved
+to remain in session without any interval until a vote was taken.
+There was a strong band of pacifists in the House, some with
+pronounced pro-German sympathies, and they occupied much of the day
+with their outgivings. The House floor leader, Representative Kitchin
+of North Carolina, was one of their number. The debate extended
+through the night without cessation until 3.15 the next morning, April
+6, 1917, when, after a wearisome discussion exceeding seventeen hours,
+the resolution passed amid resounding cheers by the overwhelming vote
+of 373 to 50.
+
+The President signed the resolution in the afternoon of the same day,
+at the same time issuing a proclamation notifying the world that a
+state of war existed between the United States and the Imperial
+Government of Germany, and outlining regulations for the conduct of
+"alien enemies" resident within American jurisdiction.
+
+American relations with Germany's allies--Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and
+Bulgaria--remained to be determined. In his war address to Congress
+the President made this allusion to them:
+
+"I have said nothing of the governments allied with the Imperial
+Government of Germany, because they have not made war upon us or
+challenged us to defend our right and our honor. The Austro-Hungarian
+Government has, indeed, avowed its unqualified indorsement and
+acceptance of the reckless and lawless submarine warfare, adopted now
+without disguise by the Imperial German Government, and it has
+therefore not been possible for this Government to receive Count
+Tarnowski, the ambassador recently accredited to this Government by
+the Imperial and Royal Government of Austria-Hungary; but that
+Government has not actually engaged in warfare against citizens of the
+United States on the seas, and I take the liberty, for the present at
+least, of postponing a discussion of our relations with the
+authorities at Vienna. We enter this war only where we are clearly
+forced into it, because there are no other means of defending our
+right."
+
+Under German dictation, however, Austria-Hungary and Turkey broke
+relations with the United States on April 9 and April 21, 1917,
+respectively. Bulgaria took no action. The American war declaration
+thus solely applied to Germany.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVI
+
+BUILDING THE WAR MACHINE
+
+
+The United States entered the war as a member of the Allied
+belligerents in their fight for civilization against Germany at 1.18
+on the afternoon of April 8, 1917, at which time President Wilson
+signed the resolution empowering him to declare war as passed by
+Congress.
+
+The nation set about girding on its armor. A message was flashed to
+the great naval radio station at Arlington, Va., which repeated it to
+the extent of its carrying radius of 3,000 miles, notifying all
+American ships at foreign stations and the governors and military
+posts of American insular possessions in the Pacific and in the
+Antilles.
+
+Orders were issued by the Navy Department for the mobilization of the
+fleet, and the Naval Reserve was called to the colors. The navy also
+proceeded to seize all radio stations in the country.
+
+An emergency war fund of $100,000,000 was voted by Congress for the
+use of the President at his discretion.
+
+The Allied warships which had been patrolling the Atlantic coast
+outside American territorial waters since the war began, to prevent
+the German ships in American ports from escaping, were withdrawn.
+There was no need of further vigilance, as one of the first acts of
+the Government was to seize every German and Austrian vessel which had
+lain safe under the protection of the Stars and Stripes. There were
+ninety-one German ships, several of them interned men-o'-war,
+aggregating 629,000 gross tonnage. The largest group were moored in
+New York Harbor, numbering 27, and included leviathans like the
+_Vaterland_, (54,282 gross tons), _George Washington_ (25,570 tons),
+and _Kaiser Wilhelm II_ (19,361 tons). Six were in Boston Harbor,
+among them the _Amerika_ (22,622 tons), and the _Kronprinzessin
+Cecile_ (19,503 tons). Others were held in the Philippines and Hawaii.
+Seven Austrian vessels were seized, but subject to payment, the United
+States not being at war with the Dual Monarchy.
+
+All the German officers and crews were taken in charge by the
+immigration authorities and held in the status of intending immigrants
+whose eligibility for entering the country was in question until the
+end of the war. This decision meant internment.
+
+The machinery of most of the German ships was found to be damaged to
+prevent the Government making immediate use of them as transports, for
+which the larger ones were admirably fitted. The damage dated from the
+severance of relations on February 3, 1917, and was a preconcerted
+movement undertaken by the various captains and officers upon
+instructions from Berlin to cripple the machinery when war seemed
+imminent. Captain Polack of the North German Lloyd liner
+_Kronprinzessin Cecile_, held in Boston, admitted that he had received
+orders to make his vessel unseaworthy from the German Embassy at
+Washington three days before the rupture with Germany took place.
+
+Congress later authorized the President to take title to the German
+ships for the United States and to put them into service in the
+conduct of the war. Payment or any other method of return for their
+seizure was to wait until the war ended. In a short time more than
+half of the seized vessels had been repaired and put upon the seas
+under the American flag with new names. Fifteen were fitted for
+transports. The Stars and Stripes was duly hoisted on the great German
+liner _Vaterland_.
+
+Simultaneous with the seizure of these vessels came wholesale arrests
+of Germans suspected of being spies. Federal officers swooped down on
+them in various parts of the country as soon as war was declared. They
+could not now safely be at large. Several had already been convicted
+of violating American neutrality by hatching German plots and were at
+liberty under bond pending the result of court appeals; others were
+under indictment for similar offenses and waiting trial; the remainder
+were suspects who had long been under Federal surveillance. It was a
+war measure taken without regard to the civil law to circumvent
+further machinations of German conspirators, who had now become alien
+enemies.
+
+Bearing upon these precautions was a proclamation issued by the
+President warning citizens and aliens against the commission of
+treason, which was punishable by death or by a heavy fine and
+imprisonment. The acts defined as treasonable were: The use of force
+or violence against the American army and navy establishment; the
+acquisition, use, or disposal of property with the knowledge that it
+was to be utilized for the service of the nation's enemies; and the
+performance of any act and the publication of statements or
+information that would give aid and comfort to the enemy.
+
+The Government had previously assured Germans and German reservists
+domiciled on American soil that they would be free from official
+molestation so long as they conducted themselves in accordance with
+American law. A general internment of German aliens was deemed to be
+both impracticable and impolitic.
+
+Precautions taken against internal uprisings by Teutonic sympathizers
+proved to be sufficient without corralling the great number of German
+citizens established among the populace--a step which would not only
+be costly but inflict great hardships on many unoffending and orderly
+aliens. The Administration held by its previous determination not to
+resort to reprisals in its treatment of Germans nor to lose its head
+in the periodic waves of spy fever which spread throughout the
+country.
+
+The President and his advisers, while taking all these preliminary
+measures of war, were deeply conscious of the enormous field of other
+activities, calling for leadership and statesmanship of a high order,
+which the war situation had opened out. Without being daunted by the
+prospect, the President took the step of appealing to the people at
+large for cooperation. There were so many things to be done besides
+fighting--things without which mere fighting would be fruitless. The
+President thus stated them:
+
+"We must supply abundant food for ourselves and for our armies and our
+seamen, not only, but also for a large part of the nations with whom
+we have now made common cause, in whose support and by whose sides we
+shall be fighting.
+
+"We must supply ships by the hundreds out of our shipyards to carry to
+the other side of the sea, submarines or no submarines, what will
+every day be needed there, and abundant materials out of our fields
+and our mines and our factories with which not only to clothe and
+equip our own forces on land and sea, but also to clothe and support
+our people, for whom the gallant fellows under arms can no longer
+work; to help clothe and equip the armies with which we are
+cooperating in Europe, and to keep the looms and manufactories there
+in raw material; coal to keep the fires going in ships at sea and in
+the furnaces of hundreds of factories across the sea; steel out of
+which to make arms and ammunition both here and there; rails for
+worn-out railways back of the fighting fronts; locomotives and rolling
+stock to take the place of those every day going to pieces; mules,
+horses, cattle for labor and for military service; everything with
+which the people of England and France and Italy and Russia have
+usually supplied themselves, but cannot now afford the men, the
+materials, or the machinery to make."
+
+The President's specific appeal was to the agricultural and industrial
+workers of the country to put their shoulder to the wheel to help
+provision and equip the armies in Europe. On the farmers and their
+laborers, he said, in large measure rested the issue of the war and
+the fate of the nations. To the middlemen of every sort the President
+was bluntly candid: "The eyes of the country are especially upon you,"
+he said. "The country expects you, as it expects all others, to forego
+unusual profits, to organize and expedite shipments of supplies of
+every kind, but especially of food," in a disinterested spirit. He
+asked railroad men of all ranks not to permit the nation's arteries to
+suffer any obstruction, inefficiency, or slackened power in carrying
+war supplies. To the merchant he suggested the motto: "small profits
+and quick service" to the shipbuilder the thought that the war
+depended on him. "The food and the war supplies must be carried across
+the seas, no matter how many ships are sent to the bottom." The miner
+he ranked with the farmer--the work of the world waited upon him.
+Finally, every one who created or cultivated a garden helped to solve
+the problem of feeding the nation; and every housewife who practiced
+economy placed herself in the ranks of those who served.
+
+Legislative tasks which confronted Congress were overwhelming and not
+a little confusing. They embraced measures for authorizing huge issues
+of bonds to finance the Allies and provide funds for the American
+campaign; new taxation; food control; the provision of an enormous
+fleet of airships; forbidding trading with the enemy; an embargo on
+exports to neutral countries to prevent their shipment to Germany; an
+espionage bill; and chiefly, a measure of compulsory military service
+by selective draft to raise a preliminary army of 500,000 men, to be
+followed by a second draft of the same number, to enable 1,000,000
+Americans to help the Allies defeat Germany.
+
+The Bond Bill passed both houses of Congress without a dissentient
+vote within eleven days of the war declaration and five days of the
+bill's submission. The Administration sought authority for an issue of
+$5,000,000,000 bonds, to be raised by public subscription, and
+$2,000,000,000 bonds in Treasury certificates of indebtedness, the
+latter to be redeemed in a year by the aid of new war taxation then
+expected to be available. Both bonds and certificates bore 3-1/2 per
+cent interest. The main portion of the five-billion issue, or three
+billions, was apportioned as a loan to the Allies, in the disposition
+of which the President was to be wholly unhampered. Securities at par
+to that amount were to be acquired from the various foreign
+governments to cover the loan. Representative Kitchin, in presenting
+the bill to the House, described it as representing "the most
+momentous project ever undertaken by our Government and carried the
+greatest authorization of bonds ever contained in a bill submitted to
+any legislative body in the world." The only material amendments made
+limited the loans and the acquisition of foreign securities as
+collateral to the period of the war. The House passed the measure
+after two days' debate on April 14, 1917, by a vote of 889 to 0. The
+Senate vote, three days later, after a day's debate, was 84 to 0. The
+various factions in both Houses, which were hostile to the
+Administration's policy before war was declared, dropped all
+partisanship in their eagerness to support measures for prosecuting
+the war now that the die had been cast.
+
+The War Revenue Bill was less easily disposed of. It bristled with
+contentious points bearing upon the most equitable ways and means of
+raising supplementary imposts to meet the first year's war outlays. As
+submitted to the House it was designed to raise a revenue of
+$1,800,000,000; but the barometer of the Treasury's needs kept rising
+and presently stood at $2,250,000,000 as the amount needed to be
+raised by the bill. The House hurriedly passed a loosely constructed
+measure, taxing practically every industry and individual, especially
+the incomes of corporations and men of wealth. It raised all tariff
+duties and abolished the free list by making the exempted articles
+subject to a duty of 10 per cent. The House accepted it as a war
+measure, full of inequalities that would never be tolerated in times
+of peace. It threw upon the Senate the onus of repairing the defects
+of the bill. It passed it largely as it stood, a hasty piece of
+patchwork, in order to get some kind of legislation before Congress to
+meet the Treasury's requirements. The measure was discussed in a cloud
+of confusion, and so perplexed the members that, in disposing of it,
+they relied upon the Senate to return it in better shape for
+adjustment in conference. The Senate was inclined to confine the
+measure's revenue scope to $1,250,000,000, leaving the balance needed
+by the Government to be raised by authorized bond issues. But in
+redrafting the bill the Senate committee, after vainly succeeding in
+paring the imposts below $1,670,000,000, was eventually obliged to
+raise them $500,000,000. The conferees' report further enhanced them
+to yield approximately $2,500,000,000. In this shape the bill finally
+passed the Senate October 2, 1917.
+
+A simple named bill "to increase temporarily the military
+establishment of the United States," which was early presented to
+Congress after the declaration of April 6, 1917, stood out as the
+Administration's chief war measure. It became known as the Selective
+Draft Bill because of its chief provisions, which authorized the
+President to institute a modified form of conscription for raising a
+new army. It also authorized him to raise the regular army and the
+National Guard to their maximum strength and officer and equip them.
+These latter enlistments were to be voluntary, under existing laws,
+unless the required number was not forthcoming by that means, in
+which case the regular military establishment was to be replenished
+from recruits obtained by the selective draft. This latter method the
+President was empowered to use for creating two forces of 500,000 men
+each, one immediately, the other later, as deemed expedient. All men,
+citizens and intended citizens, between the ages of 21 and 30, were
+subject to call under the selective draft and were required to
+register their names for possible enrollment. The census showed that
+some 10,000,000 men between the ages named could be located by
+registration, from which number the Government could select the
+million of men required in two divisions. The House and Senate adopted
+the measure on April 28, 1917, by substantial majorities, the voting
+being respectively 397 to 24 and 81 to 8. A vain attempt was made in
+both Houses to raise the new army by voluntary enlistments.
+
+There was a popular demand for sending former President Roosevelt to
+France as head of a volunteer force of four infantry divisions, and
+the Senate adopted an amendment authorizing the project. The House had
+rejected the proposal. When the bill reached the Conference Committee,
+the Senate amendment authorizing the Roosevelt expedition was deleted.
+But upon the bill's return the House reversed itself by refusing to
+accept it, and sent it back to the Conference Committee with the
+instruction to restore the section permitting Colonel Roosevelt to
+organize a volunteer force for service in Europe. The bill went to the
+President for signature with this provision restored; but the
+President declined, in his discretion, to avail himself of the
+authority to permit the dispatch of the Roosevelt division, and it
+never went.
+
+The Food Control Bill which conferred large powers on the Government
+for safeguarding the food supplies of the country for war purposes
+proved as difficult to pass as the War Revenue Bill, but succeeded in
+reaching the President. Its presentation to Congress was heralded by a
+public statement from the President, who sought to impress upon the
+country the immediate need of legislation to conserve and stimulate
+the country's food production. He sought authority to appoint a food
+administrator, and named Herbert C. Hoover, who had creditably
+directed the feeding of the Belgians as head of the Relief Committee,
+for the post. The President drew a sharp line of distinction between
+the work of the Government as conducted by the Department of
+Agriculture in its ordinary supervision of food production and the
+emergencies produced by the war.
+
+"All measures intended directly to extend the normal activities of the
+Department of Agriculture," he said, "in reference to the production,
+conservation, and the marketing of farm crops will be administered, as
+in normal times, through that department, and the powers asked for
+over distribution and consumption, over exports, imports, prices,
+purchase, and requisition of commodities, storing, and the like which
+may require regulation during the war, will be placed in the hands of
+a commissioner of food administration, appointed by the President and
+directly responsible to him.
+
+"The objects sought to be served by the legislation asked for are:
+Full inquiry into the existing available stocks of foodstuffs and into
+the costs and practices of the various food producing and distributing
+trades; the prevention of all unwarranted hoarding of every kind and
+of the control of foodstuffs by persons who are not in any legitimate
+sense producers, dealers, or traders; the requisitioning when
+necessary for the public use of food supplies and of the equipment
+necessary for handling them properly; the licensing of wholesome and
+legitimate mixtures and milling percentages, and the prohibition of
+the unnecessary or wasteful use of foods.
+
+"Authority is asked also to establish prices, but not in order to
+limit the profits of the farmers, but only to guarantee to them when
+necessary a minimum price which will insure them a profit where they
+are asked to attempt new crops and to secure the consumer against
+extortion by breaking up corners and attempts at speculation, when
+they occur, by fixing temporarily a reasonable price at which
+middlemen must sell.
+
+"Although it is absolutely necessary that unquestionable powers shall
+be placed in my hands, in order to insure the success of this
+administration of the food supplies of the country, I am confident
+that the exercise of those powers will be necessary only in the few
+cases where some small and selfish minority proves unwilling to put
+the nation's interests above personal advantage."
+
+A sweeping bill was thereupon presented to the House empowering the
+President, under the war clause of the Constitution, to take the
+measures he named whenever, in his opinion, the national emergency
+called for their exercise.
+
+The mere conferring of such extreme powers on the President, it was
+hoped, would suffice. The Government view was that armed with the
+effective weapons the bill provided, no difficulty would be
+encountered in enlisting on the side of the public interest all
+recalcitrant private agencies without legal action.
+
+The House, in passing the measure, made it more drastic by inserting
+an amendment prohibiting the further manufacturing of alcoholic
+liquors during the war, and authorizing the President, in his
+discretion, to commandeer existing stocks of distilled spirits. The
+President was unwilling to countenance such a drastic curb on the
+liquor industry, and the Senate Agriculture Committee, on his
+recommendation, restricted the veto on the manufacture of liquor to
+whisky, rum, gin, and brandy, removing the ban on light wines and
+beer, but retained the clause empowering him to acquire all distilled
+spirits in bond, as above named, should the national exigency call for
+such action. The Senate approved the bill as thus amended.
+
+The antiwhisky provisions, which were due to the Prohibitionists, were
+denounced as unconstitutional. Nevertheless, the House vote on the
+bill was 365 to 5. The Senate vote was as emphatic, being 81 to 6.
+
+A more direct contest with the President over his war powers was waged
+around the Espionage Bill. Though primarily framed to make spying and
+its attendant acts treasonable offenses punishable by death or heavy
+fines and imprisonment, it was projected more as a measure aimed at
+news censorship, on account of a section forbidding the pursuit and
+publication of information on the war. A violent and persistent
+agitation by the press of the country against such a restriction,
+echoed in both Houses in the course of lengthy debates, finally won
+the day. All control of the publication of war news was denied the
+Administration, despite the President's appeals to Congress for the
+provision of a press censorship. The newspapers demanded to be placed
+on their good behavior and scouted the idea that any law was needed to
+restrain them from publishing information likely to give aid and
+comfort to the enemy. Thwarted by Congress, the President had to be
+content to forego the authority he sought for placing a veto on war
+news except such as the Government permitted to be disclosed. He was
+reminded that when relations were broken with Germany and war neared,
+the press readily responded to the Administration's request--made in
+the absence of legal authority to establish a press censorship--to
+suppress the publication and transmission of information concerning
+the movements of American merchant craft, then about to be armed
+against German submarines. Since then announcements of arrivals at and
+sailings from American ports of all vessels were excluded from the
+newspapers.
+
+The Espionage Bill had an inherent importance of its own, but its
+purposes had been so overshadowed by the prominence given to the
+censorship provision that they were lost sight of. It empowered the
+President to place an embargo on exports when public safety and
+welfare so required; provided for the censoring of mails and the
+exclusion of matter therefrom deemed to be seditious and anarchistic,
+and making its transmission punishable by heavy fines; the punishment
+of espionage; the wrongful use of military information; circulation of
+false reports designed to interfere with military operations; attempts
+to cause disaffection in the army and navy, or obstruction of
+recruiting; the control of merchant vessels on American waters; the
+seizure of arms and ammunition and prohibition of their exportation
+under certain conditions; the penalizing of conspiracies designed to
+harm American foreign relations; punishment for the destruction of
+property arising from a state of war; and increased restrictions on
+the issue of passports.
+
+The measure acquired a conspicuous place in the war legislation by
+reason of the embargo provision. It appeared an inconsequential
+clause, judging from the little public attention paid to it; but the
+President saw a weapon in it that might have more effect in bringing
+Germany to her knees than Great Britain's blockade of her coasts,
+stringent as the latter had proved. It developed into a measure for
+instituting a blockade of Germany from American ports. It had long
+been known that the maritime European neutrals--Holland, Denmark,
+Norway, and Sweden--had flourished enormously by supplying Germany
+with various necessities--mainly obtained from the United States on
+the pretense that the huge increase of their American trade was due to
+enlarged domestic consumption, the same being due, in its turn, to the
+cutting off of needed supplies from other countries by the British
+blockade and the war situation on land. The design of the embargo
+provision was to stop these neutrals from receiving any American goods
+until it was clearly established, _before_ leaving an American port,
+that they would not be transhipped to Germany. With this object the
+President was authorized to stop any or all exports to any or all
+countries in his discretion. This was a sweeping blanket instruction
+from Congress aimed at placing a barrier on transhipment trade with
+Germany from the port of departure. "Satisfy us that your goods are
+not going to Germany via neutral countries," the Government told
+exporters, "and your ships can get clearance. Otherwise they cannot."
+The embargo was even aimed at neutral countries that permitted their
+own goods to cross the German frontier by threatening to cut those
+countries off from any trade with the United States. But it was not
+clear how it could be made effective in this respect. Its chief aim
+was rather to make it impossible for the neutrals to replenish with
+American goods such of their domestic stocks which had been depleted
+by exports to German customers.
+
+The subject raised a stormy debate during a secret session of the
+Senate. Senator Townsend, in an assault upon the embargo proposal,
+took the view that the Administration wished to use the embargo to
+force small neutral nations into the war as American allies.
+
+"I am not willing," he said, "to vote for the very German methods we
+have condemned. I understand that this provision is not to be used for
+the protection of American produce or to protect the American supply,
+but to coerce neutral countries. We stood for neutrality, and urged
+the nations of the world to support neutrality. Now that we are
+engaged in war we ought not to coerce other nations and force them to
+enter the struggle."
+
+The Administration found a supporter from an unexpected quarter--from
+Senator Stone, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who
+opposed the war and all its works. He thus defended the embargo:
+
+"If we were still neutral I should join readily in opposing such
+legislation. But we are now belligerent. If it is true that any
+neutral country, contiguous to Germany, which is now our enemy, is
+supplying Germany with food, munitions, and other materials out of its
+own productions, and then comes to the United States to purchase here
+and transport there a sufficient quantity to replenish its supply,
+doesn't the senator think the United States is within its belligerent
+rights to say that the United States doesn't consent?"
+
+"It is true we are no longer neutral," insisted Mr. Townsend, "and we
+don't intend that any other country shall remain neutral. We are in
+trouble and want everybody else to be in trouble if we are strong
+enough to put them in."
+
+The admitted purpose of the embargo was to force neutral countries
+contiguous to Germany to suspend trade with her as an enemy of the
+United States. The sentiment of the Senate, barring the objections of
+a few members like Senator Townsend, who protested against the
+embargo's "injustice," was that the United States had full control
+over its own trade, and, especially in time of war, could restrict it
+as its foreign interests required. No international law was involved
+in American legislation which determined the disposition of American
+exports, even if that legislation had a direct bearing on the
+prosecution of the war. The Administration refused to see any analogy
+between this embargo policy and the questions raised by the blockade
+controversy between the United States and Great Britain when the
+former was a neutral. American belligerency had necessitated a change
+of basis in the Government's attitude.
+
+The President went to some pains to explain to the country what the
+export embargo meant. He created a Board of Exports Control, or
+Exports Council, composed of Herbert C. Hoover, the selected head of
+the food administration body, and a number of leading Government
+officials. This board's duty was to prevent a single bushel of wheat
+or the smallest quantity of any other commodity from leaving an
+American port without the board's license and approval. This check on
+exports, the President pointed out, regulated and supervised their
+disposition, and was not really an embargo, except on consignments to
+Germany.
+
+"There will, of course, be no prohibition of exports," he said. "The
+normal course of trade will be interfered with as little as possible,
+and, so far as possible, only its abnormal course directed. The whole
+object will be to direct exports in such a way that they will go first
+and by preference where they are most needed and most immediately
+needed, and temporarily to withhold them, if necessary, where they can
+best be spared.
+
+"Our primary duty in the matter of foodstuffs and like necessaries is
+to see to it that the peoples associated with us in the war get as
+generous a proportion as possible of our surplus, but it will also be
+our wish and purpose to supply the neutral nations whose peoples
+depend upon us for such supplies as nearly in proportion to their need
+as the amount to be divided permits."
+
+Nevertheless the proclamation that came from the White House on July
+9, 1917, disclosed an exercise of presidential authority without
+precedent in American history in that it contemplated, with British
+cooperation, the virtual domination of the country's trade with the
+whole world. It provided for the absolute governmental control, by
+license, of the exports of essential war commodities to fifty-six
+nations and their possessions, including all the Allied belligerents,
+all the neutrals, as well as the enemy countries. These commodities
+embraced coal, coke, fuel, oils, kerosene and gasoline, including
+bunkers, food grains, flour and meal, fodder and feeds, meats and
+fats, pig iron, steel billets, ship plates and structural shapes,
+scrap iron and scrap steel, ferromanganese, fertilizers, arms,
+ammunition and explosives. By the control of coal and other fuels the
+Government was bent on obtaining a firm grasp on shipping. And the
+point was, as stated in the preamble of the proclamation, "the public
+safety requires that succor shall be prevented from reaching the
+enemy."
+
+Europe hailed the establishment of the American embargo as signalizing
+a "real blockade" against Germany. The Paris "Temps" succinctly
+expressed the prevailing view in the Allied countries:
+
+"The Allies, despite the patience of their diplomats and the vigilance
+of their navies, have failed to make the blockade sufficiently tight.
+A new measure was needed; the United States has now supplied it. By
+forbidding indirect assistance the United States has introduced a new
+and efficient condition. If the Allies firmly apply the principle, as
+public opinion strongly demands, President Wilson's proclamation will
+have been one of the decisive acts of the war."
+
+The need for sending foodstuffs and like necessaries to the Allies, as
+pointed out by the President in explaining the embargo, called for
+shipping facilities of a magnitude that demanded the immediate
+attention of Congress. Exports there would be in unexampled
+quantities, but their destination must largely be to the Entente
+countries, consigned in armed ships. Coastwise craft were drafted for
+transatlantic trade; ships under construction for private concerns
+were subject to acquisition by the Government; every craft afloat
+adaptable to war service--ferryboats, private yachts, motor boats and
+the like--were listed for contingent use; and the thousand or more
+merchant ships of American registry demanded an equipment of guns and
+ammunition to enable them to run the submarine blockade.
+
+The seized German and Austrian ships helped to supply the needed
+tonnage, but they did not go far. War conditions, created by the
+recognition that the United States would practically win the war for
+the Allies by keeping their countries generously supplied with all
+necessities required the construction of a huge trade fleet of steel
+or wooden ships at a cost of a billion dollars. The Government,
+through the Shipping Board, reserved the right of preempting the
+products of every steel mill in the country and of canceling all their
+existing contracts with private consumers, so as to divert the use of
+steel products for the trade fleet. The acquisition of every shipyard
+in the country was also contemplated as a contingency. Tentative
+estimates provided for the construction of thousands of steel and
+wooden cargo ships aggregating between five and six million tonnage
+within the coming two years.
+
+The shipbuilding program was undertaken by General Goethals, builder
+of the Panama Canal, as general manager of a new Government body
+called the Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, and William
+Denman, its president. Conflict immediately arose between them
+regarding the expediency of building steel or wooden ships to meet the
+emergency, and the whole project was imperiled by their personal
+differences. General Goethals favored a steel fleet and planned to
+apply the available balance of an appropriation of $550,000,000 to the
+construction of fabricated steel ships of standard pattern. Early in
+July contracts for 348 wooden ships, aggregating 1,218,000 tons, and
+costing some $174,000,000, had been made or agreed upon and contracts
+for a further 100 were under negotiation. Of steel ships seventy-seven
+had been contracted for or agreed upon, amounting to 642,800 tons, at
+a cost of $101,660,356. This was a good beginning, as it represented a
+program under way for providing 525 ships of all sorts. The remainder
+of the Goethals program called for steel ships, of which he promised
+3,000,000 tons in eighteen months. Another feature of the Goethals
+policy was the immediate commandeering of private ships in the stocks,
+whether owned by Americans, Allies, or neutrals. Acute friction arose
+between General Goethals and Mr. Denman, mainly over the question of
+the former's negotiations and plans with the steel interests. In the
+end President Wilson intervened by accepting the invited resignations
+of both, and placing the shipbuilding in the hands of Admiral
+Washington L. Capps, a naval ship constructor of renown, and Edward
+N. Hurley, former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission.
+
+By now the foundations of a huge war machine had been laid by
+legislative and executive action; but it was discovered that a vital
+factor in modern wars had been overlooked. An enormous air fleet was
+necessary to provide further eyes for the Allies. Congress repaired
+this omission by voting $640,000,000 for building 22,000 airships and
+for raising and equipping an American corps of 100,000 aviators.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII
+
+MEN AND MONEY IN MILLIONS
+
+
+The country early realized the practical effect of the legislation
+passed by Congress enabling the President to call on the national
+resources in men, money, and material for conducting the war with
+Germany.
+
+The Administration's first nation-wide appeal was for money. Under the
+Bond Bill it was empowered to raise war funds, and proceeded to do so
+by floating the first issue of the "Liberty loan of 1917," this being
+a demand for $2,000,000,000 from the popular purse. The money raised
+was to provide credits to the Allied governments to meet the enormous
+war purchases they were making in the United States, and, like
+previous accommodations to them, this provision of funds was not so
+much a loan as a transfer or exchange of credits. American money was
+lent to the Allies, deposited in American banks, to enable them to buy
+American products. Not a cent of the Liberty loan went out of the
+country.
+
+It was the largest single financial transaction ever undertaken by the
+United States Government. It greatly exceeded all previous bond issues
+and squarely brought the country to face the necessities of war
+finance on a huge scale. But the prewar period, which produced a high
+tide of prosperity, due to the unexampled calls on American industries
+by the Allied Powers, had revealed the enormous wealth and economic
+strength of the American investing community, as well as a
+flourishing condition of the working population. The Government
+entered upon the financial operation with no misgivings and the result
+proved its confidence in the success of the loan. Bank subscriptions
+were discouraged. National loans hitherto issued in war time were
+floated as a basis of national currency and were taken up by the banks
+in large amounts. But the Liberty loan was an appeal to the
+million--to several millions; to the man in the street, the small
+tradesman, the salaried class. Workers realized that in subscribing to
+the loan they were not only securing an absolutely safe investment,
+but were providing funds for wages and profits. The money they
+invested as a loan to the Allies was applied by them to buying
+American goods.
+
+The Liberty loan was floated on May 14, 1917, in denominations as low
+as $50, rising to $100,000, at 3-1/2 per cent. interest, redeemable in
+fifteen or thirty years. The banks of the country, national and State,
+the trust companies, newspapers, department stores, express companies,
+and numerous corporations and firms placed their establishments and
+staffs at the national service for receiving applications, which came
+from all classes. The response flagged as the date for closing the
+subscription lists neared (June 15, 1917), but there was a rally at
+the last moment by small investors, and the lists closed with the loan
+greatly oversubscribed.
+
+Germany had been watching its progress. There were lulls during the
+month in which the loan was under issue and Germany was eager to see
+in a passing slowness of response a popular unwillingness to shoulder
+the burden of war and an apathy that she welcomed. The people had no
+spirit for the war and it was largely a bankers' loan, said her
+spokesmen. Anticipating this criticism the Government, aided by the
+press, publicists, and bankers, conducted a propaganda which
+successfully impressed the country that a large popular
+oversubscription could not be misconstrued by Germany, as it would
+convince her that there would be no stinting of national resources by
+the United States to aid the Allies in encompassing her defeat. The
+result showed that a request for $2,000,000,000 had been met by a
+response of $3,035,226,850 from over 4,000,000 investors, mainly for
+small amounts. The success of the loan, especially in its appeal to
+modest purses, was imposing. Secretary McAdoo of the Treasury thus
+expressed the Government's gratification:
+
+"The widespread distribution of the bonds and the great amount of the
+oversubscription constitute an eloquent and conclusive reply to the
+enemies of the country who claimed that the heart of America was not
+in this war. The result, of which every citizen may well be proud,
+reflects the patriotism and the determination of the American people
+to fight for the vindication of outraged American rights, the speedy
+restoration of peace, and the establishment of liberty throughout the
+world.
+
+"The Congress pledged all the resources of America to bring the war to
+a successful determination. The issue just closed will serve as an
+indication of the temper and purpose of the American people and of the
+manner in which they may be expected to respond to future calls of
+their country for the necessary credits to carry on the war."
+
+The operation of the Selective Draft law provided a simultaneous
+opportunity for a display of patriotism. Acting under its provisions,
+the President in a stirring proclamation issued on May 18, 1917,
+called upon every man in the country between the age of 21 and 30 to
+register his readiness to be called upon for army service at the
+designated registration place within the precinct where he permanently
+resided. It was a call to the nation to arm.
+
+"The power against which we are arrayed," the President said, "has
+sought to impose its will upon the world. To this end it has increased
+armament until it has changed the face of war. In the sense in which
+we have been wont to think of armies, there are no armies in this
+struggle, there are entire nations armed. Thus, the men who remain to
+till the soil and man the factories are no less a part of the army
+that is in France than the men beneath the battle flags. It must be so
+with us. It is not an army that we must shape and train for war; it is
+a nation.
+
+"To this end our people must draw close in one compact front against a
+common foe. But this cannot be if each man pursues a private purpose.
+All must pursue one purpose. The nation needs all men; but it needs
+each man, not in the field that will most pleasure him, but in the
+endeavor that will best serve the common good. Thus, though a
+sharpshooter pleases to operate a trip hammer for the forging of great
+guns and an expert machinist desires to march with the flag, the
+nation is being served only when the sharpshooter marches and the
+machinist remains at his levers.
+
+"The whole nation must be a team, in which each man shall play the
+part for which he is best fitted. To this end, Congress has provided
+that the nation shall be organized for war by selection; that each man
+shall be classified for service in the place to which it shall best
+serve the general good to call him.
+
+"The significance of this cannot be overstated. It is a new thing in
+our history and a landmark in our progress. It is a new manner of
+accepting and vitalizing our duty to give ourselves with thoughtful
+devotion to the common purpose of us all. It is in no sense a
+conscription of the unwilling; it is, rather, selection from a nation
+which has volunteered in mass. It is no more a choosing of those who
+shall march with the colors than it is a selection of those who shall
+serve an equally necessary and devoted purpose in the industries that
+lie behind the battle line."
+
+The President had strongly espoused the selective draft in preference
+to the voluntary system of raising an army organization. He had
+pointed out that many forms of patriotic service were open to the
+people, and emphasized that the military part of the service,
+important though it was, was not, under modern war conditions, the
+most vital part. The selective draft enabled the selection for service
+in the army of those who could be most readily spared from the pursuit
+of other industries and occupations. There being a universal
+obligation to serve in time of war, the Administration felt the need
+of being empowered to select men for military service and select
+others to do the rest of the nation's work, either by keeping them in
+their existing employment, if that employment was useful for war
+purposes, or utilizing their services in a like field.
+
+"The volunteer system does not do this," he said. "When men choose
+themselves they sometimes choose without due regard to their other
+responsibilities. Men may come from the farms or from the mines or
+from the factories or centers of business who ought not to come but
+ought to stand back of the armies in the field and see that they get
+everything that they need and that the people of the country are
+sustained in the meantime."
+
+Registration day, which was fixed for June 5, 1917, partook of the
+character of an election day. The young manhood of the country of the
+prescribed ages trooped to the registration places of their districts
+like voters depositing ballots at polling booths. It was a national
+roll call of the pick of civilian manhood available for military duty,
+and yielded an enrollment of 9,649,938 from which the first army was
+to be drafted.
+
+"The registration," reported the Government, "was accomplished in a
+fashion measuring up to the highest standards of Americanism. The
+young men came to the registration places enthusiastic; there was no
+hint of a slacking spirit anywhere, except in a few cases where
+misguided persons had been prevailed upon to attempt to avoid their
+national obligation."
+
+The machinery for the selective draft had merely been started. Only
+the groundwork had been laid. The principal operation--the draft
+itself--had to be undertaken, and the process was a slow one. Half the
+men who registered claimed exemption from military service for a
+multitude of reasons, but as not more than 6 per cent were to be
+chosen to compose the first citizen army, this was not important even
+if most of the exemption claims were justified and allowed.
+
+The outstanding fact was that the registrants were all on an equal
+footing and that their mustering brought nearer the realization of the
+President's dream of a "citizenry trained" without favoritism or
+discrimination. The son of the millionaire and of the laborer, the
+college-bred man and the worker forced to earn his living from early
+youth, were to march side by side in the ranks and practice
+marksmanship and trench digging together. Great Britain and France had
+democratized their armies; the United States did the same.
+
+The President increased the number of men to be drafted for the first
+army from 500,000 to 687,000 in order to use drafted men to bring the
+regular army and the National Guard to their full strength. Thus there
+were 687,000 men to be selected from a registration of 9,649,938. The
+quota required from each State, based upon each State's number of
+registrants, was determined in that proportion.
+
+The draft, which was practically a great lottery to establish the
+order in which the registrants were to be called into war service,
+took place on July 20, 1917, in Washington. As it was anticipated that
+fully half of the men called would either be exempted or rejected
+after medical examination, the exemption boards appointed throughout
+the country, located in 4,557 districts, were required to call double
+the number of their quota for examination in the order in which the
+men's numbers appeared on the district list after the drawing. This
+meant a call of 1,374,000 men.
+
+The drawing itself was based on a system of master-key numbers in two
+groups, written on slips of paper. These slips were rolled and placed
+in a bowl, from which they were drawn one at a time by blindfolded
+men. The picking of a single number out of one set of a thousand
+numerals, or out of another set of eleven numerals, drafted each man
+in the 4,557 districts whose registration card bore the serial number
+picked. The method fixed with absolute equality of chance the order in
+which all registrants--if called upon--were to report to their local
+boards for examination and subsequent exemption, discharge, or
+acceptance for military service. The local boards at once organized
+for the examination and enrollment of the men called.
+
+The new citizen force became known as the National Army, in
+contradistinction to the regular army and the National Guard, and was
+organized into sixteen divisions, grouped by States as under:
+
+ First--Massachusetts, Maine, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont,
+ and New Hampshire.
+
+ Second--Lower New York State and Long Island.
+
+ Third--Upper New York State and northern Pennsylvania.
+
+ Fourth--Southern Pennsylvania.
+
+ Fifth--Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and District
+ of Columbia.
+
+ Sixth--Tennessee, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
+
+ Seventh--Alabama, Georgia, and Florida.
+
+ Eighth--Ohio and West Virginia.
+
+ Ninth--Indiana and Kentucky.
+
+ Tenth--Wisconsin and Michigan.
+
+ Eleventh--Illinois.
+
+ Twelfth--Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
+
+ Thirteenth--North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota,
+ and Iowa.
+
+ Fourteenth--Colorado, Kansas, and Missouri.
+
+ Fifteenth--Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma.
+
+ Sixteenth--Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, California,
+ Nevada, and Utah.
+
+Huge cantonments, or concentration camps--army cities--were put under
+construction in the various sections of the country where the drafted
+men could be expeditiously massed for mobilization and training before
+proceeding to the European battle ground. In all, thirty-two of these
+camp cities were required, the regular army and National Guard
+providing another sixteen divisions for which such training grounds
+were needed. The camp sites were chosen for spaciousness, absence of
+marshes, natural drainage situations, and proximity to lines of
+transport and a good water supply. Each army camp called for vast
+building supplies, as each was designed to constitute a complete town,
+with sewerage, water works, lighting system, and streets.
+
+[Illustration: United States naval gunners defending the troop
+transport ships from submarine attack. The troop ships of the first
+contingent to cross the sea were twice attacked by submarines on the
+way.]
+
+The volunteer system was largely depended upon to recruit the regular
+army and the National Guard to their required strength; but in the
+draft call a provision of 187,000 men had been made for service in
+these two branches to fill up gaps caused by failure of volunteer
+enlistments or by the detailing of regulars or guardsmen to aid in
+training the draft recruits. The President pointed out that there was
+ample scope for the volunteer system in augmenting the two established
+services, which needed as many men as the draft army. On April 1,
+1917, before war was declared, the regular army and National Guard
+numbered about 225,000 men. These branches needed augmenting to a
+strength of 293,000 and 400,000 respectively, making a combined force
+of 693,000. There was thus a call for 468,000 men, which was mainly
+responded to by volunteers. The draft citizen army of 500,000 and this
+force of 693,000 made an army approaching 1,200,000 men which the
+Government organized for field service in Europe in the first year of
+America's participation in the war. Adding to this an augmented naval
+force of 150,000, and the Marine Corps, numbering 30,000, a grand
+total approximating 1,400,000 men appears as the first American
+contribution to the forces fighting Germany.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVIII
+
+ENVOYS FROM AMERICA'S ALLIES
+
+
+What perhaps most vividly brought home to the nation that it was now
+one of the belligerents of the Allied Powers was the visit of a number
+of special commissioners from the governments of the latter countries,
+following the American declaration of war. The presence of the British
+and French missions in particular made a deep impression, not only
+because of the importance and magnitude of their errand, but because
+of their personnel. The British mission was headed by Arthur James
+Balfour, a former Conservative premier, and now Foreign Secretary in
+the Lloyd-George cabinet. The French mission included Rene Viviani, a
+predecessor of Premier Ribot and a member of his cabinet, and Marshal
+Joffre, the victor of the Battle of the Marne and an idol of France.
+The commanding personalities of Mr. Balfour and Marshal Joffre caught
+the American imagination and the visits they paid to several cities
+during their brief stay partook of the character of state events,
+marked by an imposing welcome and sumptuous hospitality.
+
+A reception no less generous was accorded the members of the other
+missions--the Italian, headed by the Prince of Udine, son of the Duke
+of Genoa and nephew of King Victor Emmanuel, and including Signor
+Marconi, the inventor of wireless telegraphy; the Russian, headed by
+Boris Bakhmetieff, the new Russian Ambassador; and the Belgian, headed
+by Baron Moncheur. Other missions came from Ireland, Rumania, and
+Japan.
+
+The reception of these various missions formed the occasion for a
+number of state functions which placed the Administration in the role
+of a national host to many distinguished guests from foreign countries
+with which the United States was now allied for the first time in a
+devastating war. The honors paid to them produced remarkable
+proceedings in Congress without parallel in that body's deliberations;
+but then the great world war had shattered precedents wherever it
+touched. The spectacle was witnessed of a British statesman, in the
+person of Mr. Balfour, addressing the House and Senate, an event which
+became an enduring memory. Congress also heard addresses from M.
+Viviani, Baron Moncheur, and the Prince of Udine. They told why their
+countries were in the war--a familiar story whose repetition within
+the halls of Congress had considerable point in that the national
+legislature itself had sanctioned war on Germany for the same reasons.
+American and Allied statesmen thus met on common ground in a common
+cause. The numerous conferences between the various sections of the
+Allied missions and American officials--beginning with that between
+the President and Mr. Balfour--were councils of war. They symbolized
+the joining of hands across the sea in a literal sense--across a sea
+infested with German submarines, which the envoys, incidentally,
+escaped both in coming and returning.
+
+In the public ceremonials that marked their visit the leading envoys
+freely and repeatedly expressed their grateful recognition to the
+United States for unselfishly entering the war at last on the side
+which was fighting for civilization--a disinterested action without
+parallel in the history of wars, as Mr. Asquith had called it. Their
+gratitude might well be taken for granted; but, like the Allies' aims
+in the war, it bore repetition, because American aid was sorely
+needed, and they had, in fact, come to accept as much assistance as
+the United States had to give.
+
+The immediate need was money, food, ships--all the accessories of war
+outside the fighting zone. Funds for loans having become available,
+the American Treasury proceeded to distribute its largesse generously.
+Great Britain received $200,000,000 as the first installment of a
+number of loans; France and Italy received $100,000,000 each; Serbia
+got $3,000,000; Russia $175,000,000; France another $60,000,000; and
+Great Britain $300,000,000 more. Further credits to the various
+countries brought the amount loaned to $1,525,000,000 by the close of
+July, 1917, or more than half of the $3,000,000,000 sanctioned by
+Congress for financing the Allies.
+
+By these transactions the United States Government displaced the
+banking firm of J. P. Morgan & Co., who had been acting as fiscal
+agent for the Allies since they began to purchase huge supplies in
+America on American credits.
+
+Great Britain, as the bulwark of her allies, had many weighty matters
+to lay before the United States. Her mission sought an understanding
+regarding the conduct of the blockade, naval operations, munition
+supplies, military dispositions and resources, and the shipment of
+foodstuffs. There was no driving of bargains, since neither was a
+competitor of the other, and hence could have no radical difference of
+view on questions to the settlement of which they had been drawn in
+union against a common foe. The attitude of the British mission
+invited American cooperation, reciprocal service, and expressed
+gratitude for the American partnership. They had no policies to
+suggest to the Administration. They had much information on the
+conduct of the war to lay before the United States--specially
+blunders to be avoided; but they did not presume to teach Americans
+how to make war. The United States, on its part, eagerly wanted to
+know all that could be known, and to be guided accordingly.
+
+A week of conferences clarified the situation. Both the British and
+French missions revealed with surprising frankness the status of the
+Allied resources and the military situation. Great Britain was
+especially candid in disclosing the extent of her losses by
+submarines. She needed ships, as many as America could build. France
+needed an American army at once to augment her man power. Italy wanted
+coal and grain. Most of all, the collapse of Russia's military
+organization had brought the Allies to the pass of relying on American
+aid as imperative if Germany was to be defeated.
+
+The personal contact between American Government officials and the
+various missions, especially the British, produced a mutual confidence
+and sympathy not to be measured by words. Resources and needs were
+frankly stated. The United States disclosed what it could do and how.
+The way, in short, was cleared for the United States to enter the
+Grand Alliance on a basis making for efficient cooperation in the
+conduct of the war.
+
+A gentleman's agreement was effected with neither side committed to
+any binding policy. The United States retained a free hand, and was
+not controlled, formally or informally, by any entangling undertaking
+as to any future course it might elect to take in its relations with
+Germany. But one enlightening point emerged. It was that while the
+United States was free to enter into any peace it chose, it would not
+enter into a separate peace. No action in that direction was
+imaginable in the circumstances without consulting the Entente Allies.
+This injection of peace considerations into the war situation, before
+the United States had really entered the lists with troops and guns,
+was taking time by the forelock. But it was needful to clear the air
+early, as one of the reasons ascribed to Germany's apparent
+complacence to the entrance of America as a belligerent was that she
+counted on the United States as a balance wheel that might restrain
+the Entente's war activities and hasten peace, or later operate to
+curtail the Entente's demands at the peace conference. On these
+assumptions America's participation was supposed to be not wholly
+unwelcome to Berlin.
+
+American freedom of action was unlikely to confuse the war issues in
+the manner Germany looked for. Whatever hopes Germany built upon that
+freedom did not deter Secretary Lansing and Mr. Balfour from hastening
+to counteract misleading impressions current that America would be
+embarrassed in its postwar foreign policy by becoming involved in
+European territorial questions, from which, for more than a century,
+it had remained aloof.
+
+The French mission also achieved an incontestable popular triumph, due
+to the presence of Marshal Joffre and to memories of French assistance
+in the Revolutionary War. France's heroic resistance to German
+invasion of her territory, specially in thwarting the advance on
+Paris, had also attached American sympathies to her cause. M. Viviani
+and Marshal Joffre did not hesitate to avail themselves of this
+feeling by plainly requesting the immediate dispatch of American
+troops to France. While this course conflicted with the early plans of
+the American General Staff, the latter had to recognize the immense
+moral effect which the flying of the Stars and Stripes would have on
+the Allied troops in the Franco-Belgian trenches, and the request did
+not go unheeded. The country realized that the French importunity for
+troops was born of an equally importunate need.
+
+All the missions, except the British, were birds of passage, who
+departed upon fulfilling their errands of securing American aid in
+directions where it was most required. There was more permanency to
+the British mission, owing to Great Britain's role of general provider
+to her Allies, which called for the establishment of several British
+organizations in New York and Washington as clearing houses. Mr.
+Balfour and his suite left, to be succeeded by Lord Northcliffe, chief
+proprietor of the London "Times," London "Daily Mail," and many other
+British publications, who was commissioned by Lloyd-George to continue
+the work Mr. Balfour had begun and to coordinate the ramifications
+produced by extensive scope of the Allies' calls on American
+industries for war equipment.
+
+In the same direction the American Government consolidated its
+energies in a War Industries Board, which it created to supervise the
+expenditure of millions of dollars on equipping the American armies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIX
+
+IN IT AT LAST
+
+
+The Administration decided to send an American expeditionary force to
+France as an advance guard of the huge army in process of preparation.
+Major General John J. Pershing was placed in command of this
+expedition, which was believed to embrace an army division, a force of
+the Marine Corps, and nine regiments of engineers. A veil of official
+secrecy (religiously respected by the press in pursuance of the
+voluntary censorship it imposed upon itself) was thrown over the
+dispatch of the preliminary force, and nothing further was heard of it
+until tidings came of the unheralded arrival of General Pershing in
+England on June 8, 1917, and of the appearance of a number of American
+warships off the French coast about the same time.
+
+This latter event proved to be the safe arrival of a convoyed naval
+collier, the _Jupiter_, which served as a harbinger of the fleet of
+transports conveying the American troops. It carried a cargo of army
+provisions, including over 10,000 tons of wheat.
+
+The arrival of the first division of transports at an unnamed French
+seaport was reported on June 26, 1917. They were signaled from the
+deserted quays of the town at 6 o'clock in the morning, and as they
+steamed toward port in a long line, according to an eloquent
+eyewitness, they appeared a "veritable armada," whose black hulls
+showed clearly against the horizon, while the gray outlines of their
+escorting destroyers were almost blotted out in the lead-colored sea.
+Dominating all was an enormous American cruiser with its peculiar
+upper basket works. The warships went to their allotted moorings with
+clockwork precision, while tugs took charge of the transports and
+towed them to their berths. Resounding cheers were exchanged between
+the troops which lined the rails of the incoming ships and the
+populace which lined the quays.
+
+The next day came a formal intimation from Paris that the first
+expeditionary unit of American troops, in command of Major General
+William L. Sibert, had safely reached their destination. Rear Admiral
+Gleaves, commanding the destroyer force which accompanied the
+transports, telegraphed the Navy Department to the same effect. But it
+subsequently transpired that all had not been plain sailing in passing
+through the submarine zone.
+
+The expedition was divided into contingents, each contingent including
+troopships and a naval escort designed to hold off any German raiders
+that might be sighted. An ocean rendezvous had also been arranged with
+the American destroyer flotilla under Admiral Sims, which had been
+operating in European waters since May 4, 1917, in order that the
+passage of the danger zone might be attended by every possible
+protection. Frequent indications pointing to the presence of
+submarines in the expedition's course were observed as the transports
+neared European waters. The passage through the infested zone was
+therefore made at high speed; the men were prepared for any emergency;
+boats and life belts were at hand for instant use; and watches at
+every lookout were heavily reenforced.
+
+These precautions were timely and more than warranted. The first
+contingent of transports was attacked twice by German U-boats. Admiral
+Gleaves, describing these incidents in reporting to Admiral Mayo,
+commander in chief of the Atlantic fleet, said the first attack was
+made at 10.15 p. m. on June 22. The location, formation, and names of
+the transports and the convoys, the speed they made, and the method
+of proceeding, were suppressed in the account made public by the Navy
+Department.
+
+It appeared that the destroyers' flagship, which led the transport
+fleet, was the first to encounter the submarine. At least the officer
+on deck and others on the bridge saw a white streak about fifty yards
+ahead of the ship, crossing from starboard to port at right angles to
+the ship's course. The ship was sharply turned 90 degrees to starboard
+at high speed, a general alarm was sounded, and torpedo crews were
+ordered to their guns. One of the destroyers called _A_ and one of the
+transports astern opened fire, the destroyer's shell being fitted with
+tracers. Other members of the convoying destroyers turned to the right
+and left. At first it was thought on board the flagship that the white
+streak was caused by a torpedo, but later reports from other ships
+warranted the conclusion that it was the wake of the submarine itself.
+At 10.25 the wake of a torpedo was sighted directly across the bow of
+the destroyer called _A_, about thirty yards ahead. The ship's course
+was swung to the left, and shots were fired from port batteries in
+alarm, accompanied by blasts from the siren. The destroyer then passed
+through a wake believed to be from the passing submarine. A second
+torpedo passed under the destroyer _A's_ stern ten minutes later.
+
+Another destroyer known as _D_ was also the target of a torpedo which
+passed it from starboard to port across the bow about forty yards
+ahead of the ship, leaving a perceptible wake visible for about four
+or five hundred yards.
+
+The submarine sighted by the flagship immediately engaged the
+attention of destroyer _B_. In fact it darted under the latter and
+passed the flagship's bows, disappearing close aboard on the
+flagship's port bow between the destroyer columns. The _B_ followed
+the wake between the columns and reported strong indications of two
+submarines astern, which grew fainter. The _B_ afterward guarded the
+rear of the convoy.
+
+So much for the ghostly movements of the submarine or submarines which
+crossed the tracks of the first contingent of American transports on
+the night of June 22. In the absence of more tangible proof of their
+presence beyond that provided by white streaks and wakes on the sea
+surface, the incident might well have been a false alarm. It only
+occasioned much excitement and activity. But its interest lay in the
+alertness of the destroyers to danger. The officers on board the
+flotilla had no doubt at all that the danger was real. Admiral
+Gleaves, indeed, saw circumstantial evidence of the menace in alluding
+to a bulletin of the French General Staff which referred to the
+activities of a German submarine off the Azores. This U-boat, the
+bulletin said, was ordered to watch in the vicinity of those islands,
+"at such a distance as it was supposed the enemy American convoy would
+pass from the Azores."
+
+The second contingent of transports, which arrived in France a week
+later, had a similar experience, with the important difference that
+their encounters with submarines took place in broad daylight, and
+that the firing at one of them produced material traces of the enemy's
+proximity. Two submarines were met on the morning of June 26, 1917,
+one at 11.30, when the ships were about a hundred miles off the coast
+of France, the other an hour later. The destroyer _H_, which was
+leading, sighted the first U-boat, and the _I_ pursued the wake, but
+without making any further discovery. The second episode was more
+convincing of the actual presence of a submarine. The destroyer _J_
+saw the bow wave of one at a distance of 1,500 yards and headed for it
+at a rapid speed. The pointers at the destroyer's gun sighted its
+periscope several times for several seconds; but it disappeared each
+time before they could get their aim, which the zigzagging of the ship
+impeded. Presently the _J_ passed about twenty-five yards ahead of a
+mass of bubbles which obviously came from the submarine's wake. A deep
+charge was fired just ahead of these bubbles. Several pieces of
+timber, quantities of oil and debris then came to the surface. Nothing
+more was seen of the submarine. There was plain evidence that it had
+been sunk.
+
+Two days later--on the morning of June 28, 1917, at 10 o'clock--the
+destroyer _K_ opened fire at an object, about three hundred yards
+ahead, which appeared to indicate a submarine. Admiral Gleaves
+described it as a small object rising a foot or two high out of the
+water, and leaving a small wake. Through binoculars he made out a
+shape under the water, too large to be a blackfish, lying diagonally
+across the _K's_ course. The port bow gun fired at the spot, and the
+ship veered to leave the submarine's location astern. Then the port
+aft gun crew reported sighting a submarine on the port quarter, and
+opened fire. The lookouts also reported seeing the submarine under the
+water's surface. The ship zigzagged and the firing continued. Not only
+was the submarine seen but the lieutenant in charge of the firing on
+the _K_ destroyer, as well as the gun crews and lookouts aft,
+testified that it fired two torpedoes in the direction of the convoy.
+The latter, however, had sheered off from its base course well to the
+right when the alarm was sounded. The _K_ continued to zigzag until
+all danger had passed, and duly joined the other escorts. The convoy
+then formed into column astern.
+
+No submarine ambuscades awaited the third group of transports. Their
+voyage was quite uneventful. Apart from the probability that much of
+the commotion marking the passage of the first and second contingents
+might well have been due to groundless fears, the success of the
+American expedition in safely landing in France registered Germany's
+first defeat at the hands of the United States. It was her boast that
+her submarines would never permit any American army to reach its
+destination.
+
+General Pershing was in Paris when the first transport contingent
+arrived, and immediately set out for the French port to get in touch
+with his troops. They were debarking in long lines when he arrived,
+making their way to their temporary camp, which was situated on high
+ground outside the town. Their debarkation signalized the actual
+beginning of General Pershing's command in the European theater of war
+of an army in being, as yet small, but composed of seasoned troops
+from the Mexican border and marines from Haiti and Santo Domingo, all
+fit and ready for immediate trench service. He had been greeted in
+England as America's banner bearer, was immediately received by King
+George on his arrival in London, while Paris accorded him, as London
+did, the royal welcome which a sister democracy knows how to extend
+to the representative of a democracy bound to the Anglo-French Entente
+by the grimmest of ties. The landing of the vanguard of his army
+disposed of further hospitalities and brought him squarely to the
+business in hand, which was to get his troops in the fighting zone.
+
+A section of the French battle front for eventual occupancy by the
+American forces was early selected after General Pershing had
+inspected the ground under the guidance of the British and French
+military authorities. Its location, being a military secret, was not
+disclosed. Meantime the troops were dispatched to training bases
+established for affording them the fullest scope to become familiar
+with trench operators. The bases also included aviation, artillery,
+and medical camps. Further tidings of them thenceforth came from the
+"American Training Camp in France," wherever that was. Toward the
+close of July, 1917, actual intensive work was under way and pursued
+with an enthusiasm which warranted hopes that the troops would soon
+reach a stage of efficiency fitting them for the firing zone. Trenches
+were dug with the same spirit as that animating soldiers digging
+themselves in under artillery fire. The trenches were of full depth
+and duplicated those of certain sections of the front line, consisting
+of front or fire trenches, support trenches, and reserve trenches,
+with intricate communicating passages between them.
+
+The marines--those handy men who apply themselves to every service
+in warfare, as to the manner born, whenever the occasion
+requires--cheerfully bent their ardent energies to spade work, which
+was probably a new task even for that many handed corps. Thereafter
+they wired themselves in their trenches behind barriers of
+barbed-metal entanglements.
+
+All this intensive work was performed under conditions approximating
+to actual warfare. Both offensive and defensive tactics were employed,
+including lively sham battles with grenades, bayonets, and trench
+mortars. For bayonet practice dummies were constructed and the men
+were taught the six most vital points of attack. The troops were
+entertained by stories telling how the French decorated and painted
+their dummies to resemble the kaiser, Von Hindenburg, and other enemy
+notables, and each company searched its ranks for artists who could
+paint similar effigies.
+
+Practice in trench warfare did not displace route marching. The
+hardening process in that direction continued as part of the
+operations. The men's packs increased in weight until they neared
+fifty pounds. Duly the men would be equipped with steel helmets and an
+extra kit, when their packs would weigh eighty pounds, like the burden
+carried by the British troops. Accordingly the Americans were drilled
+to bear this burden without undue fatigue. This was the stage American
+operations in France had reached by the beginning of August, 1917.
+
+Little was disclosed regarding naval movements--beyond the activities
+of American destroyers, which were not only occupied in convoying
+transports and passenger liners through the submarine zone, but
+cooperated with British patrols in checking submarine destruction in
+other lanes of travel. The British recognized them as a formidable
+part of the grand Allied fleet.
+
+As to the navy itself, its personnel was increased to 150,000 men.
+Where the main American fleet was--whether with the British fleet at
+the Orkneys, or stationed in some other zone--no event transpired to
+give any clue. But patrol of the South Atlantic, as well as of the
+American coast, was assumed by the Pacific coast fleet under Admiral
+Caperton, the remaining French and British warships in those waters
+acting under his authority.
+
+Sea warfare conditions, outside the useful work of the American
+destroyers provided by the German submarines, gave little scope for
+naval operations, and it was assumed that the main American fleet,
+like the British, was lying quiescent, with its finger on the trigger,
+awaiting its opportunity. The Navy Department meantime busied itself
+arming scores of American merchant vessels to brave the submarines,
+and in carrying out an extensive building program, which included the
+construction of hundreds of submarine chasers--a new type of swift,
+powerfully armed small craft--as well as of many new destroyers.
+
+
+
+
+PART IX--THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXX
+
+FORESHADOWING REVOLUTION
+
+
+Without danger of overstatement or exaggeration, it may be said that
+the most dramatic feature of the Great War's history during the period
+February-August, 1917, was the revolution in Russia. To outsiders,
+acquainted with Russian conditions only superficially, it was
+startlingly unexpected. A revolution, usually, is merely the climax of
+a long series of events of quiet development, the result of a long
+period of propaganda and preparation, based on gradually changing
+economic conditions. The overthrow of the Russian autocracy seems to
+have been an exception to this general rule--at least in part. For
+even to close observers nothing seemed more dead than the
+revolutionary organizations in Russia on the outbreak of the Great War
+in the summer of 1914. To be sure, when the opportunity came, they
+sprang into life again and were able to place themselves in control of
+the situation. But the great climax certainly did not come about
+through their conscious efforts.
+
+For this reason a detailed description of the early revolutionary
+movements directed against the czar's government is not necessary to a
+thorough understanding of the events which so startled the world in
+March, 1917. The causes which brought them about originated after the
+outbreak of the war.
+
+We were in the habit of describing the two great governments, that of
+the German Empire and that of the Russian Empire, with the word
+"autocracies." And in that each was, and one still is, controlled
+absolutely by a small group of men, responsible to nobody but
+themselves, this was true. Aside from that, no further comparison is
+possible.
+
+The German autocracy is the result of the conscious effort of highly
+capable men who built and organized a system with thoughtful and
+intelligent deliberation. With a deep knowledge of human psychology
+and the conditions about them, they have guided their efforts with
+extreme intelligence, knowing when to grant concessions, knowing how
+to hold power without being oppressive.
+
+The Russian autocracy was a survival of a former age, already growing
+obsolete, rarely able to adapt itself to changing conditions, blindly
+fighting to maintain itself in its complete integrity against them.
+Change of any sort was undesirable to those controlling its machinery,
+even though the change might indirectly benefit it. It had been
+crystallized in a previous epoch, even as the tenets of its church
+were the crystallized superstitions of a barbaric age. It was, in
+fact, a venerable institution which certain men wished to perpetuate
+not so much from self-interest as from a blind veneration for its age
+and traditions. To them even the interests of the people were of far
+less importance than the maintenance of this anachronism in its
+absoluteness. Where the German rulers had the intelligence to divert
+opposing forces and even to utilize them to their own benefit, the
+Russian autocrats fought them and attempted to suppress them.
+
+The chief of those forces which oppose autocracies are, naturally, the
+growing intelligence of the people and the resulting knowledge of
+conditions in other countries which they acquire. Realizing this fact,
+at least, the Russian rulers were bitterly opposed to popular
+education and made every effort to suppress the craving of the common
+people for knowledge of any kind.
+
+These facts considered, it is not surprising that the first
+revolutionary movements in Russia should have been generated among the
+educated classes, even among the aristocracy itself. As far back as a
+century ago a revolutionary society was formed among the young army
+officers who had participated in the Napoleonic Wars, and who, in
+their contact with the French, imbibed some of the latters' democratic
+ideas, though they were then fighting them. Failing in their efforts
+to impregnate these ideas among the czar and his ruling clique, they
+finally, in 1825, resorted to armed violence, with disastrous results.
+Nicholas I had just ascended the throne, and with furious energy he
+set about stamping out the disaffection which these officers had
+spread in his army, and for the time being he was successful.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXI
+
+THE RISE OF NIHILISM
+
+
+The first agitators for democracy among the civil population were the
+Nihilists, those long-haired, mysterious individuals whose
+bomb-throwing propensities and dark plottings have furnished so many
+Western fiction writers with material for romances. The Nihilists, so
+well described as a type in Turgenev's "Fathers and Sons," were the
+sons and daughters of the landed aristocracy, the provincial gentry,
+who went abroad and studied in foreign universities, or, studying at
+home, imbibed revolutionary ideas through foreign literature. Coming
+together in small groups, they began to formulate ideas of their own
+especially adapted to Russian conditions. At first these ideas were of
+a nonpolitical character and extremely abstract. They wished to go
+among the ignorant peasants and educate them in the Western sciences.
+"Going among the people" was a phrase among them which assumed the
+significance of a program. But with its antipathy toward all forms of
+learning the Government soon showed its determination to suppress all
+these efforts at educating the common people, and the youthful
+agitators were arrested and thrown into prison by the hundreds.
+
+As a matter of fact their abstract ideas had made little impression on
+the ignorant mujiks, and had the Government ignored the Nihilists it
+is probable that their organization would have died a natural death
+from lack of success. But the opposition of the police only roused the
+fighting spirit of the young aristocrats, and they not only became
+more enthusiastic, but added recruits to their ranks more than enough
+in numbers to fill the gaps made by those in prison. The persecution
+by the police, furthermore, forced them to make a secret organization
+of their loosely knit groups, and this too fired the romantic
+imaginations of the young people.
+
+The fight between the agitators and the police waxed stronger and more
+bitter. Then one day all Russia was shocked by the news that a
+Petrograd police chief had had a young woman in prison as a Nihilist
+suspect disrobed and flogged.
+
+Hitherto the Nihilists had been entirely peaceful in their methods;
+violence had formed no part of their tactics. The indignation roused
+within their ranks by the outrage to the young woman resulted in a
+change. They decided to instill terror into the hearts of the
+Government officials by a systematic policy of assassination, whereby
+the most oppressive of the officials should be removed from their
+field of activity by death. The first of these assassinations, not
+quite successful, took place in Kiev in 1878. From then on violence on
+both sides increased and the bitterness intensified until in 1881 it
+culminated in the assassination of Alexander II. This so enraged the
+Government officials and vitalized their energy that soon after all
+the most active Nihilists had been captured or driven abroad, and for
+some years there came a lull in the agitation for democracy in Russia.
+But it was, after all, lack of success which had killed Nihilism
+rather than the violent measures of the Government. Practically all of
+the Nihilists had imbibed the radical doctrines of Karl Marx and
+Michael Bakunin, especially those of the latter, himself a Russian and
+more inclined toward violent anarchism than toward political
+socialism. These doctrines were far too abstruse for the untutored and
+practical minds of the peasants, and in most cases they had shown
+animosity rather than sympathy toward the agitators.
+
+Yet the Nihilist doctrines and program formed the basis for later
+efforts toward creating a revolutionary spirit among the Russian
+people. To this day the few surviving Nihilists of the early days,
+notably Katherine Breshkovskaya, "the grandmother of the Russian
+Revolution," are venerated by the people as the last representatives
+of the heroic age.
+
+It was not until the middle of the last decade of the nineteenth
+century, after the succession of Nicholas II to the throne in 1894,
+that revolutionary organization was revived in Russia. These modern
+efforts were concentrated into two forms of organization. The largest
+of these was the Social Democratic party, whose program consisted
+mainly of organizing the working people in the large cities and
+industrial centers. Its leaders were made up largely of recruits from
+the educated middle classes and from the Jewish elements.
+
+Second in size, though quite as important in influence, was the Social
+Revolutionary organization. Though smaller in regard to membership,
+its leaders and most active members were those same students from the
+aristocratic classes which had made up the Nihilist groups. It was
+interested in injecting its doctrines into the peasantry, rather than
+propagating them among the working classes. And a certain branch of
+the organization, known as the Fighting Branch, still practiced
+assassination as a means to gaining its ends. As a result of its
+activities some of the highest officials of the Government and the
+most important dignitaries of the ruling clique lost their lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXII
+
+REVOLUTIONARY DOCTRINES
+
+
+As members of both these organizations are at present in power in
+revolutionary Russia, it may be quite appropriate to enunciate their
+fundamental principles.
+
+The Russian Social Democrats, together with all the Socialist parties
+of the world, stand for a democracy that shall be economic or
+industrial as well as political. They contend that a nation, such as
+the United States, which is democratic in its political organization,
+but whose industries and natural resources are in private hands, is
+democratic only in appearance. They stand for the socialized state
+which, being controlled by the universal suffrage of its people, shall
+in its turn own and control the natural resources and the industries
+through which the people are supplied with their daily needs. Their
+first aim is to gain control of the political machinery of the state,
+then reorganize industry on a socialistic basis.
+
+The aims of the Social Revolutionists are not so easily defined, for
+the reason that there is more diversity of opinion among the
+membership. Most of them are undoubtedly Socialists, and many again
+are Anarchists of the Kropotkin school. Temperamentally the Russian is
+much more an Anarchist than a State Socialist, more an individualist
+than a collectivist. It is the Jewish element which gives the Social
+Democrats their numerical superiority. As compared to the Social
+Democrat it may be said that the Social Revolutionist, taking the
+average, is opposed to the strongly centralized state and bases his
+scheme of reconstruction on the local autonomy of the small community.
+It is the same difference that may be found, or is supposed to exist,
+between the principles of the Republican and the Democratic parties of
+the United States. The Social Revolutionist is the Democrat of
+Socialistic Russia; the Social Democrat is the Republican.
+
+The failure of the war with Japan proved a strong stimulus to the
+revolutionary movements in Russia. In fact, their activities compelled
+the Government to conclude a peace when further hostilities might
+have brought about the defeat of the Japanese. To bring this domestic
+unrest to a head before it should gain too wide a volume, the
+Government sent its own agitators among the workingmen and incited
+them to make demonstrations and other forms of disturbance, which
+should serve the police as a pretext for violent suppression. The
+first of these demonstrations occurred on January 21, 1905, a date
+which remains in: scribed in the pages of Russian history as "Red
+Sunday." The workingmen, some thousands in number, were led by Father
+Capon, a priest, who was at least under the influence of the
+Government, if not in its pay. Against the wishes of the Social
+Democrats, with whom his organization cooperated, he decided to lead a
+great army of his followers to the gates of the palace and petition
+the czar for constitutional government. When the unarmed demonstrators
+arrived at the palace they were shot down by the hundreds and trampled
+into the mud by the hoofs of the cavalry horses.
+
+The outrage stirred the Russian people profoundly. The revolutionary
+elements now began to act in earnest, though they were not quite as
+prepared as they had wished to be. A general strike was organized, and
+so effectively was it maintained that the czar and his clique promised
+the people a constitution. But when the strike had been called off and
+the disturbances subsided, it soon became evident that the promises
+were not to be fulfilled. More than that, the police now began such a
+series of repressive measures that again the fires on the revolution
+were lighted. Most notable of these was the uprising in Moscow in
+December, 1905, when the people and the soldiers fought bloody battles
+in the streets. But the revolutionary forces lacked proper
+organization, and were finally crushed. Of all the promises which had
+been made only the Duma remained, amounting to little more than a
+debating club with absolutely no independent legislative power.
+
+The first Duma at least served to give some conception of the coloring
+of public opinion in Russia. The majority of the deputies belonged to
+the Constitutional Democrats, a political party which appeared and
+represented the moderate progressives, those who wished a
+constitutional monarchy and progressive reforms. Their leader was
+Paul Milukov, a professor in the University of Moscow and at one time
+professor in the University of Chicago.
+
+The Duma, though the restrictive election laws had minimized the
+revolutionary elements within it, clamored for the promised reforms
+until it was finally dissolved by the Government. A number of deputies
+went to Finland and there issued a manifesto with the object of
+rousing a general demonstration, but without success. The second Duma
+proved quite as progressive as the first and was also dissolved
+arbitrarily. Then the electoral laws were made still more restrictive,
+so that the landed nobility and the clergy should be more represented.
+The third Duma, as a result, proved quite innocuous, and for five
+years it sat, never attempting to initiate any changes, attracting
+very little attention.
+
+During this period reaction regained all its former ascendency, within
+the Social Revolutionary organization it was discovered that the chief
+of the fighting organization, Eugene Azev, was nothing more than the
+paid agent of the secret police and that he had been delivering the
+members of the organization into the hands of his masters as they
+proved themselves most dangerous. The agent through whom the exposure
+had been made, by an ex-police chief, was an obscure Russian
+journalist, Vladimir Bourtsev, who at once rose to international
+prominence as the "Sherlock Holmes of the Russian Revolution." To
+maintain his reputation he began with much publicity further
+investigations and discovered a great number of smaller-fry spies in
+the organization, with the result that all mutual confidence of the
+members was broken and the organization went completely to pieces.
+
+After this, 1907, little more was heard in foreign countries of
+Russian revolution. Within Russia itself the university students who
+had formed the best material for the working committees turned their
+energies in other directions, degenerating into the notorious
+"candle-light clubs" and other somewhat depraved practices with free
+love as a basis.
+
+Nor had anything occurred to revive the hopes of the friends of
+Russian freedom when hostilities broke out between Russia and Germany
+in 1914, and the greatest of all wars was precipitated. Certainly not
+within revolutionary circles. Among the peasantry and the working
+classes, indeed, and of spontaneous origin, there had appeared a great
+economic movement, more directly revolutionary in character than the
+more picturesque terrorist organizations. This was the cooperative
+societies. In the towns and cities and the industrial centers they
+took the form of consumers' organizations in which the people combined
+their purchasing power and conducted their own stores for the supply
+of their daily needs. These local societies again federated into the
+Moscow Wholesale Society, which purchased in bulk for its
+constituents. In the rural districts the peasants organized for the
+purpose of marketing their produce jointly; this form of cooperation
+was especially marked in Siberia among the dairy farmers. Then there
+were the credit societies, cooperative banks which federated in the
+Moscow Narodni (People's) Bank, and so had millions of rubles at its
+disposal with which to finance more cooperative organizations. All
+these societies were much restricted by the police, but they gained
+enough headway to play an important part in the economic life of the
+nation after the outbreak of hostilities and to become a big element
+in the final revolutionary movement.
+
+Closely akin to the cooperatives, and of much older origin, were the
+Zemstvos. These local governing organizations were established in 1864
+by Alexander II to satisfy the desire of the peasants to express
+themselves in local politics. The local Zemstvo is charged with the
+administration of education, sanitation, medical relief for the poor,
+maintenance of highways, and other local matters outside the sphere
+of the central government. Naturally the Zemstvo was not intrusted
+with any power that was likely to prove dangerous to the Petrograd
+Government, but as the members were elected by popular suffrage,
+restricted by certain qualifications demanding the ownership of
+property on the part of the electors. The Zemstvos proved highly
+effective training schools in which the peasants could learn
+self-government and parliamentary procedure. The local Zemstvos, like
+the cooperative societies, federated into district Zemstvos, which
+sometimes had the control of large affairs on their hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIII
+
+RUSSIAN WAR SPIRIT AROUSED
+
+
+With the declaration of war against Germany, slumbering Russia seemed
+suddenly to awaken, and elements which had hitherto been antagonistic
+joined together for the common purpose of repelling the German
+invasion. Keenly patriotic, even to the point of fanaticism, in spite
+of his ready acceptance of radical doctrines, the Russian is ever
+ready to present a solid front against outside interference. Thus it
+was that when the war began revolutionists who had fled from Russia,
+or who had been exiled abroad, flocked home in great numbers and
+offered their services to the autocracy to fight the Germans. Never
+has Russia shown such unanimity of spirit and such solidarity of
+purpose. The Japanese War had been so plainly one of aggression, and
+in so distant a part of the world, that this same spirit had not been
+manifested in 1904. But now the Germans, always hated by the Slavs,
+were actually crossing the Russian frontier, close to the national
+capital. All Russia rallied to the call for action. As a matter of
+fact, it was the Russian autocracy itself which presently began
+realizing that it had unintentionally and illogically arrayed itself
+on the side of the forces which it had always fought, as the
+revolutionary elements in Russia also presently began realizing that
+they had followed their truest instincts in supporting the war against
+Germany.
+
+For within a few weeks after the outbreak of hostilities the war
+assumed an entirely different character. In its first aspect it was a
+quarrel between various autocracies over greed for influence and
+territory. The Russian autocracy went into the fight because of its
+pretensions in the Balkans. Then France and Great Britain, the two big
+democracies of Europe, threw themselves into the conflict. They fought
+to oppose the ambition of the German rulers to Prussianize the whole
+of Europe. It soon became obvious that the Teutonic Powers wanted
+something of immensely more importance than territorial gains in
+Serbia; they wanted to become the masters of all Europe. And so the
+initial character of the war changed within a few weeks: it developed
+into a conflict between international democracy on the one hand and
+international autocracy on the other hand. It was then when the
+question of Serbia sank into comparative insignificance that the
+Russian autocrats realized that they had enlisted on the wrong side.
+But with the whole populace of the country enthusiastically united
+behind it, the Government was swept onward; it was too late to make an
+abrupt change of front.
+
+Undoubtedly all the members of the ruling class of Russia realized
+this fact. But in full justice to them it must be said that the large
+majority of them, those who previously had supported the Government
+against the revolutionary and progressive elements, decided to accept
+the situation and support the war against Germany to a finish,
+whatever the results might be in internal affairs after the war.
+
+Within the governing clique, comprising some of the most influential
+individuals, was a small group, later known as "the dark forces,"
+which quickly came to the conclusion that democracy must be defeated
+at all costs.
+
+First of all came the czar himself. Nicholas, however, played a very
+small figure as a personality in all the later intrigues. Weak of
+character, almost to the point of being mentally defective, he
+reflected only the personalities of those about him. Yet he was by
+blood seven-eighths German.
+
+Next came the czarina, entirely German, with not a drop of Russian
+blood. Of a stronger personality, though scarcely more intelligent,
+she formed the real power behind the throne, in so far as direct
+control was concentrated in any one person. By persons of more
+intelligence than herself she could be used in manipulating the will
+of the czar to their own purposes. Behind her, or rather to one side
+of her, stood a group of the Russian nobility of German origin,
+descendants of the courtiers and officials brought into Russian court
+circles by the German wives of Russian czars. These still retained
+enough of their German sympathies to counteract any consideration they
+might otherwise have felt for the interests of Russia itself,
+especially as this was further strengthened by their realization that
+the defeat of Germany would also mean the doom of Russian autocracy,
+of which they were a part.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIV
+
+RASPUTIN, THE EVIL SPIRIT OF RUSSIA
+
+
+The dominating figure of this dark circle of pro-Germans within the
+Russian court was the monk Rasputin--Rasputin the peasant, the
+picturesque, the intriguing, the evil medium through which the agents
+of Germany manipulated the Russian Government toward their own ends,
+the interests of the German autocracy. Such a figure could have played
+a part in no other than a court of Oriental pattern, and such the
+Russian court was.
+
+Gregory Novikh was a Siberian by birth, the son of a common,
+illiterate mujik, as illiterate and as ignorant as his father. Early
+in life, while still a common fisherman, he showed abnormal qualities.
+Degenerate, unrestrained in all his appetites, he possessed a magnetic
+personality sometimes found in persons of that type. It was said that
+no woman, even of the highest culture and quality, could resist his
+advances. So loose was his behavior that he acquired the nickname of
+Rasputin, which means a rake, a person of bad morals. And by this name
+he gradually became notorious all over the land.
+
+From fishing Rasputin turned toward easier ways of making a living.
+He became an itinerant monk, a holy man, a mystic. A role he was able
+to play on account of his peculiar hypnotic powers. As a religious
+fakir he acquired influence over women of high degree, though his
+manners were coarse and his person was decidedly unclean.
+
+Eventually Rasputin made the acquaintance of Madame Virubova, the
+favorite lady-in-waiting of the czarina. With the credulity of a
+superstitious woman of her class, the czarina was a patroness of many
+occult cults and had a firm belief in the influence of invisible
+spirits. Rasputin was presented to her by the lady-in-waiting as an
+occult healer and a person of great mystic powers. Immediately he was
+asked to show his powers on the young czarevitch, Alexis, heir to the
+throne, who was constitutionally weak and at that moment was suffering
+especially from attacks of heart weakness. Rasputin immediately
+relieved the sufferings of the child and so permanently established
+himself with the czarina and even with the czar. As has been explained
+since, Madame Virubova had previously administered a drug to the young
+czarevitch, and by applying the antidote Rasputin had obtained
+immediate results. Whether this story be true, or whether Rasputin
+really did possess those peculiar healing powers which certain
+abnormal persons undoubtedly do possess, the fact was that he remained
+in court as a permanent attachment and acquired an influence there
+which was equaled by no other person. He became, in actual fact, the
+real ruler of all the Russias, for the prime minister who incurred his
+displeasure did not long remain in power. Such a man, naturally, would
+have many enemies, even within court circles, and efforts were made to
+bring about the downfall of Rasputin. Once his enemies did actually
+succeed in having him expelled from Petrograd for a while, but
+immediately the czarevitch became critically ill and during his
+absence the czarina was almost continuously hysterical. Again he was
+invited back to court and then he set about building up his influence
+into a political machine that was never again to be broken, even after
+his death, until it became necessary for the reactionaries themselves
+to help destroy the autocracy itself in order to purge Russia of the
+spirit of Rasputin.
+
+Rasputin, not the revolutionary movement, brought about the downfall
+of czarism.
+
+Yet up until after the outbreak of the war Rasputin had been
+intelligent enough to refrain from interfering in matters of state
+importance. His influence had thus far been wielded only to secure his
+own position. Perhaps his keen instincts, rather than his
+intelligence, warned him against too deep an interference in political
+matters. To this self-restraint he owed his long continuance in power,
+for though the situation was well known all over Russia, it was
+regarded rather in the light of a joke. Rasputin's power was
+underestimated, perhaps; he was more or less regarded as the pet
+poodle of the czarina.
+
+It was after the war that he suddenly changed his attitude. He was one
+of the first to realize the danger to the autocracy that a German
+defeat would mean; that the Russian court was ranged against the
+forces which would perpetuate it. Whether it was this realization
+which determined Rasputin to wield his powerful influence in favor of
+Prussianism, or whether he had been bought by German gold, the fact
+remains that he became the central figure about which revolved all
+those "dark forces" which were working for either a separate peace
+with Germany or the utter military defeat of Russia in the war. In
+this object Rasputin and his allies nearly succeeded. It was to avert
+this that practically all the social elements, both liberal and
+reactionary, united with the revolutionists in overturning czarism.
+
+What the plans of the dark forces were during the first year of the
+war cannot now of course be definitely known. Perhaps they realized
+that the utter inefficiency of the Russian autocracy would soon decide
+the issue on the eastern front. And had there not appeared other
+elements to guide and support the Russian soldiers at the front,
+Russia would undoubtedly have been overrun by the German-Austrian
+armies before the end of the first year.
+
+But the patriotic enthusiasm which German aggression had awakened
+also brought into life powerful social organizations created for the
+purpose of supporting the army in its fight against the Germans. Five
+days after war was declared a congress of all the Zemstvos met in
+Moscow and organized the Russian Union of Zemstvos. A Central
+Committee was appointed and, with almost unlimited funds at its
+disposal, raised through subscriptions, set to work to supplement the
+work of the Red Cross and the commissary department of the army, both
+of which were obviously unable to meet the needs of the situation.
+This organization practically took the place of the two other
+departments of the Government, establishing hundreds of hospitals and
+supplying their equipment, caring for the wounded soldiers, supplying
+the soldiers at the front not only with their necessities, but with
+tobacco, bathing facilities, laundries, and many other minor luxuries.
+During the first two years of the war the Central Committee disbursed
+over half a billion dollars. At the head of this organization,
+democratic in form, as its president was Prince George Lvov, who was
+later destined to play an important part in the organization of the
+revolutionary government.
+
+Another spontaneous and democratic organization which came into
+existence to support the army against the Germans was the Union of
+Towns, representing 474 municipalities in Russia and Siberia. It, too,
+carried on a work similar to that of the Zemstvos, raising and
+spending vast sums of money. Then came the cooperative societies,
+supplying the army with food. In the towns and cities the consumers'
+societies combated the intrigues of the food speculators, which were
+even more active in Russia than they are in this country, and
+stabilized prices. In some of the cities the local municipal
+administrations turned over the whole problem of food supply to the
+local cooperatives, doing nothing more than foot the bills. During the
+war the membership of these societies rose to thirteen million. They,
+too, were democratic in form.
+
+It would seem that the Government could have done no less than accept
+the cooperation of these social organizations thankfully and done all
+in its power not to handicap them in their efforts. But this did not
+happen. On the contrary, from the beginning they were hampered as
+though they were dangerous revolutionary organizations. This policy
+became even more pronounced later on, when the success of the Allies
+made the dark forces desperate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXV
+
+TREACHERY OF THE AUTOCRACY
+
+
+On the outbreak of the war the premier was Ivan L. Goremykin, a
+typical autocrat, who had served under four czars, and who was now
+well past seventy. As though utterly unconscious of the war situation,
+he carried his administration on as he had done previous to the war.
+First of all, he began a determined campaign of persecution of the
+Jews, at a moment when the most violent anti-Semites would be
+irritated by such a course. He even went so far as to have a number of
+pogroms perpetrated and he spread persistent rumors that the Jews were
+betraying the cause of Russia, in spite of the fact that they were
+playing a leading part in the social organizations and were more than
+proportionately represented in the army. Then he instituted similar
+persecution among the Ruthenians and the Poles, and when Galicia was
+occupied by the Russian military forces Goremykin sent there a number
+of petty officials whom he instructed to make the inhabitants into
+Russians according to old methods. Then when the commander in chief,
+Grand Duke Nicholas, issued his manifesto promising the Poles liberty,
+the Goremykin ministry completely ignored the promise. And finally, a
+number of political refugees, who had returned from abroad to offer
+their services, either in the army or in the social organizations,
+were imprisoned or sent to Siberia.
+
+Even the reactionaries who had previously supported all that the
+Government stood for were indignant. This feeling became most manifest
+in the Duma. In 1914 the Duma had been a reactionary body, the
+majority of the deputies being in favor of trusting entirely to the
+Government. In August, 1915, a most astonishing thing happened, the
+Duma, with a large majority, which included Conservatives, Liberals
+and Radicals alike, drew up a demand for a series of reforms,
+including the institution of a cabinet responsible to the people
+through itself. Another demand was for a general amnesty for all
+political prisoners. This was the famous Progressive Bloc. Goremykin
+refused even to discuss the program. Instead, he hurried to the czar
+to get his signature to a decree proroguing the Duma, in which he
+succeeded. The result was that the whole population rose in
+threatening revolution, and this time the threat was not from the
+revolutionary elements. Even former leaders of the Black Hundreds were
+among the protestants. It was then that Rodzianko, the president of
+the Duma, addressed a letter to the premier, placing the
+responsibility of Russia's recent defeats squarely on him and added:
+"You are obviously too old to possess the vigor to deal with so
+difficult a situation. Be man enough to resign and make way for some
+younger and more capable man." Then Goremykin resigned.
+
+But the change was for the worse, rather than for the better, for the
+next premier was a close friend and associate of Rasputin, a younger
+man, to be sure, and more capable, but whose capabilities were to be
+turned in the wrong direction. Boris Sturmer, a German by blood and
+sympathies, former governor of Tver, one of the blackest of
+reactionaries, was appointed to fill the vacant premiership.
+
+Sturmer, where his predecessor had perhaps been merely incompetent,
+now set about consciously to make a separate peace with Germany, and
+this object he hardly took the trouble to hide. Through the censorship
+he suppressed the loyal press and encouraged a number of papers which
+openly denounced Russia's allies and demanded a separate peace with
+the kaiser. Then he sent agents to Switzerland, there to confer with
+representatives of the German Government, so openly that it was known
+all over Russia, even among the peasants, that a separate peace was
+being prepared.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVI
+
+PARTY INTRIGUES
+
+
+Again the popular protest checked the machinations of the dark forces.
+Then Sturmer turned deliberately to suppress the democratic
+organizations. Early in 1916 he issued an order forbidding any of
+these societies, which were keeping the armies in the field, from
+holding meetings. Next the headquarters of all these organizations
+were placed in charge of the police. And then came the removal from
+the Cabinet of Sazonov, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the one man
+in whose loyalty to Russia the people had confidence. Sazonov had
+always been a keen admirer of the British and the French, and was in
+close touch with the embassies of these countries in Petrograd. To the
+Russians he had seemed at least some sort of a guarantee against being
+surprised with a sudden separate peace. Nor can there be any doubt
+that he was a serious obstacle in the way of the dark forces in their
+efforts to bring about their object. Sazonov's removal acquired still
+deeper significance when it was announced that Sturmer himself would
+take charge of foreign affairs, business of which he had absolutely no
+experience.
+
+Of a deep significance, though this was not obvious at the time, was
+the appointment of Alexander D. Protopopoff as Minister of the
+Interior. This was the man who was finally to kick aside the last
+wedge shoring up the tottering walls of the Russian autocracy.
+
+Protopopoff, who had for the first time entered politics in 1908,
+being a cloth manufacturer of Simbirsk, was in that year elected a
+deputy to the Duma by the moderate Octobrists, a conservative body
+which usually sided with the Government. But when the Octobrists
+joined the Progressive Bloc against the Government, Protopopoff had
+shown himself quite radical and supported it. Quite unexpectedly, by
+the resignation of a vice president of the Duma, he rose to prominence
+by being elected to the vacant office. In the summer of 1916 he was
+one of a delegation which visited England, France, and Italy. On his
+return to Russia, through Stockholm, he there met and held a
+conversation with a German agent, but at the time, though the matter
+was taken up by the Duma for investigation, he managed to exonerate
+himself. But, as became known, the incident caused him to attract the
+attention of Rasputin, and he and the court favorite came together and
+to an understanding. The result was his appointment to the cabinet.
+
+At first it was hoped that Protopopoff would prove the sign of
+surrender of the autocracy; that a liberal element was to be
+introduced into the administration through him. But the new minister
+showed himself in close harmony with Sturmer, and presently this last
+hope was destroyed.
+
+With Protopopoff a new idea was introduced into the Government. It was
+he undoubtedly who conceived the idea of staging a revolution in
+Russia, of creating or precipitating a premature uprising, as had been
+done so successfully in 1905, but for a different purpose. The idea
+now was to create such internal disorders as to give the Government a
+pretext for making separate peace with the Central Powers. This might
+deceive everybody; the revolutionary elements, which would be used as
+the medium for the disorder, and the liberals and conservatives who
+were now strongly anti-Government. In the midst of the turmoil the
+separate peace could be effected; then the soldiers could be recalled
+from the front and used in suppressing the revolution, a task that
+could be easily accomplished with the vast number of men under arms.
+As was later to be demonstrated, the dark forces did not reckon with
+the psychological changes which the army was also undergoing.
+
+Mysterious placards now began to appear in the factories and munition
+shops calling on the workingmen to go out on strike and organize
+demonstrations. Police agents, disguised as workingmen, went into the
+industrial plants and began to preach revolution. It was easy enough
+to utilize Socialist philosophy for this purpose. Why should the
+workers of Russia fight the workers of Germany, when their interests
+were identical? Why should they shed their blood for the ruling
+classes, when the ruling classes were the only ones who could gain
+through the war? The German Socialists were even then rising against
+their masters; the Russian Socialists were urged to do likewise and so
+join their German comrades in paving the way to the cooperative
+commonwealth.
+
+Fortunately the Social Democratic party had already issued a detailed
+manifesto explaining why the Russian Socialists should stand by the
+war. The genuine leaders of the Socialists should [see TN] the labor
+organizations realized immediately the policy which the dark forces
+were initiating. For once they came together with the liberals and
+even with the conservative elements, and prepared to combat this
+underhanded propaganda. Placards were posted and proclamations were
+issued by the real leaders denouncing the impostors and explaining
+their tactics. This underground fight among the laboring classes was
+of long duration, however. In instituting this policy the dark forces
+were indeed playing with the fire which was eventually to consume
+them.
+
+Throughout the war the food supply had been very bad, not on account
+of any real scarcity of foodstuffs, but because of the inefficient
+handling of the inadequate transportation facilities. In some
+localities provisions rotted in the warehouses while in the large
+cities the people were starving, on the verge of famine. Instead of
+handling the food situation as the other belligerent countries were
+doing, Sturmer encouraged a group of dishonest financiers to acquire
+control of the food supplies, thereby making big financial profits
+himself. This greediness on his part was, however, to cause his own
+downfall before that of his associates. A traitor to his country, he
+was also a thief.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVII
+
+THE WORK OF TRAITORS
+
+
+Such were the tactics the dark forces had fully adopted in the fall of
+1916, only a few months before the revolution. They deliberately set
+about disorganizing the machinery of the nation to facilitate a
+Russian defeat. As has been proved, they did not stop short of actual
+treachery in the military field. The failure of the Rumanian defense
+was the result of actual betrayal by those higher even than the
+generals in the field. The Germans and Austrians had known every
+detail of the campaign plans of the Rumanians and the Russian army
+supporting them, and this information they had obtained directly from
+Petrograd.
+
+Had it not been for the fact that the whole nation was awaiting the
+opening of the Duma to take place on November 14, 1916, it is more
+than probable that the revolution would have taken place in the fall
+of 1916 instead of four months later. It would then, however, have
+been a far bloodier event, for then the disintegration of the
+autocracy had not yet reached such a complete stage as it did in the
+following spring, and it might have offered a far more serious,
+perhaps a successful, resistance. But the last hope of the people was
+in the Duma, and they awaited its session in that spirit.
+
+The Duma convened on the date set, and then was witnessed the
+remarkable spectacle of the conservative members denouncing the
+Government with the fiery oratory of Socialist agitators. The
+president himself, Michael Rodzianko, who hitherto had always been a
+stanch supporter of the autocracy, being a prosperous landowner and
+the father of two officers in a crack regiment, arraigned Sturmer as
+once he had arraigned the revolutionary agitators. But it was left to
+Professor Paul Milukov, the leader of the Constitutional Democrats, to
+create the sensation of the meeting. He not only denounced Sturmer as
+a politician, but he produced the evidence which proved beyond a doubt
+that Sturmer was receiving bribes from the food speculators; the
+specific case he brought up showed that Sturmer, through his
+secretary, had offered to shield certain bankers under indictment for
+a substantial consideration. Sturmer immediately took steps to
+dissolve the Duma. But the czar, whose signature he needed, was at the
+front. For the moment he was delayed.
+
+During this interval another sensation occurred. General Shuvaiev,
+Minister of War, and Admiral Grigorovitch, Minister of Marine,
+appeared in the Duma, and declared themselves on the side of the Duma
+and the people. This settled the fate of Sturmer. On his way to the
+front to procure the signature of the czar to the proclamation
+dissolving the Duma he was handed his dismissal.
+
+His successor was Alexander Trepov, also an old-time bureaucrat, but
+known not to be affiliated with the dark forces. It was hoped that he
+would conciliate the angry people. But Trepov never played an
+important part in later developments; the fight was now between the
+Duma and the people on the one hand and the Minister of the Interior,
+Protopopoff, on the other. This battle now began in earnest and was
+destined to be fought out to a bitter finish.
+
+With a brazen fearlessness which must be credited to him, Protopopoff
+now arraigned himself openly against the whole nation and the Duma,
+with only the few hundreds of individuals constituting the dark forces
+behind him. But these sinister forces included Rasputin, the
+all-powerful, the czarina, and, unconscious though he himself may have
+been of the part he played, the czar himself.
+
+Protopopoff now began persecuting the members and the leaders of the
+social forces as though they were the veriest street agitators for
+Socialism. Next he endeavored to have Paul Milukov assassinated, but
+the assassin repented at the last moment and revealed the plot. Then
+he gathered together former members of the Black Hundreds and
+recruited them into the police force and trained them in machine-gun
+practice. And finally he renewed the energy with which he had begun to
+organize revolutionary disorders among the workers.
+
+All Russia was against him, even to the great majority of the members
+of the Imperial family. His own mother had warned the czar that
+disaster threatened him. As early as December, 1916, the Grand Duke
+Nicholas Michailovitch had held a long interview with the czar in
+which he had openly denounced the czarina and Rasputin in such strong
+terms that when he had finished, having realized he had gone extremely
+far, he remarked:
+
+"And now you may call in your Cossacks and have them kill me and bury
+me in the garden." In reply the czar only smiled and offered the grand
+duke a light for the cigarette which he had been fingering in his
+nervous rage. It was by a member of the Imperial family that the first
+vital blow was struck at the dark forces. In the early morning hours
+of December 30, 1916, a dramatic climax was precipitated.
+
+It was then that a group of men drove up in two motor cars to the
+residence of Prince Felix Yusupov, a member of the Imperial family
+through his having married a cousin of the czar. Among the men in the
+two cars were Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovitch, ex-Minister of the
+Interior, A. N. Khvostov, also an ex-Minister of the Interior, and
+Vladimir Purishkevitch, at one time a notorious leader of Black
+Hundred organizations, but since the beginning of the war an active
+worker in the social organizations and a deputy in the Duma, where he
+formed one of the Progressive Bloc.
+
+A few minutes later the policeman on duty in the neighborhood heard
+shots within the house and cries of distress. On making an
+investigation he obtained no satisfaction, nor did he dare to continue
+his inquiry on account of the high rank of the owner of the house.
+Again the men came out of the house and carried between them a large
+bundle resembling a human form, which they hustled into one of the
+automobiles and rode off.
+
+Next morning blood spots were found in the street where the motor cars
+had stood. Then a hole was discovered in the ice covering the river
+Neva, beside which were found two bloody goloshes. Further search
+revealed a human body, which proved to be the corpse of no less a
+person than the notorious monk Rasputin himself.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXVIII
+
+THREATENING OF THE STORM
+
+
+Thus was Rasputin finally removed from his sphere of evil influence by
+men who before the war had been of the very inner circles of the
+autocracy, but who had gradually undergone a great change of opinion.
+They believed that even the autocracy itself was only secondary in
+importance to Russia herself, and they had taken it upon themselves,
+after doing all in their power to circumvent the traitors through
+legitimate means, to remove the archconspirator as such creatures
+usually were removed in the days when they were more common. Rasputin
+had been lured to the house of Prince Felix and there killed.
+
+It was said that the czarina was hysterical for days after the
+sensational news had swept over all Russia and Protopopoff fainted
+upon being informed of the death of his dark ally and master. The
+czar, who was at headquarters at the front, hurried home to Tsarskoe
+Selo. And then, as though to insult the nation, the dead mujik was
+buried with such pomp as was accorded only to members of the Imperial
+family, the emperor and Protopopoff being among the pallbearers.
+
+The people treated the event as though it were a great military
+victory, rejoicing unrestrainedly. The premier, Trepov, who though a
+mere figurehead, was still loyal to Russia and secretly an enemy of
+Rasputin and Protopopoff, allowed all the details of the assassination
+to be published in the papers, even to the names of those concerned in
+the actual killing. These latter were of too high a rank to be
+punished, besides which popular sentiment stood solidly behind them.
+Trepov himself did not prosecute them because of his sympathy with
+their deed.
+
+Now that Rasputin, the undoubted leader and master mind of the dark
+forces was dead, there was universal hope that the pro-German
+conspiracy was killed with him. But the machine he had built up for
+his own protection and medium through which to accomplish his ends was
+too well organized to be broken even by his removal. Into Rasputin's
+place stepped Protopopoff. He maintained his hold over the czar by
+means of spiritualistic seances in which he pretended to have
+communication with the spirit of the dead monk. The conspiracy
+continued unabated, only now Protopopoff worked with the fury of
+desperation. And so the crisis soon came to a head.
+
+All Russia, save for the small palace group, was against him. At the
+new year reception held in the palace he was most severely humiliated
+by Rodzianko, the president of the Duma, who, when Protopopoff
+approached him with extended hand, swung his back to him, causing a
+sensation all over the country. At another time, when he entered the
+rooms of the aristocratic club in Petrograd, of which he was a member,
+all the other members present walked out. Yet he had the courage of
+his evil convictions; with the desperate fury of a tortured bull in
+the ring he faced all his enemies and continued on his path, the whole
+nation against him.
+
+Trepov, who had shown his sympathy for the executioners of Rasputin,
+was removed. So were the Ministers of War and Marine, who had declared
+themselves for the people. Black reactionaries and pro-Germans were
+placed in their posts. Then he began arresting all the labor leaders
+who were agitating against strikes and demonstrations and in favor of
+prosecuting the war, leaving his own hirelings, who were preaching
+strikes and revolution, to continue their efforts unharmed. This was
+about the most obviously significant act he had yet committed. Then
+the food-supply trains arriving daily in Petrograd were deliberately
+halted in the provinces and the population drifted on to the verge of
+actual famine.
+
+Then Protopopoff's efforts, in the early days of March, 1917, began to
+bear fruit. In spite of the warnings of the few loyal labor leaders
+still at liberty, the workers began to grumble and to talk revolt.
+Their stomachs were empty. On February 27, 1917, when the Duma went
+into session again, 300,000 workingmen had gone out on strike in
+Petrograd. The air was charged with electricity. Everybody realized
+that the critical moment was approaching: the final battle between the
+dark forces and the people.
+
+On March 1, 1917, the only two leaders of the labor organizations
+which supported the Duma issued an appeal exhorting the workers to
+return to work.
+
+And this appeal in favor of order and law was censored by the
+Government.
+
+Further proof of the treachery of Protopopoff were not needed; this
+was the most convincing which had yet appeared.
+
+During the first week of March, 1917, the unrest among the populace
+continued growing, and the Duma and the labor leaders felt themselves
+regarding the situation helplessly. Small riots occurred and martial
+law was immediately declared. Food was so scarce that even the wealthy
+were starving.
+
+But Protopopoff had made one mistake: he was also starving the troops
+garrisoning Petrograd.
+
+On March 9, 1917, the street railways ceased running on account of a
+strike of the street railway men. The streets were full of excited
+crowds, though as yet no violence had been committed. Cossacks and
+soldiers also patrolled the thoroughfares, while squads of police were
+on the housetops, covering the street corners with machine guns.
+Protopopoff wanted revolution, but he did not mean to allow it to
+succeed. All he wanted was a few days of violent disorder, a prolonged
+Red Sunday, during which a separate peace with Germany and Austria
+might be proclaimed.
+
+But the violence did not break out so soon as he desired. The strike
+was spreading; by the 10th it had become practically universal. But
+meanwhile the workingmen were quietly organizing. Electing delegates,
+they formed the Council of Workingmen's Deputies, which immediately
+took over the control of their movements. It was this fact which
+caused what might have been a blind uprising of desperate people to
+assume the character of an organized revolution. On this date the
+Duma, which had been in continual session, broke off relations with
+the Government with a resolution stating that "with such a Government
+the Duma forever severs its connections." In response to this act the
+czar issued a decree ordering the dissolution of the Duma.
+
+On the following day, Sunday the 11th, the members of the Duma
+unanimously decided to ignore the decree of the czar and to hold what
+was to prove the first session of the Duma as the representative body
+of the Russian democracy.
+
+Meanwhile the street demonstrations continued, augmented by those
+workers who had not yet gone out on strike and were simply out on
+their weekly day of rest. A proclamation had been issued by the
+military authorities forbidding gatherings, adding that the severest
+measures would be resorted to in breaking them up. But no notice was
+taken of this order. The Cossacks were riding through the crowded
+streets, but, in sharp contrast to their behavior of former times,
+they took great care not to jostle the people even, guiding their
+horses carefully among the moving people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXIX
+
+REVOLUTION
+
+
+The first actual violence was begun by the police, who opened fire on
+the crowds in certain sections of the city from the housetops with
+their machine guns. A number of demonstrators were killed and wounded,
+but still the disorders did not yet become general. Where the police
+opened fire the more resolute elements of the crowds rushed in to
+attack them and killed them. And now came Protopopoff's pretext for
+ordering the soldiers to fire and to begin such a massacre as had
+squelched the premature uprising on Red Sunday twelve years before.
+
+It was at this point that one of the most vital arrangements of
+Protopopoff's scheme snapped.
+
+There were 35,000 soldiers in Petrograd at this time, more than
+sufficient to suppress any uprising. Neither Protopopoff nor the most
+radical members of the Duma doubted that the soldiers would obey the
+orders of their officers, and shoot down the crowds on the streets.
+When had Russian soldiers ever refused to suppress demonstrations of
+the people? "The revolution is on," cried Milukov, "but it will be
+drowned in blood!" In this supposition both sides were to prove
+greatly mistaken.
+
+The Russian army of March, 1917, was a very different organization
+from the Russian army of March, 1914. First of all, it was now
+composed of men who three years before had been part of the Russian
+people. The regular professional army, the standing establishment,
+which had been the support of the autocracy, had been practically
+drowned in the vast influx of recruits. Furthermore, the old,
+well-trained regiments constituting the regular army had been
+decimated in the fierce battles along the Russian front, some of
+them being annihilated. They had been eliminated. Of still more
+importance there had been a change in the minds of the highest army
+leaders themselves. Whatever might have been their attitude toward
+the autocracy and the people in the days of old, like their
+colleagues, the civilian reactionaries, they had seen the autocracy
+and the social organizations contrasted; they were profoundly
+patriotic and they realized what Rasputin and his dark forces had
+stood for, what Protopopoff stood for; they had personally, most of
+them, pleaded with the czar to clean the court of the sinister
+pro-German influences--with absolutely no success. They realized
+that the country must choose between the autocracy as it was and a
+government of the people if Prussianism was to be defeated, and they
+did not hesitate in their choice.
+
+Among these army leaders, who had undergone such a change of
+psychology, was no less a person than the Grand Duke Nicholas
+Nicholaievitch himself, who had been removed from his command of the
+armies facing the Austro-Germans and transferred to the minor field of
+operations against Turkey, only because he had protested against the
+influence of an illiterate Siberian mujik.
+
+With very few exceptions, the army leaders, from the commander in
+chief down to the regimental commanders, stood arrayed on the side of
+the Duma. So clever an intriguer as Protopopoff should have realized
+this.
+
+One of the first regiments to be called out to fire on the people
+after the first encounters between the machine-gun squads of the
+police and the demonstrators was the famous Volynski Regiment,
+notorious in Russian revolutionary history. Never had it failed its
+masters. A noncommissioned officer of this crack regiment,
+Kirpitchnikov, immediately made the round of the soldiers and the
+other noncommissioned officers. They organized a committee which
+approached the officers. The latter, with the single exception of the
+colonel, stood with the committee. When the order came to fire on the
+people, they shot the colonel, formed, shouldered their pieces, and
+marched out on the streets as the first organized body of soldiers to
+fight for the awakening Russian democracy.
+
+Persuading several other guard regiments to join them, they attacked
+Protopopoff's police squads. This event occurred at 5 o'clock in the
+afternoon of the 11th, and marked the beginning of the actual
+revolution. The fighting begun by the mutinied soldiers now became
+general. One by one other regiments were called out, but with very few
+exceptions all refused to fire on the people and joined the
+revolutionists. Then the Cossacks came over in a body. As twilight
+approached the firing in the streets became general and continuous.
+
+Meanwhile Michael Rodzianko, president of the Duma, made one more
+effort to avert the great crisis. The czar, having been assured by
+Protopopoff several days previous that all danger was over and the
+situation well in hand, had gone to army headquarters at the front. To
+him Rodzianko sent a telegram worded as follows:
+
+"The situation is extremely serious. Anarchy threatens in the capital,
+transportation of provisions is completely disorganized, and fighting
+has begun in the streets. It is of vital importance that a new cabinet
+be formed by some person enjoying the confidence of the people. Each
+moment of delay adds to the disaster. May the responsibility for a
+great national calamity not fall upon your head."
+
+To this telegram the czar made no answer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXX
+
+THE CULMINATION
+
+
+Meanwhile the deputies sat in session, helpless, regarding the
+situation with growing alarm. After all, the majority were naturally
+conservatives and feared revolution. As a matter of fact, they allowed
+themselves to lose grip of the situation.
+
+As has already been said, the uprising was not a blind force giving
+vent to elemental feeling, but a thoroughly organized revolutionary
+movement. The old revolutionary forces had awakened in time to take
+control of the developing situation. It was the leaders of the Social
+Democrats, the Social Revolutionists, the successors of the old-time
+Nihilists and the labor leaders, who were proving themselves masters
+of the situation. The Duma sat quiet, inert, and so lost its
+opportunity. It hated the dark forces on the one hand, it feared the
+revolution on the other, and at the critical moment helped neither.
+What saved it from being completely discredited was the fact that a
+number of the revolutionary leaders, such as Alexander Kerensky and
+Tcheidze, both Socialists, were also deputies in the Duma, and, being
+of well-balanced minds, realized that they must have the support of
+those elements which the Duma represented to succeed. The real center
+of government of the new democracy, then rising out of the birth pangs
+of the nation, was the Council of Workingmen's Deputies.
+
+This organization on the part of the active revolution was largely
+completed during the night of the 11th, even while heavy firing swept
+up and down the streets of the city. When Monday morning dawned the
+various radical and labor leaders had knit themselves together in the
+Council of Workingmen's Deputies and were in control of the
+revolutionary forces through a great number of subcommittees. An
+intelligent plan of campaign for the actual military or fighting
+operations had been drawn up and was followed with an efficiency that
+would have done credit to organized troops. Undoubtedly the officers
+of the mutinied regiments who had gone over to the side of the people
+helped, but the revolutionary commanders did not for a moment allow
+them to take control of the situation. The red flag of International
+Socialism was raised that Monday morning as the emblem of the new
+regime, and to the present moment it continues flying.
+
+The dominating brain, the vital moral force, behind the revolution was
+Alexander Kerensky, the young Socialist lawyer.
+
+On Monday morning the revolutionary column headed by a regiment of the
+mutineers delivered an attack on the Arsenal, after dispersing the
+police groups in the neighborhood. The commandant, General Matusov,
+proved loyal to Protopopoff and offered resistance, but after some
+sharp fighting the garrison was overcome and Matusov killed. The
+capture of the Arsenal gave the revolutionists possession of a supply
+of rifles, small arms, machine guns, and ammunition more than ample to
+equip all their fighting forces. The artillery depot was also taken,
+and now the revolutionary soldiers, most of them students and
+workingmen, organized into flying detachments which scoured the city
+in automobiles and hunted down the police as though they were wild
+animals. The jails and prisons too were broken into and all the
+political prisoners liberated. And so fell the notorious Peter and
+Paul Fortress, the Bastille of Russia, in which some of the finest
+minds of the Russian revolutionary movement, both men and women, had
+been done to death with horrible torture. In the confusion some
+criminals also escaped, but in spite of their presence in the fighting
+crowds, there was very little looting or disorder, such as invariably
+attends violent uprisings. Schlusselburg Prison, another monument to
+martyred advocates of freedom, also fell. Then, headed by one of the
+old revolutionists, just released from a long imprisonment, the people
+turned on the most hated of all the old institutions, the headquarters
+of the secret police. This building was stormed, its defenders killed
+and then burned to its foundations, together with all its records.
+Everywhere the revolutionary forces were successful, meeting
+comparatively little resistance.
+
+Meanwhile the Duma continued inactive, except that Rodzianko sent a
+second telegram to the czar and also a telegram to each of the
+prominent army commanders, begging them to make their personal appeals
+to the czar, that he might be persuaded to take some action which
+would at least save him his throne nominally.
+
+"The last hour has struck," wired the Duma president. "To-morrow will
+be too late if you wish to save your throne and dynasty."
+
+And again the czar, misled by a false adviser, refused to heed.
+Various accounts would seem to indicate that he was drunk at the time.
+
+By this time 25,000 soldiers of the garrison had joined Kerensky's
+revolutionary army under the red flag. Then came a committee from
+these soldiers to the doors of the Duma with the demand:
+
+"We have risen and helped the people overturn the autocracy. Down with
+czarism! Where do you stand?"
+
+President Rodzianko, speaking for the Duma, showed them his telegrams
+demanding a ministry of the czar responsible to the people, and said
+that they stood for a constitutional democracy. The soldiers were
+satisfied. Then soldiers began arriving at the Taurida Palace, the
+meeting place of the Duma, to acknowledge their recognition of its
+authority. This was done under the influence of deputies Kerensky,
+Tcheidze, and Skobelev, all Socialists, who felt the need of having
+the cohesion of the Duma to the revolution. At about this time the
+newly appointed premier, Golitzin, who had succeeded Trepov,
+telephoned his resignation to the Duma. The other members of the
+cabinet had disappeared.
+
+That afternoon the Duma appointed a committee of twelve members,
+representing all parties, which should represent its authority and
+should assist the revolutionary organizers in maintaining order. These
+latter held a separate meeting in another room of the palace and
+issued an appeal to the populace to refrain from excesses. An election
+of deputies to the Council of Workingmen's Deputies was then called
+for that evening, the name of the council being now changed to the
+Council of Workingmen and Soldiers' Deputies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXI
+
+THE NEW GOVERNMENT
+
+
+By this time the firing in the streets had died down. Desultory
+fighting still continued in the outskirts of the city between patrols
+of the revolutionary forces and policemen, but by evening calm once
+more settled down over the city. The autocracy was dead; the
+revolution had been won. The dead and wounded had been collected and
+the latter were being cared for. The dead amounted to slightly less
+than two hundred.
+
+The two committees--the one representing the Duma and the one
+representing the red radicals--were in joint session all that night
+working with a harmony that would have seemed incredible only a week
+before. On the following morning they issued two proclamations. The
+first simply appealed to the people to remain calm and commit no
+excesses. The other announced the establishment of a new government
+for Russia, which should be based on universal suffrage. Then the Duma
+committee issued a special appeal to army officers to support the new
+regime. All day delegations from various organizations of both social
+and military life of the capital appeared before the doors of the Duma
+to offer allegiance, and again and again Milukov and Kerensky, each
+the popular hero of their separate elements, the one of the liberal
+middle classes and the other of the radical working classes, were
+called out to deliver addresses to crowds of enthusiastic people.
+Despite their differences of opinion, these two and their fellows
+worked together with an ideal harmony, each supporting the other with
+his constituency. Perhaps no greater anomaly was ever presented in
+history than the spectacle of Rodzianko, ultraconservative, and
+Kerensky, radical Socialist, each addressing a large crowd, the one in
+one courtyard the other in another courtyard, exhorting their
+audiences to stand shoulder to shoulder for a common purpose. Nothing
+but the knowledge that on the morrow the Prussians might be thundering
+at the gates of the city could have produced such harmony of action
+between two such differing types.
+
+Another picturesque incident of the actual revolution occurred when
+the Imperial Guards at the palace revolted and, having disposed of
+their commanders, sent a committee in to arrest the czarina, who was
+attending her children, all of whom were ill with the measles.
+
+"Do not hurt me or my children," she appealed, "I am only a poor
+Sister of Charity." A guard was left over her while the main body of
+the regiment went over to Taurida Palace to place itself at the
+disposal of the Provisional Government.
+
+Meanwhile other notorious members of the dark forces were apprehended.
+Ex-Premier Boris von Sturmer, the traitor whom Milukov had denounced
+as a thief, and who had since his downfall been a member of the court
+camarilla, was arrested and put in a cell lately occupied by a
+political prisoner. Next came the metropolitan of the church, Pitirim,
+an appointee of Rasputin, a feeble old man in a white cap and a black
+cassock, tottering in the midst of a crowd of laughing and jesting
+soldiers and workingmen, showing him, however, no other violence than
+with their tongues. One by one all the members of the old regime were
+brought in, or they came of themselves. Finally the archconspirator,
+Protopopoff himself, was the only one of note still at large. For two
+days his whereabouts remained unknown. As developed later, he was
+hiding in the house of a relative.
+
+On the evening of the 13th an old man in civilian dress appeared
+before the main doorway of the Duma headquarters. A civilian guard, a
+student, stood there.
+
+"I am Protopopoff," said the man to the astonished guard; "I have come
+to surrender myself to the Duma and to recognize its authority. Take
+me to the right person."
+
+The guard shouted the ex-minister's name in his excitement and a crowd
+quickly gathered. Even the perennial good humor of a Russian crowd
+forsook this gathering and it began to assume the aspect of a Western
+vigilance committee. There were angry shouts; the archtraitor,
+Protopopoff, was before them in person. But before actual violence
+could be offered the old man, Kerensky, the Socialist leader, leaped
+into the crowd and allayed the excitement, thus saving Protopopoff's
+life.
+
+Another strange feature of the day's events was the appearance of
+Grand Duke Cyril on the balcony of his own house, uttering a
+revolutionary speech to the crowds on the pavement below. He declared
+himself unequivocally for the new government, wherever it might lead,
+and appealed to the people to support it. Meanwhile the Duma committee
+sent telegrams to all the commanders along the various fronts and to
+the admirals of the Baltic and Black Sea fleets, stating the bare
+facts and asking their adhesion to the Provisional Government. From
+all came ready professions of loyalty and adhesion. Similar telegrams
+were sent to all the towns and cities throughout the provinces. And
+all the country responded similarly. With very little violence the old
+regime was upset all over Russia and local councils elected to work in
+harmony with and under the authority of the Provisional Government in
+Petrograd. The French and British ambassadors too hastened to inform
+the president of the Duma that their respective governments recognized
+its authority and were prepared to enter into diplomatic relations
+with the Duma committee.
+
+On the 14th the streets of Petrograd had assumed their normal quiet,
+if not their normal appearance, for it was somewhat unusual not to
+observe a single policeman in sight. Every member of the police was
+either in prison, in the hospital, or dead. The maintenance of order
+was given over to a civilian police, or city militia, under the
+command of Professor Yurevitch, the first time in Russian history that
+a college professor had ever undertaken such a function. On this day
+the garrison of the fortress of Kronstadt and the sailors of the fleet
+stationed there mutinied, killed their commanders and came over to the
+cause of the revolution. That evening the Duma committee issued a
+proclamation worded as follows:
+
+"Citizens! The wonderful event has transpired! Old Russia is dead. The
+Committee of Safety of the Duma and the Council of Workingmen's and
+Soldiers' Deputies are bringing back order into the city and the
+country.... The most pressing need now is food supplies for the people
+and the army. Assist with bread and your labor."
+
+Until now since the last of the fighting the control of affairs had
+been in the hands of the two committees, one representing the radical
+revolutionists and the other the middle class and aristocratic Duma.
+Each committee appealed to its constituency to respect the authority
+of the other.
+
+During all of the next morning, the 15th, the two committees were in
+continuous joint session, planning the formation of a cabinet or set
+of officers for the Provisional Government. Early in the afternoon
+this labor was concluded and the members of the new government were
+announced. Prince George Lvov, he who had organized the Zemstvo Union
+and served so efficiently as its president, was Premier and Minister
+of the Interior. Though an aristocrat of the bluest blood, he was
+extremely liberal in his views. Never had he been an autocrat, even
+in sympathy. Paul Milukov, the leader of the Constitutional Democrats,
+was Minister of Foreign Relations. He represented the middle-class
+liberals or progressives, constituting what in this country would be
+called the business men and professional class, as Lvov represented
+the broad-minded country gentry. Alexander Kerensky, the radical
+Socialist, an old member of the Social Revolutionists, the
+organization of many assassinations, was named Minister of Justice.
+Less fanatical and more balanced than many of his associates, he
+represented the connecting link between the two sharply contrasting
+elements which constituted the new government. To him the red flag of
+International Socialism meant more than the flag of national
+patriotism, but he, as some of his associates did not, realized that
+national patriotism must not be destroyed until the spirit of
+international brotherhood was an established fact; that world
+federation must rest first on national unity. He proved then, though
+still a man in his early thirties, the dominant figure of the
+situation, a position which he has retained to an increasing degree
+ever since.
+
+The other members of the new cabinet were: M. A. I. Gutchkov, chairman
+of the War Industries Committee, Minister of War and Marine. In
+earlier life he had been a soldier of fortune, having fought under
+many flags, for many causes, including that of the Boers in South
+Africa. In politics he was conservative. Andrei Shingarev, a
+Constitutional Democrat, was made Minister of Agriculture, an
+important post, for under his charge came the complicated problem of
+food supply, to be solved by means of a transportation all too
+inadequate in its lack of rolling stock to supply both army and people
+together. A physician by profession, he was also an expert on finance.
+Neither Rodzianko, president of the Duma, nor Tcheidze, the president
+of the Council of Workingmen's and Soldiers' Deputies, was represented
+in the cabinet, though both had taken important and leading parts in
+the revolution and the organization following.
+
+The policy agreed upon was a compromise between the two elements in
+the new government. The Duma party could not yet face the possibility
+of a pure republic, and desired a constitutional monarchy under the
+czar, reducing him to a mere figurehead, to be sure. The radicals
+wanted a clear-cut democracy. Between them, by mutual compromise, they
+agreed that the czar should be deposed and his brother Grand Duke
+Michael should be proclaimed regent, with the Czarevitch Alexis as
+heir apparent. The new constitution, which was to be as liberal as the
+most progressive in the world, must, it was decided, be worked out in
+detail by a national congress or constituent assembly which should be
+elected by universal suffrage as soon as possible. The more important
+and pressing task before the nation, it was realized by both elements,
+was the organization of transportation that both the people and the
+army might be supplied with food and that munitions and other military
+supplies might be sent to the front. The armies of two great empires
+were still to be defeated before there could be any detailed
+discussion of forms of government.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXII
+
+THE CZAR ABDICATES
+
+
+Meanwhile where was the czar? As yet not a word had been heard from
+him. He seemed to have been lost in the confusion. And as a matter of
+fact he was as though he were the lost soul of the dead autocracy
+wandering about in space, mournfully looking for some spot on which he
+might alight.
+
+As has already been stated, Nicholas was at the general headquarters
+of General Alexiev, the commander in chief, when the crisis was
+precipitated in Petrograd. With him were a number of his personal
+toadies, among them Baron Fredericks, the Court Minister, said to have
+been responsible for most of the evil influences during past years.
+Another of his companions was General Voyeykov.
+
+The two telegrams from Rodzianko had been received, but it seems
+probable that they had been intercepted by either one of these two
+attendants. At any rate, they must have counteracted whatever
+influence the telegrams might have had on the weak-willed man's
+decisions. General Alexiev, too, in response to Rodzianko's telegram
+to himself had attempted to bring the czar to a realization of the
+seriousness of the situation. Nevertheless he did nothing. Of the many
+personal pictures of the czar which have been painted by those who
+have known him personally one stands out predominantly: a little man
+with a weak face, twirling his mustache with one hand and alternately
+looking out of the window or fixing the speaker with a semi-vacant
+stare.
+
+Nicholas stood so when Alexiev explained to him the situation in the
+capital and then pleaded with him to grasp his last opportunity. But
+this last opportunity he allowed to slip by. Undoubtedly he could then
+have saved himself. Had he been a man of broad intelligence he might
+have come forward and averted the rising storm by granting even less
+than the autocracy of Germany has conceded to the German masses. Thus
+he might have emerged more firmly fixed in his high position than ever
+before. There are those who assert that Nicholas is mentally
+defective. Certainly the facts bear them out.
+
+Finally there came an urgent appeal from his wife to return to
+Tsarskoe Selo, and this, a purely domestic matter, he understood.
+Together with his suite he started on a train, his escort under the
+command of General Tsabel. All had been drinking heavily, and when
+finally the news of the uprising came through in full detail, they
+were all inclined to minimize the importance of what had happened. On
+the morning of the 14th General Voyeykov briefly summarized the
+situation to the czar, then added that General Ivanov, the one
+commander at the front who still remained faithful to the autocracy,
+was advancing on Petrograd with a regiment of picked men and he would
+soon restore order. General Tsabel overheard this conversation. He
+thereupon showed a telegram which he had just received from Petrograd
+in which he was ordered to bring the czar's train direct to the city
+instead of to Tsarskoe Selo.
+
+"How dare they give such orders!" demanded Nicholas.
+
+"This order," replied General Tsabel, "is backed by sixty thousand
+officers and soldiers, who have gone over to the revolutionists."
+
+Nicholas was now finally impressed by actual fact.
+
+"Very well," he said, suddenly, "if it must be so, it must. I will go
+to my estate in Livadia and spend the rest of my days among my
+flowers."
+
+But even that was not a final decision. On approaching Petrograd and
+Tsarskoe Selo the news came through that the garrison at the latter
+place had gone over to the revolutionists. The czar now insisted that
+he would go to Moscow, which he believed still remained loyal. But
+presently there came a telegram announcing that the Moscow garrison
+had also revolted.
+
+All day the train rolled back and forth from point to point, with no
+destination in view, the czar and his suite hoping to find some break
+in the wall about them. At Dno General Ivanov joined the party and
+advised the czar to go to the army. It was later said that he and
+General Voyeykov suggested that the Russian lines be thrown open at
+Minsk and the Germans be allowed to come in to suppress the
+revolution. To his credit be it said, however, that Nicholas refused
+to consider this last resort.
+
+He next went to Pskov, the headquarters of General Russky, in command
+of the army nearest to Petrograd, hoping to persuade that commander to
+send a large enough force to Petrograd to suppress the revolution. At
+8 o'clock in the evening he arrived. But Russky, together with all the
+other army leaders, including the Grand Duke Nicholas, who had
+conferred together by means of telegrams, had decided to support the
+Duma.
+
+At 2 o'clock next morning, on the 15th, the czar met Russky. The
+latter explained to him his position, and then called up Rodzianko by
+telephone. Rodzianko told Russky that the Duma and the Council of
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Deputies had mutually agreed that the czar
+must abdicate and two deputies--Gutchkov, the War Minister, and
+Shulgin--were on their way to demand a document to this effect from
+Nicholas. Before seeing the czar again Russky communicated with all
+the commanders and explained the new situation, namely, that the czar
+must be eliminated entirely. All replied immediately that they agreed
+to this as the best course. Then Russky went to the czar again and
+told him there was no other way open to him, he must vacate his
+throne. The czar agreed and went to his private apartment on the train
+to prepare the document.
+
+At 8 o'clock that evening the two deputies from the Provisional
+Government arrived and were taken directly to the czar. They
+immediately explained to the fallen monarch the full details of the
+situation in Petrograd. The one incident that seemed to make an
+impression on him was the defection of his own body guard.
+
+"What shall I do, then?" demanded Nicholas finally.
+
+"Abdicate," replied Gutchkov briefly.
+
+It will be remembered that the Provisional Government had decided that
+it would demand of the czar that he abdicate in favor of his son and
+of his brother, the Grand Duke Michael, as regent.
+
+"I have already signed my abdication," said Nicholas, "but on account
+of his health I have decided that I cannot part with my son. Therefore
+I wish to abdicate in favor of Michael."
+
+The two deputies asked leave to consult together for a few minutes
+over this change. Finally they agreed to this form of abdication. The
+czar then withdrew and presently returned with the document. The two
+deputies read it through, approved it, shook hands with Nicholas
+Romanoff, no longer czar, and returned to Petrograd.
+
+Still unrestrained in regard to his freedom of action, Nicholas went
+to Moghiliev, the general headquarters, to bid his staff farewell, but
+his reception there was cool at least; nobody took the slightest
+notice of him, no more than if he had been some minor subaltern
+officer. Then his mother, the Dowager Empress Marie, appeared and in
+the evening he dined with her in her private car.
+
+Meanwhile public opinion in Petrograd had begun to make itself
+strongly felt in regard to the outward form of the future Russian
+Government. Many organizations passed resolutions and street
+demonstrations took place, all protesting against a monarchical form
+of government. Before the Provisional Government needed to take any
+special action in response to this expression of popular sentiment,
+Grand Duke Michael, the new czar, hastened to abdicate in his turn.
+Favoring the principle of democracy, he added, he was not willing to
+assume the responsibilities of such a high office without the formal
+assent of the Russian people expressed by an election "based on the
+principle of universal, direct, equal, and secret suffrage." Finally,
+he urged the people to give their loyal support to the Provisional
+Government, until such a time as an election could be held.
+
+Czar Nicholas abdicated on March 15, 1917. His brother, Czar Michael,
+abdicated within twenty-four hours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXIII
+
+FIRST ACTS OF THE NEW REGIME
+
+
+The Provisional Government then made no further steps toward filling
+the vacant throne and Russia remained a republic.
+
+Then on the following day came a telegram from General Alexiev,
+stating that the people of Moghiliev were growing impatient over the
+freedom allowed ex-Czar Nicholas and requested the Provisional
+Government to have him removed from headquarters. Alexiev did not wish
+him wandering about headquarters.
+
+Four deputies were dispatched to Moghiliev to arrest the ex-emperor.
+The four were received with a popular demonstration of enthusiasm,
+which contrasted sharply with the coldness with which Nicholas had
+been received. Nicholas was in his mother's train when the four
+deputies arrived. He immediately emerged, crossed the platform and
+stood before the four representatives of the new republic like a
+school child about to be punished; with one hand he came to a salute,
+recognizing their authority; with the other he twirled his mustache.
+
+He was shown his carriage and quietly placed under guard. The deputies
+took places in another carriage, and then the train steamed out of the
+station with Nicholas a prisoner. Arriving at the palace at Tsarskoe
+Selo, Nicholas was taken over by the commandant and marched through
+the gates of his old residence. And so he disappeared completely from
+Russian public life.
+
+Meanwhile the czarina had also been arrested and confined to her suite
+of rooms in the palace. All the telephone and telegraph wires were
+cut. Most of the palace servants were dismissed and all the doors
+except three were locked and barred. A battalion of soldiers now
+mounted guard over him who had made more political prisoners than any
+other man in the world.
+
+Now began the troubled career of the new Russian republic. The Council
+of Workingmen and Soldiers, under whose direct supervision the
+fighting forces of the old regime had been overcome and the revolution
+organized, and which represented just those elements which the Duma
+did not represent on account of the restrictive election laws, felt
+its right to exist beside the Duma, possessing at least an equal
+authority. Thus the new governing forces started under very peculiar
+conditions, with a double head. The Council immediately issued a
+proclamation inviting the communities all over Russia to elect local
+councils, which might send their delegates to Petrograd to associate
+themselves with the deputies elected by the workingmen and soldiers of
+the capital.
+
+Another of the first acts of the Provisional Government was to order
+the liberation of all the political prisoners of the old regime,
+especially those in Siberia, and to invite all exiles abroad to return
+home. The return of some of these political exiles roused quite as
+much enthusiasm and popular demonstration as had the overthrow of the
+autocracy itself. The progress of Catherine Breshkovskaya, the
+"grandmother of the Russian revolution," from Siberia to Petrograd was
+almost like the progress of a conquering general. She had been one of
+the original Nihilists in the seventies and since then had spent most
+of her life in Siberia. All Petrograd turned out to welcome the
+popular heroine, now a feeble old woman, and she was officially
+received at the railroad station by Kerensky and other members of the
+Government in the old Imperial waiting rooms, where formerly only
+members of the Imperial family had been permitted to enter. Outside in
+the streets surged crowds of fur-capped people as far as the eye could
+reach, waving red banners and revolutionary emblems. Now and again a
+roar of voices chanting the Marseillaise would sweep back and forth
+over the throngs. Within the station the walls were banked with
+flowers and festooned with red bunting and inscriptions addressed to
+the returning heroine. However, this incident occurred later, already
+a great deal had been accomplished.
+
+The emancipation of the Jews had been one of first acts of the new
+cabinet. All restrictions were removed and the Jews were recognized as
+Russian citizens, and as such to be distinguished from all other
+citizens in no way. Then the constitution of Finland was restored and
+its full autonomy recognized. The same recognition was granted all the
+other minor nationalities. Next the death penalty was abolished, and
+finally the Provisional Government declared itself in favor of the
+equal suffrage of women with men, a principle which is innate in the
+revolutionary movement of Russia, to which as many women as men have
+sacrificed themselves. The vast possessions of the ex-czar and most of
+his munificent income were confiscated. At the same time the grand
+dukes and other members of the Imperial family voluntarily gave up
+their landed possessions and at the same time expressed their loyalty
+to the new order.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXIV
+
+SOCIALISM SUPREME
+
+
+Within the church the same overturning of old authorities took place.
+The new procurator caused to be thrown out the gilded emblems of the
+autocracy, and priests known to be in sympathy with the revolution
+were elevated to the offices vacated by the reactionaries. Most of the
+vast landed estates of the church were confiscated, and the church was
+relegated to a position in which it could no longer interfere in
+matters of state. Probably a majority of the radicals would have liked
+to abolish the church altogether, but even they must have realized
+that the great body of Russia's population, the peasantry, had not yet
+arrived at this state of mind, corrupt though they knew the
+institution to be.
+
+For some weeks while these reforms, in which the vast majority of the
+people believed, were being promulgated the most enthusiastic harmony
+prevailed between the two elements constituting the Provisional
+Government. But those realizing the wide gulf lying between these two
+elements, the constitutionalists and the revolutionary radicals, were
+every day expecting the inevitable dissensions to arise. Eventually
+they came. They would have come much sooner had it not been for the
+fact that the nation was at war.
+
+The friction which presently began between the two contrasting
+elements sharing the power of government has undoubtedly been much
+magnified and distorted by the press in Great Britain and this
+country, not through malicious intent, but through ignorance of the
+aims of one of these elements and of Russian character. The two
+elements in question are, of course, found in all countries, and the
+dissensions in Petrograd probably caused more bitterness in other
+countries between these opposing elements than existed in Russia
+itself. The conservative press of England and America exaggerated to
+absurdity the program and aims of the radical forces in Russia, while
+the Socialist press of these same countries was equally unreliable in
+its partisanship, and would have had its readers believe Prince Lvov
+and Milukov hardly any improvement on Protopopoff, a view in which it
+would not have been supported by the most radical Russians. For the
+true story of this period we must wait yet a while until dispassionate
+witnesses have had time to present their experiences and observations
+in permanent form.
+
+Nevertheless, there seems to be no doubt that the wine of freedom did
+rise to the heads of the ultraradicals, and the Russian radical's
+ideas often do approach the borders of absurdity. Having obtained
+democracy in civil life, the extremists among the deputies of the
+Workingmen's and Soldier's Council wished to extend it in full to the
+army. Though this army was face to face with the best organized
+military machine in the world, they demanded the resignation of all
+the officers, that their places might be filled by the votes of the
+common soldiers. This rank absurdity the commanders on the front
+naturally resisted, and it was not allowed to come into practice, but
+the spirit behind the suggestion did begin to permeate the ignorant,
+peasants of the rank and file and caused endless demoralization.
+Animated by the same spirit, many of the workingmen in the factories
+supplying the army grew restless under the discipline of work and
+struck for impossible wages. They had always thought that under a
+Socialist system they would have little work and plenty to eat. Now
+the social revolution had been accomplished, and these improvements
+did not materialize. If more disorder and fighting were needed to
+bring them about, they would supply these deficiencies.
+
+What added to this spirit was the arrival in Russia, early in April,
+1917, of the extreme radical Socialist, Lenine. He is generally
+credited in this country with being an agent of Germany, but men of
+his type are not easily subsidized, nor would it have been necessary
+for the Germans to do so. Utterly idealistic, a wild fanatic,
+unpractical to the point of being unbalanced, he represented that wing
+of radicalism which lives in Utopias and will give no consideration to
+things as they are. They preach the doctrine of the brotherhood of man
+with the same bitterness that many religious sects preach the
+salvation of the soul. Lenine began his propaganda, together with
+thirty or more of his followers who arrived with him. They preached
+an immediate separate peace with Germany and Austria; it was not to
+the interest of the Russian working classes to fight the Teuton
+working classes when both were slaves under the same masters, the
+capitalists of the world. Let the Germans fight their capitalists and
+the Russians theirs. And even if the Germans did conquer Russia, what
+did it matter? They would not prove any worse masters than the Russian
+capitalists. All the working classes of the world should unite and
+attack the capitalists simultaneously, etc. Undoubtedly Lenine made
+some impression on the more ignorant workingmen of Petrograd and
+soldiers of the army, but his significance has been much overestimated
+in this country. In Russia his influence corresponds somewhat to the
+influence of Emma Goldman in this country: their followers are more
+noisy than numerous.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXV
+
+POLICIES PROCLAIMED
+
+
+The first important cause for dissension between the Council of
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Deputies and the Provisional Government
+occurred on April 7, 1917, when Professor Milukov, speaking as
+Minister of Foreign Affairs, stated that the occupation of
+Constantinople and the Dardanelles was essential to the economic
+prosperity of Russia. Either he underestimated the strength of the
+Socialist elements, or he did not understand their point of view, for
+here he proclaimed a principle to which even the mildest Socialist
+would be opposed: the holding of territory occupied by people of one
+nationality by a nation whose people are of another nationality.
+
+There was a rising storm of protest, in which even Kerensky joined
+against his associate in the ministry. The result was that the
+Provisional Government was compelled to issue the famous statement of
+its aims in the war, in which it renounced all indemnities and the
+desire to conquer any foreign territories, at the same time
+enunciating the rights of all small nationalities to decide their own
+separate destinies. President Wilson had expressed a very similar
+formula before the entrance of the United States into the war in the
+words "peace without victory." Unfortunately this general statement of
+Socialistic principle lacked the detail necessary to make it
+applicable to the war situation; nor have the radical forces ever been
+unanimous enough in their opinions since then to supply these details.
+There remained, and there still remains, the question as to whether
+liberating Alsace and Lorraine from the Germans would be the conquest
+of foreign territory, or whether reparation on the part of Germany for
+the damage done in Belgium would constitute an indemnity. Must the
+Armenians remain forever under Turkey, or must armed force be employed
+to take Armenia away from Turkey, that the Armenians might settle
+their own destiny? Either course might be interpreted as against or in
+accordance with the principle enunciated.
+
+Nevertheless, this manifesto had a powerful influence in the Allied
+countries, and the justice of the principles in question have been,
+broadly speaking, generally recognized.
+
+The Germans made the most of the proclamation and suggested a separate
+peace through countless agencies, in which Russia should not lose any
+territory inhabited by Russians and need not pay any indemnities. At
+this bait the Leninites and dupes of the numerous agitators in German
+pay, which undoubtedly began infesting Petrograd, bit readily. But
+here the Provisional Government responded by a clever stroke of
+diplomacy, and in this it had the support of the council; if the
+German and Austrian Socialists were really in sympathy with the
+Russian ideals of democracy and wished to make peace with them, let
+them then also overturn their autocracies. If they would do this, then
+they might expect peace with Russia and undoubtedly with the other
+Allies, for France, Great Britain, and the United States had each
+declared that it was fighting the Teutonic autocracies and not the
+people they ruled.
+
+The German Socialist is entirely a different type from the Russian
+Socialist. He believes in iron discipline. He believes in strong
+centralization. The German autocracy in many of its features
+approaches something not far from the ideal of the German Socialist,
+especially in its care of the working classes through state insurance,
+workingmen's compensation legislation, and its many state and
+municipal enterprises. In this lies the strength of the German
+autocracy; with all its imperialistic features, it has cared for the
+welfare of the working classes.
+
+The German Socialists did not respond to this appeal. And from that
+moment all danger of a separate peace between the Russian democracy
+and Germany was past, if danger it may be called. The real danger to
+the cause of the Allies and to Russia itself was the internal danger,
+the disorganization in army discipline which the radicalism of the
+revolution naturally spread among the soldiers, augmented, as it was,
+by every power and agency which the enemy could bring to bear.
+
+In the second week of April, 1917, a convention or congress of the
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Council was held, all parts of Russia being
+represented. By a vote of 325 against 57 the continuance of the war
+was declared necessary. The council also issued various appeals to the
+soldiers, both in Petrograd and at the front, asking their support of
+the Provisional Government, which seemed at least to indicate that
+there were radical influences at work even too advanced for the
+council.
+
+In Petrograd General Kornilov, the famous Cossack commander, who had
+once been a prisoner of the Austrians and had escaped, and who had
+personally placed the czarina under arrest, was placed in command of
+the Petrograd garrison. His task was especially difficult, as his men
+were in closer contact with the demoralizing influences of the radical
+debating clubs of the capital.
+
+The Workingmen's and Soldiers' Council probably had no deliberate
+intention of undermining the military discipline necessary to maintain
+the efficiency of a body of troops, but it could not entirely give up
+its idea of "democratizing the army." The result of these efforts, as
+the members of the council themselves admitted, went far beyond
+anything they had intended. On the 1st of May a number of political
+demonstrations on the part of the soldiers took place in Petrograd.
+Socialistic in nature, some of them directed against policies of the
+Provisional Government. The council immediately disclaimed all
+responsibility for the demonstrations and appealed to the soldiers to
+remain in their barracks.
+
+This disintegration in army organization nevertheless made continual
+progress during the early part of May, 1917, and was fast
+precipitating a crisis. The fact was that the Provisional Government,
+though nominally at the head of affairs, had no material power behind
+it. This power, the army, was organized in the council and was
+self-conscious. Naturally it could not resist the temptation of
+attempting to exercise its judgment, though it realized that it was
+not fitted to assume the entire responsibility of government. It felt,
+too, a right to assert itself because the Duma, on account of the
+restrictive election laws which had created it years before during the
+old regime did not represent those classes to which the soldiers
+belonged.
+
+The members of the Provisional Government did not deny the justice of
+this claim, and early in May, 1917, they suggested as a remedy that
+the cabinet be reorganized and the radical elements be given fuller
+representation. But here again the council was faced by the obstacle
+in the Socialist principle that Socialist organizations must never
+fuse with so-called capitalist organizations. The offer was refused.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXVI
+
+KERENSKY SAVES RUSSIA FROM HERSELF
+
+
+On May 9, 1917, the situation was intensified when the council issued
+an appeal to the working classes of the world to come together in a
+general congress to discuss terms of peace. This meant naturally an
+international Socialist conference. There was really no disloyalty
+behind this move. The majority of the deputies no doubt considered it
+a means of forcing the hands of the Socialists of the Central
+Empires, perhaps to force them to overthrow their autocracies. The
+idea was to formulate a peace program which would come close to
+demanding universal democracy the world over and, by having the Teuton
+Socialists subscribe to it, force them to bring pressure to bear on
+their governments which might even develop into revolution. But this
+was not understood abroad, and created much ill feeling.
+
+On May 13, 1917, General Kornilov, commanding the Petrograd garrison,
+gave up his efforts in despair and handed in his resignation, on
+account of "the interference of certain organizations with the
+discipline of his troops." Generals Gurko and Brussilov also sent in
+their resignations, and a few days later Minister of War and Marine
+Gutchkov, wishing to precipitate the impending crisis, also resigned.
+
+Complete anarchy now threatened, for the council still insisted on its
+right to guard the interests of democracy in the army as well as among
+the civil population. It was then that Minister of Justice Kerensky
+rose and saved the situation with an impassioned speech, in which he
+declared that he wished he had died two months before when democracy
+seemed such a promising dream. He then appealed to his associates in
+the council, of which he was a vice president, to set aside their
+Utopian fantasies for the time being and consider the needs of the
+present. His oratory carried the day. The council agreed to a
+coalition cabinet which should have full control of affairs.
+
+After a joint session between the executive committee of the council
+and the Duma committee, the new cabinet was formed on May 19, 1917.
+
+Paul Milukov retired as Foreign Minister, for his nationalistic
+utterances in regard to Constantinople had aroused against him all the
+radicals. Prince Lvov remained as premier. Kerensky became Minister of
+War. The Minister of Finance, Terestchenko, became Minister of Foreign
+Affairs. Shingarev, a Social Revolutionist, became Minister of
+Finance. Altogether the new cabinet included six radicals. Immediately
+afterward the council passed a resolution of confidence in the new
+government and urged all its constituents to support it. Kerensky
+then stated that he would immediately leave for a tour of the front
+for the purpose of exhorting the soldiers to submit to military
+organization and that an iron discipline would be instituted. The
+generals at the front now withdrew their resignations, which had not
+been accepted, and returned to their posts.
+
+During this period two important conventions were held in Petrograd; a
+national congress of the Cossacks and a national congress of peasants.
+The former declared itself for a strong offensive against the enemy
+but passed no political resolutions other than to support the
+Provisional Government. The peasants' congress did likewise and also
+showed itself strongly Socialistic in its election of officers.
+Lenine, however, who was one of the candidates, received only 11
+votes, as against 810 polled by Tchernov, a Social Revolutionist, and
+809 by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the "grandmother of the revolution."
+
+During the month of June, 1917, the Provisional Government made
+distinct progress, considering the almost insurmountable obstacles
+inherent in such a situation as it had to face. From now on there was
+very little friction between the cabinet and the council; they worked
+together with comparative harmony. The fact that the radical elements
+were now so well represented in the ministry probably was the chief
+reason, but the personality of Kerensky was now beginning to rise as
+the dominating figure of the new Russia. A fairly extreme radical
+himself, with the confidence of his associates, he was also respected
+by the more conservative elements on account of his sanity and
+practical abilities. On June 1, 1917, A. I. Konovalov, Minister of
+Commerce and Trade, resigned on account of friction with his
+associates over what he considered the Government's interference with
+private industries, but this incident passed quietly.
+
+On this same date there occurred another incident which, on account of
+its highly dramatic aspect, attracted wide attention in the press of
+the Allied countries, and was therefore considered more significant
+than it has since proved to be. The local council of the Workingmen's
+and Soldiers' Council of Deputies in Kronstadt, the location of the
+naval arsenal and the headquarters of the Baltic fleet, declared
+Kronstadt an independent republic. The president of this council, a
+young student by the name of Anatole Lamanov, was apparently an
+anarchist of the extreme type; extreme in that he believed that
+anarchist principles could be put into immediate practice, and he at
+once issued a proclamation calling on all other communities in Russia
+to declare their independence. His idea was that all the communities
+should be knit together very loosely for specific purposes, such as
+the war against the Germans, of which he was still heartily in favor.
+Later dispatches, if true, would indicate that the real instigator of
+this comic-opera scene was a woman, possibly in the pay of the German
+Government, since she was the companion of Robert Grimm, a Swiss
+Socialist, later expelled from Russia by the Socialists themselves on
+account of pro-German activities.
+
+With its usual tolerance the Provisional Government made no attempt to
+suppress this act of secession by armed force. The council itself in
+Petrograd, representing the whole country, immediately denounced the
+Kronstadt proclamation, and sent two deputies to Kronstadt to reason
+with Lamanov and his associates. The whole incident seemed to be
+largely a matter of paper proclamations, since no violence on either
+side ever occurred, and the Kronstadt situation finally faded from
+public attention. Nevertheless it caused Kerensky to cut short his
+tour of the various fronts and return to Petrograd two days later.
+
+In the public speeches which he then made he spoke very encouragingly
+of the situation on the firing lines, but two days later it was
+announced that General Alexiev's resignation as commander in chief had
+been accepted and that Brussilov had been appointed in his place.
+
+On the 10th President Wilson issued his famous note, prepared in
+response to the radical formula of the council, declaring for a peace
+"without annexation and without indemnities." In spirit it was in
+perfect accord with what the council had demanded: that no people
+should be annexed against their will, that democracy should be the
+guiding principle, etc. Certainly it was in accord with his previous
+declaration made before the war; a "peace without oppressive
+victories," a principle quite as radical as anything the Petrograd
+radicals had ever formulated. There was then, and has been ever since,
+every indication that the Provisional Government and the big majority
+of the members of the council accepted this declaration as being in
+harmony with their own sentiments. Nevertheless, it became the object
+of a very noisy attack by those extreme elements known as the
+Maximalists, best represented by Lenine and his type.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXVII
+
+THE AMERICAN COMMISSIONS
+
+
+To the members of the German Government the Russian revolution
+undoubtedly came as a great surprise, placing their faith, as they
+did, in the efforts of Protopopoff and his machinations. It is
+extremely unlikely that Petrograd was infested with German agents
+disguised as radicals in the earlier days after the overthrow of the
+autocracy. But by this time, in June, 1917, Germany had had time to
+meet the new conditions, and obviously the German agents had arrived
+and were busy.
+
+The only fertile ground available was that occupied by the Leninites.
+While the genuine Maximalists may have been, and in all probability
+really were, unconscious of the spies in their midst, they accepted
+the cooperation of the dark elements, and together they set to work to
+create disorder. The Kronstadt affair was their initial success.
+
+In the early days of June, 1917, armed bands of these disturbers began
+parading the streets of the capital, haranguing the crowds. The
+Provisional Government followed the policy of noninterference. One
+party of the armed propagandists entered and took possession of a
+large residential building in the Viborg section of the city and held
+this position until late in July, 1917.
+
+These activities culminated in an attempt on the part of the
+Maximalist leaders to organize a giant demonstration in the streets
+on June 23, 1917. Placards were posted all over the city denouncing
+the war, calling upon the soldiers to refuse to fight for the
+capitalist governments, etc.
+
+The action taken by the Workingmen's and Soldiers' Council, itself so
+often denounced as being under pro-German influence, and even in
+German pay, by the press of the Allied countries, was extremely
+significant. It immediately placarded the city with appeals to the
+soldiers and workingmen to ignore the call of the Maximalists. All
+that night until daybreak not only Kerensky himself, but N. C.
+Tcheidze, the president of the council, and his associates, spent in
+making the rounds of the barracks, addressing the soldiers, appealing
+to them against participating in the demonstration. Their efforts were
+a complete success; on the following day there was no demonstration.
+And apparently in the last hour the Maximalist leaders themselves
+realized that foreign influences were at work, for when their organ,
+"Pravda," appeared, its front page was covered with an appeal to their
+followers not to demonstrate.
+
+On June 16, 1917, a convention of newly elected deputies to the
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Council, representing all Russia, convened
+in Petrograd. One of its first acts was to pass a resolution of
+approval of the Provisional Government's expulsion of Grimm, the Swiss
+Socialist, who had attempted pro-German activities in the capital, the
+vote being 640 against 121.
+
+In the middle of the month the two American commissions, one under
+Root and the other under Stevens, arrived in Russia, and it was
+notable that the reported utterances of their members were sharply in
+contrast to the press dispatches in their optimism. The conclusion
+must be obvious that German influences were at work with our sources
+of news. The Stevens Commission, whose mission was of a technical
+nature, expressed surprise and pleasure over the progress which had
+been made in straightening out the transportation tangle and the good
+condition in which they found railroad facilities, the only handicaps
+being lack of locomotives and rolling stock.
+
+Meanwhile, during June, 1917, a special council of sixty members was
+at work drafting new legislation for the civil government of the
+country. One law prepared by this body, as an illustration, was making
+the judges of petty courts subject to the election of the people on
+the American principle. This council was also intrusted with the task
+of formulating the groundwork for the new constitution for the Russian
+democracy, to be approved by the General Assembly when elected.
+
+During the first half of July, 1917, the sudden offensive of the
+Russian armies, so brilliantly begun, seemed to engross every element
+of Russian society. Kerensky himself had gone to the front and was
+said to be leading the advancing troops himself. But even his magnetic
+personality and stupendous vitality proved insufficient to accomplish
+a task evidently begun too prematurely.
+
+On July 15, 1917, five members of the Provisional Government
+resigned--Shingarev, Minister of Finance; Manuilov, of Education;
+Nekrasov, of Ways and Communications; Prince Shakovsky, of Social
+Welfare; and Acting Minister of Trade and Commerce, Steganov. Their
+reasons for this action was their inability to agree with their
+associates in the cabinet over the demands made just then by the
+Ukraine elements in southern Russia, who wanted complete independence.
+The dissenting ministers held that to grant such a demand would open
+the way to similar action on the part of Finns, Ruthenians, Poles, and
+other minor nationalities, which would mean the disintegration of
+Russia.
+
+On July 18, 1917, there was a sudden outburst of Maximalist activity,
+the most violent which had yet occurred. A body of sailors from
+Kronstadt appeared and, together with the Anarchists who had
+previously made armed demonstrations, they began parading the streets.
+A body of Cossacks, armed only with sabers, which was advancing up one
+of the streets conveying some wagon loads of material was fired upon
+and several Cossacks were killed. The cavalrymen retired, being unable
+to return the fire. This first bloodshed roused the indignation of the
+troops supporting the Provisional Government, and they at once set
+about clearing the streets. Some severe fighting followed, in which a
+number of men on both sides were killed and several hundreds were
+wounded. The demonstrators were finally driven away and within
+forty-eight hours order had been reestablished. On this occasion, as
+before, the Council of Workingmen's and Soldiers' Deputies cooperated
+with the members of the Government in making the rounds of the
+barracks and the workingmen's quarters to quiet the soldiers and the
+people. The disturbance on this occasion was obviously of traitorous
+origin, as the leaflets which had been used in furthering the
+disorders accused both the Provisional Government and the council of
+planning a counter-revolution in favor of the autocracy.
+
+The Provisional Government and the council now together appointed a
+special commission for the purpose of keeping in touch with the
+commandant of the Petrograd garrison and cooperate with him in
+counteracting the efforts of the Maximalist agitators.
+
+Of special significance is the fact that these disorders occurred
+almost simultaneously with the mutinous behavior of the regiments at
+the front, whose treachery at a critical moment broke the Russian
+offensive. Another result of the disturbances was a more energetic
+policy against the Anarchists. Troops were now detailed to dislodge
+the armed bands of Anarchists who had been occupying several large
+residences in the city. On seeing that the Government was in earnest
+the Anarchists surrendered unconditionally.
+
+On July 20, 1917, it was announced that Prince Lvov had resigned from
+the premiership and that Kerensky had taken his place. Prince Lvov
+gave as his reason for retiring his inability to agree with his
+Socialist associates in their determination to declare Russia a
+republic, since he believed that this decision was essentially the
+right of the Constituent Assembly yet to be elected. The recent
+disorders and the unfortunate situation at the front, however,
+probably had much to do with the new ministerial crisis, for it was
+also announced that Kerensky would be granted unlimited powers in
+suppressing further disorders and an "iron discipline" in the army
+would be instituted. At a joint conference held between the
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Council and the Executive Committee of the
+Peasants' Congress, it was decided by a large majority to give the new
+government, to be known as the "Government of National Safety,"
+absolute support.
+
+On the following day Kerensky announced that sterner measures would
+immediately be taken: the death penalty would be reestablished, both
+in civil life and in the army. Deserters and traitors would be shot.
+
+Though the radical elements were behind the change in the government
+personnel, the new cabinet was not by any means a Socialist body. Five
+non-Socialists still remained: Nekrasov, Vice Minister President,
+without portfolio; Terestchenko, Minister of Foreign Affairs; Efremov,
+Minister of Justice; Nicholas Lvov, Procurator of the Holy Synod; and
+Godniev, Controller of State. The radicals were Kerensky, the Premier,
+who also retained the War portfolio; Terestelli, Minister of Posts and
+Telegraphs; Skobeliev, Minister of Education; Tchernov, Minister of
+Agriculture; and Pieschiehonov, Minister of Supplies.
+
+For some days there were reports that further changes were still to be
+made, giving the Constitutional Democratic party more definite
+representation in the cabinet, on condition that these representatives
+would be free from party dictation. Milukov, the party chief, showed
+himself very much opposed to this suggestion, as he was to the
+granting of such absolute power to the Government. On the last day of
+the month further changes had not been made. Already Russia's armies
+on the front were stiffening up against the German onslaughts. For
+this full credit was given to Kerensky. He stands now as the
+dominating figure in Russia, with the eyes not only of all Russians,
+but all the peoples of the Allied nations, turned on him as the man
+most capable of guiding the Russian republic through the difficulties
+lying before it. Beginning with only the confidence of the radical
+elements, he has gradually acquired a similar confidence in his
+abilities and integrity from the Russian conservatives and all the
+peoples of the countries aligned with Russia against the common enemy.
+
+
+
+
+PART X--EASTERN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXVIII
+
+THE END OF WINTER AT THE EASTERN FRONT
+
+
+Various similar local enterprises were carried out on February 19,
+1917. The Germans, about a battalion strong, attacked in close
+formation in the region of Slaventine, northwest of Podgaste, but were
+met by concentrated fire and forced to return to their own
+intrenchments. In the Carpathians during a snowstorm a Russian
+blockhouse south of Smotreo was successfully raided. The blockhouse
+was blown up after the capture of its defenders. North of the Slanio
+Valley, after driving away Russian forces and repulsing counterattacks
+by outposts, Austro-German forces advanced their fighting position on
+a ridge of heights.
+
+East of Lipnicadolna, on the Narayuvka River (Galicia), the Russians
+exploded a mine under some German trenches and occupied the crater.
+The Germans, however, reconquered the position in a counterattack.
+South of Brzezany a Russian attack, made after mine-throwing
+preparations, was repulsed.
+
+On February 22, 1917, near Smorgon, west of Lutsk and between the
+Zlota Lipa and the Narayuvka, fighting with artillery and mine
+throwing became more violent. Near Zvyzyn, east of Zlochoff, German
+thrusting detachments entered a Russian position and after blowing up
+four mine shafts returned with 250 prisoners, including three officers
+and two machine guns. A successful reconnoitering advance was made
+southeast of Brzezany by another German detachment.
+
+Similar enterprises, frequently accompanied by increased artillery
+activity, were carried out in various parts of the front toward the
+middle of March, 1917. Thus on March 12, 1917, north of the
+Zlochoff-Tarnopol railroad, German reconnoitering detachments made an
+attack during which three Russian officers, 320 men, and thirteen
+machine guns were captured. Advances into the Russian lines near
+Brzezany and on the Narayuvka also brought gains in prisoners and
+booty.
+
+Again on March 14, 1917, near Vitoniez, on the Stokhod, and near
+Yamnica, south of the Dniester, enterprises of German thrusting
+detachments were carried out with success. More than 100 prisoners and
+several machine guns and mine throwers were brought back from the
+Russian positions.
+
+In the meantime there had occurred one of the most momentous events of
+the war. The great Russian nation had risen in a comparatively
+bloodless revolution against its former masters, the autocratic
+government headed by Czar Nicholas. Though these events took place
+March 8-11, 1917, news of them did not get to the outside world until
+March 16, 1917. By then the czar had abdicated both for himself and
+for his son. He, as well as his immediate family, had been made
+prisoners. A new democratic though temporary government had been set
+up by the guiding spirits who had directed the upheaval.
+
+Of course, the Germans and Austrians were not slow in taking advantage
+of these new conditions. Fortunately for Russia the spring thaw was
+beginning to set in and made really extensive operations impossible
+for the time being.
+
+The last week of March, 1917, however, saw some determined attempts
+on the part of the Germans to take as great an advantage of the
+Russian disorganization as circumstances permitted.
+
+On March 21, 1917, in the direction of Lida, on the river Beresina, in
+the region of the villages of Saberezyna and Potaschnia, German
+thrusting detachments after a bombardment of long duration attacked
+Russian positions and occupied them. By a counterattack they were
+driven out of Potaschnia. The other part of the positions remained in
+their hands.
+
+Northwest of Brody (Galicia) after artillery preparation the Germans
+attacked Russian positions in the region of Baldur. After a stubborn
+battle they were driven back to their trenches.
+
+The Russian forces were still active in some sections. On March 23,
+1917, Russian reconnoitering detachments, advancing after artillery
+preparation near Smorgon and Baranovitchy and on the Stokhod, were
+driven away by the Germans; however, severe fire by artillery and mine
+throwers preceded attacks, in which Austro-German troops south of the
+Trotus Valley in the Carpathians near the Rumanian frontier took by
+storm and in hand-to-hand fighting Russian positions on the frontier
+ridge between the Sueta and Csobonyos valleys and brought in 500
+prisoners. A Russian advance north of Magyaros that followed soon
+after failed.
+
+On March 26, 1917, the Germans again registered a success. Southeast
+of Baranovitchy an energetically carried out attack was successful.
+Russian positions situated on the west bank of the Shara between
+Darovo and Labuzy were taken by storm and in hand-to-hand fighting.
+More than 300 Russians were made prisoner and four machine guns and
+seven mine throwers captured. West of Lutsk and north of the railroad
+from Zlochoff to Tarnopol and near Brzezany, Russian battalions
+attacked after violent artillery fire. They were repulsed with heavy
+losses.
+
+Considerable fighting occurred during the following night and day,
+March 27, 1917. This, in spite of the fact that the spring thaw was
+officially announced to have set in. On the night of March 26-27,
+1917, after artillery preparation the Germans attacked in the region
+of Boguchy, northeast of Krevo, and occupied some Russian trenches.
+Immediate counterattacks restored the situation. On the Stokhod River,
+in the region of Borovo, the Russians delivered a mass attack. East of
+Brzezany (Galicia), following a mine explosion, Russian patrols raided
+German trenches and took twenty men prisoners. A German armored train
+bombarded Russian positions east of Korosmezo. During a raid on the
+northeast slope of Coman, in the wooded Carpathians, German raiding
+detachments worked their way into a Russian position, blew up several
+dugouts and returned with some prisoners and booty. A Russian attack
+on Magyaros failed. South of the Uzul Valley, near the Rumanian
+frontier, a strongly intrenched ridge was taken by storm and in
+hand-to-hand fighting by German troops, who maintained it against
+repeated counterattacks. One hundred prisoners and some machine guns
+and mine throwers remained in German hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXXXIX
+
+EFFECTS OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION
+
+
+By this time, however, the disorganization of the Russian forces which
+had resulted from the revolution made itself everywhere felt to a much
+greater extent. The Germans apparently were either taken by surprise
+by the suddenness of the revolution or else decided to wait for some
+time before undertaking any important operations and to determine
+first to what extent the revolution and change of government would
+affect the Russian armies. Another factor in the delay of the German
+attack which everyone expected almost as soon as news of the Russian
+revolution became known was the successful battles which had been
+fought by the British and French forces at the western front.
+
+On April 3, 1917, however, signs began to multiply, indicating that
+the Germans had decided to begin more extensive operations. On that
+day they opened a heavy artillery fire against Russian munition depots
+on the left bank of the river Stokhod, in the region of the
+Stchervitche-Helenin station, and on the river passages. The fire was
+delivered partly with chemical shells. Simultaneously the Germans
+discharged thirteen gas waves from the Helenin-Borovno sector.
+
+Under cover of the artillery fire the Germans took the offensive on
+the Toboly-Helenin front and pressed back the Russian troops. Part of
+the Germans succeeded in crossing the Stokhod in the region northeast
+of Helenin. The Russian left flank detachments, which were defending
+the munition dumps, found themselves in a serious position owing to
+the pressure of the Germans and were forced to cross to the right bank
+of the Stokhod. Some of the Russian detachments suffered heavy losses.
+After strongly bombarding Russian positions south of Illukst the
+Germans, attacked and occupied field posts and trenches in the region
+south of the Poniewesch railway line, but were expelled and driven
+back by a Russian counterattack.
+
+During the same night the Germans also directed a violent fire with
+artillery and mine throwers against Russian trenches in the region of
+the village of Novoselki, south of Krevo. At daybreak a German column
+in strength of about a company forced its way into first-line trenches
+near Novoselki, but as the outcome of a counterattack by Russian
+scouts was dislodged and driven back.
+
+Russian raiding troops attacked the Austrians as they were attempting
+to fortify positions in the region six miles west of Rafailova. Having
+penetrated the barbed-wire entanglements the Russian troops occupied
+three rows of trenches and bayoneted the Austrians. On the remainder
+of the front rifle firing and reconnoitering operations occurred.
+
+The German success on the Stokhod, according to German reports,
+developed almost into a rout. It was claimed that almost 10,000 men
+and officers and fifteen guns and 150 machine guns and mine throwers
+fell into the hands of the Germans.
+
+On April 5, 1917, after heavy artillery preparation, partly with
+shells charged with chemicals, the Germans took the offensive and
+occupied part of the Russian trenches to the east of Plakanen,
+thirteen miles south of Riga. They were driven out as the result of a
+Russian counterattack.
+
+On the following day, April 6, 1917, a number of local engagements
+were reported. North of Brzezany, in the region of Angostoveka and
+Koniuchy, after artillery preparation, the Germans attacked Russian
+positions, but were repulsed. Southwest of Brzezany, in the region of
+Lipnica Dolna, the Russians exploded a mine, destroying some German
+trenches which the patrols immediately captured. The Russians repulsed
+all counterattacks at this point and also took prisoners. In the same
+region they attacked with gas. West of the town of Tomnatik strong
+German detachments, supported by the fire of artillery, bomb throwers
+and mine throwers, entered Russian trenches, but were immediately
+ejected by counterattacks.
+
+Again on April 7 and 8, 1917, the Germans on the Galician front made
+minor attacks in the Carpathians, in the region west of Dzemdron, in
+the direction of Marmaroch and Siguet and to the west of the town of
+Tomnatik. All of these were repulsed, however.
+
+Similar unimportant activities occupied the next few weeks. In the
+meantime the disorganization of the Russian forces apparently
+continued to increase. The Germans, however, apparently had decided by
+this time not to attempt to make any military use of this condition,
+but to improve the opportunity to come to an understanding with the
+Russians. Almost daily reports appeared from various sources
+indicating that a certain amount of fraternizing was going on in many
+places on the eastern front. Though these reports varied very much, it
+became quite clear that generally speaking the Russian lines still
+held. In some places, undoubtedly, Russian detachments of varying size
+laid down their arms and refused to continue to fight. There were even
+isolated reports of some military groups having entered into peace
+negotiations with their opponents. It is almost impossible to sift the
+truth from these reports. It appears, however, that for some weeks a
+more or less unofficial truce had been established almost everywhere
+on the eastern front. The majority of the Russian soldiers at that
+time undoubtedly were strongly in favor of immediate cessation of
+hostilities. The Germans, on the other hand, seemed to be acting under
+orders to treat their opponents with a minimum of severity and to
+await further political developments before undertaking any important
+military operations.
+
+The Russians, though of course glad enough to notice this cessation of
+military activity, apparently were frequently not willing to let the
+enemy get too close to their lines, even though he pretended to come
+with friendly intentions. The official Russian report occasionally
+indicates this, as for instance that for April 15, 1917, which says
+that "attempts to approach Russian positions at various sectors of our
+front by small enemy groups, the members of which carried flags in
+their hands, were discovered. These groups, on coming under our fire,
+returned rapidly to their trenches."
+
+Only very rarely, however, did the Russians attempt any offensive
+movements during this period. On April 16, 1917, they made a gas
+attack in the region of Konkary, but were met by strong machine-gun
+fire. On the next day, April 17, 1917, the Germans started a slight
+diversion of a similar nature north of Zboroff in Galicia.
+
+At that reports began to appear concerning the massing of troops by
+the Germans in the northern sector of the line, indicating an attempt
+to take Riga and possibly to march against Petrograd.
+
+Throughout May, 1917, the disorganization of the Russian army
+continued. In the early part of the month the Council of Workingmen's
+and Soldiers' became more and more radical in its demands, both as to
+the share it was to have in the control of the army and as to the
+disciplinary measures under which soldiers were to live. So serious
+became the crisis that Minister of War General Gutchkov, as well as
+Generals Kornilov, Brussilov, and Gurko resigned their commands. A. F.
+Kerensky, then Minister of Justice, assumed the War portfolio, and it
+was primarily due to his sagacity that the government and the council
+finally agreed on May 16, 1917, on a basic program including the
+continuation of the war.
+
+While these serious events were happening at Petrograd nothing of any
+importance occurred at the front. The Germans still were playing their
+waiting game and, according to reports, were exerting all their
+influence toward a separate peace with Russia, both in Petrograd and
+at the front.
+
+Military operations during May, 1917, were practically negligible.
+Here and there skirmishes would occur between outposts and other small
+detachments, and occasionally artillery duels would be fought for
+short periods. Only a few times throughout the entire month were the
+engagements important enough to be mentioned specifically in the
+official reports. Thus on May 6, 1917, in the region of the village of
+Potchne, on the Beresina River (western front), Russian artillery
+dispersed a German attempt to approach the Russian trenches. In the
+direction of Vladimir Volynski, south of Zubilno, after an intense
+fire with grenades and bombs, a German company left their trenches and
+began to attack the Russian trenches with hand grenades. Russian
+artillery drove them back to their own trenches. On the
+Kabarovce-Zboroff front the Germans carried out an intense
+bombardment.
+
+Again on May 8, 1917, German artillery was active in the direction of
+Vilna, in the Smorgon and Krevo sectors, in the direction of Vladimir
+Volynski, and in the Zatorchy-Helvov sector. In the region of Zwyjene,
+to the east of Zlochoff, the Germans exploded two mines which damaged
+Russian trenches. Northeast of Brzezany Russian artillery caused
+explosions among the German batteries. "Elsewhere on the front there
+were the usual fusillades and scouting operations," continued the
+Russian official report.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XC
+
+THE BEGINNING OF RUSSIAN REHABILITATION
+
+
+The beginning of June, 1917, saw the first signs of a decided change
+in Russian military conditions. It became clear that those political
+forces at Petrograd who were demanding a separate peace and an
+immediate cessation of hostilities were losing ground. Strong as the
+cry of the soldiers was for peace and sincere as their belief had been
+that the revolution had freed them not only from czarism and all that
+went with it, but also from the awful business of killing and maiming
+in which they had been engaged for almost three years, it gradually
+dawned on them that this was not yet time.
+
+As early as June 1, 1917, reports came of increased firing at many
+points of the eastern front. A few days later, however, it again
+seemed as if Russia's military establishment was near to complete
+collapse. General Alexiev, appointed commander in chief of all the
+Russian armies as recently as April 15, 1917, resigned. He had been
+forced out as a result of the opposition on the part of the Council of
+Workingmen's and Soldiers' Deputies to his frankly pronounced belief
+that adherence to most prerevolution conditions in the army was
+essential if the army's discipline and effectiveness were to be
+retained. General Brussilov, then commanding on the southeastern
+front, was made commander in chief. Though this quick change in the
+supreme command necessarily was for discipline, it augured well in all
+other respects for a reconstruction of the Russian armies. The new
+supreme commander was known to be an efficient general, a keen
+fighter, and a sincere adherent of the Allied cause. His own command
+at the southeastern front was assumed by General Gurko.
+
+On June 20, 1917, it was announced that the Congress of Soldiers' and
+Workingmen's Delegates from the whole of Russia which was then in
+session in Petrograd had voted confidence in the Provisional
+Government and unanimously passed a resolution demanding an immediate
+resumption of the offensive and the reorganization of the army. It was
+also reported that a war cabinet was formed including the leaders of
+the Russian army and navy and technical representatives.
+
+On the same day it was reported that near Lutsk (Kovel region), on
+the Zlota Lipa, and Narayuvka (Lemberg region) and south of the
+Dniester the artillery of both sides was more active than it had been
+before. Russian raiding detachments, however, were driven off at
+several points by the Germans.
+
+Again on June 21, 1917, in some sectors of the Galician and Volhynian
+fronts Russian artillery activity increased, heavy guns cooperating.
+Aerial activity was also livelier.
+
+The first signs of a possible Russian drive against Lemberg and Kovel
+became evident on June 22, 1917. On the mountain front and in Volhynia
+Russian artillery fire was revived. The Russian artillery's continuous
+bombardment of the region south of Brzezany (Galicia) was
+energetically returned by Austrian batteries. Increased fighting
+activity also prevailed, especially between the Lemberg-Tarnopol
+railway (Galicia) and the Dniester, a front of about forty miles.
+Additional proof of the revival of the Russian fighting spirit was
+furnished by the detailed report of a small engagement on the historic
+Stokhod River. The Russian statement described how, near the village
+of Pozog (Volhynia), Russian scouts prepared an ambush, and,
+surrounding the approaching Germans, showered hand grenades on them.
+In the bayonet fighting that followed some Germans were killed. Owing
+to the approach of German reenforcements, however, the Russian scouts
+were forced to return to their own trenches.
+
+On the rest of the front fusillades became more intense in the region
+of Krevo.
+
+Apparently all thoughts of fraternizing with the enemy had left by
+that time the minds of the Russian soldiers. This was shown by the two
+occurrences reported on June 23, 1917. In Galicia, in the region of
+Grabkovce, an Austrian scouting party attempted to gain information of
+a Russian position, but was dispersed by a Russian company.
+
+In the region of Presovce an Austrian company surrounded a Russian
+scouting party. The commander of the party assembled his men and by
+means of bayonet fighting and the use of hand grenades succeeded in
+breaking through and returning to their trenches without losing a
+single man.
+
+June 24, 1917, brought very lively artillery activity at many
+points in the eastern theater. In the Narayuvka-Zboroff sector the
+Russian fire appreciably increased and continued with systematic
+regularity. In the Carpathians north of Kirlibaba fighting also
+increased in strength and frequency.
+
+[Illustration: When revolutionary Russia seemed likely to revert to
+chaotic conditions, A. F. Kerensky, the Minister of War, rallied the
+armies. He succeeded Prince Lvoff as Premier.]
+
+The following day, June 25, 1917, the Austro-Germans apparently
+decided to follow the Russian lead and renew military operations to a
+considerable extent. In the direction of Zlochoff and in the region of
+Perpelniki (Galicia) a strong Austro-German party, supported by
+artillery, endeavored to approach the Russian trenches, but was
+repulsed by rifle fire. South of Brzezany, in the region of the
+village of Svistelniki, on the Narayuvka, German infantry forced their
+way into Russian trenches, but a counterattack compelled them to
+retire. The German heavy artillery conducted an intense fire in the
+region of Potuary, Ribney, and Kotov.
+
+On June 26, 1917, south of the Lemberg-Tarnopol railway line and on
+the Narayuvka the artillery and mine-throwing fire was lively. On the
+Zlota Lipa more German forces made some Russian prisoners as the
+result of a successful reconnoitering advance.
+
+On the last day of June, 1917, came at last news of renewed fighting
+on the part of the Russians on a larger scale. After a destructive
+fire lasting all day against Austro-German positions on the upper
+Stripa as far as the Narayuvka River there followed in the afternoon
+powerful attacks by the Russian infantry on a front of about eighteen
+and a half miles. The storming troops, who suffered heavy losses, were
+compelled everywhere to retire by the defensive fire of the
+Austro-Germans.
+
+On the same day, after several days of violent fire from the heaviest
+guns, the Russians in the afternoon commenced an infantry attack south
+and southeast of Brzezany and near Koniuchy. Strong fire from Austrian
+batteries stopped this attack and inflicted heavy losses on the
+Russians. Another very strong attack, started late in the afternoon
+west of Zalocz, broke down under artillery fire. Toward midnight the
+Russians, without artillery preparation, endeavored to advance south
+of Brzezany. They were repulsed. During the night the artillery fire
+declined, but it revved the next morning. The artillery duel extended
+northward as far as the middle Stokhod and south as far as Stanislau.
+
+Then came on July 1, 1917, the news that the Russians had successfully
+attacked in force on a front about thirty-five miles wide to the west
+of Lemberg. Not until then did it become known that Prime Minister
+Kerensky, the guiding spirit of the Provisional Government, had been
+at the front for four days and had by his fiery eloquence stirred up
+the Russian armies to such an extent that all talk of peace and all
+thought of sedition disappeared for the time being. Press reports
+stated that Kerensky having told the soldiers that if they would not
+attack he would march toward the enemy's trenches alone, was embraced
+and kissed by soldiers.
+
+The Russian attacks were made at various points. In the direction of
+Kovel (Volhynia), in the region of Rudkasitovichskaya, Russian scouts
+under command of four officers, after destroying the wire
+entanglements by mines, penetrated the Austrian trenches, killed some
+of the occupants, and captured a number of prisoners. According to the
+testimony of prisoners, the Austrians knew of the attack from two
+deserters. In the direction of Zloczow, after two days' artillery
+preparation, Russian troops attacked the Austro-German positions on
+the Koniuchy-Byshki front. After a severe engagement they occupied
+three lines of trenches and the fortified village of Koniuchy and
+advanced to the Koniuchy stream, to the south of the village of the
+same name.
+
+Farther south, southeast of Brzezany, after artillery preparation,
+Russian troops attacked the strongly fortified positions of the
+Germans and after stubborn fighting occupied them at places. Germans
+and Turks made counterattacks, and formidable positions changed hands
+constantly. Along the Stokhod and on the Dniester the lively artillery
+activity of the Russians continued. As a result of these attacks the
+Russians claimed to have captured 164 officers, 8,400 men, and seven
+guns. On the other hand, the Germans claimed that sixteen Russian
+divisions constantly employing fresh troops assaulted their positions,
+which were completely maintained or recaptured by counter attacks by
+Saxon, Rhineland, and Ottoman divisions. The Russian losses surpassed
+any hitherto known. Some units were said to have been entirely
+dispersed. The Germans apparently considered these attacks very
+serious, for it was announced officially that Field Marshal von
+Hindenburg and General von Ludendorff, quartermaster general, had
+arrived at headquarters of the Austro-Hungarian army to visit the
+Austrian field marshal, Artur Arz von Straussenburg.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCI
+
+THE RUSSIAN JULY OFFENSIVE
+
+
+It soon became clear that the gradual increase in fighting activity
+was not simply an impulsive response to Prime Minister Kerensky's
+eloquence or the result of isolated local conditions. Gradually the
+fighting spread over more and more ground. It became more efficient
+and less spasmodic. Undoubtedly this was partly due to the fact that
+matters behind the front began to settle down somewhat and that
+supplies of ammunition and food again flowed more regularly and
+abundantly. Then too the new commander in chief seemed to be more
+capable of controlling his troops and to have a more definite plan for
+his operations than his predecessor. Where formerly only small
+detachments of Russians apparently could be persuaded or forced to
+undertake military operations, now regiments, brigades, and even whole
+divisions, went again at the business of fighting. Thus the Russians
+were able to gain nice successes at many points. Especially in the
+direction of Zlochoff, the Russians continued their offensive
+successfully. In the afternoon of July 2, 1917, after a stubborn
+battle, the Zoraisky regiment occupied the village of Presovce, while
+the troops of the Fourth Finnish Division and the Cheshskoslovatsky
+brigade occupied the strongly fortified German positions on the
+heights to the west and southwest of the village of Zboroff and the
+fortified village of Korshiduv. Three lines of trenches were
+penetrated. The troops of the Central Powers then retired across the
+Little Stripa. The Finns took 1,560 officers and soldiers prisoner,
+while their captures included four trench mortars, nine machine guns,
+and one bomb thrower. The Cheshskoslovatsky brigade captured sixty-two
+officers and 3,150 soldiers, fifteen guns and many machine guns. Many
+of the captured guns were turned against the former owners. Positions
+to the west of the Uzefuvka also were taken.
+
+Altogether in that day's battle in the neighborhood of Zlochoff the
+Russians took 6,300 prisoners, officers and soldiers, twenty-one guns,
+sixteen machine guns, and several bomb throwers. Southeast of Brzezany
+the battle continued with less intensity. In that region the Russians
+captured fifty-three officers and 2,200 men. Between the Baltic and
+the Pripet the activity of the fighting increased only at Riga and
+Smorgon; there was heavy artillery fighting on the middle course of
+the Stokhod, where, however, Russian local attacks on the Kovel-Lutsk
+railway line failed with heavy losses, and also on the Zlota Lipa.
+During the night following there was lively artillery fighting from
+the Stokhod to the Narayuvka. New strong attacks of the Russians took
+place at Brzezany, which failed with heavy losses.
+
+South of Zboroff the Russians, with the use of superior forces,
+succeeded in pushing back a limited portion of the Austrian front
+toward the prepared supporting position. In engagements involving
+heavy sacrifices the Austro-Hungarians were forced to retire step by
+step against the pressure of superior forces, but did this so easily
+that they enabled the reserves to intervene for the restoration of the
+situation.
+
+Unsuccessful attempts were made by the Germans in eastern Galicia on
+July 4, 1917, to regain some of the lost ground. East of Brzezany the
+Germans attacked advanced Russian posts, but were compelled by
+artillery fire to retire. East of Lipnicadolna on the eastern bank of
+the Narayuvka, after artillery preparation, they twice attacked
+Russian positions, but were repulsed on both occasions.
+
+The next day, July 5, 1917, the violence of the fighting again
+increased. In Galicia, between Zboroff and Brzezany, an artillery
+battle of great violence developed. It diminished during the night and
+increased again after daybreak. Also at Zwyzyn, Brody, and Smorgon the
+artillery activity was very lively at intervals. On that part of the
+Galician front, held chiefly by Turkish troops intermingled with some
+Germans and Austro-Hungarian forces, the Russians made an unsuccessful
+attack which cost them, according to German claims, 200 prisoners and
+500 dead.
+
+Some more successes were gained by the Russian forces on July 6, 1917.
+In the direction of Zlochoff, after artillery preparation, Russian
+infantry attacked strongly fortified positions of the enemy. They
+occupied three lines of trenches, but later the Germans succeeded in
+pressing back the Russian detachments.
+
+In the sector of the heights northwest of Presovce and in the wood
+west of Koniuchy Russian detachments conducted an offensive and
+engaged in a stubborn battle throughout July 6, 1917. The Germans
+executed counterattacks and at certain places pressed back the Russian
+detachments. Toward evening, however, there remained in Russian hands
+the heights northwest of Presovce and the villages of Lavrikovce and
+Travotloki and the heights east of Dodov, as well as seventeen
+officers and 672 men.
+
+In the region northwest of Stanislau to the south of the Dniester,
+after artillery preparation, Russian advance detachments pressed back
+the Austrians in the Jamnica-Pasechna sector and occupied their
+trenches. South of Bohorodszany Russian advance detachments defeated
+an advanced post of the Austrians. The Russians also occupied
+Sviniuchy and repulsed the enemy's counterattack. Altogether in the
+engagement the Russians took 360 prisoners.
+
+By now the Russian attack had spread so that Halicz, only sixty miles
+southwest of Lemberg, Galicia's capital, and its chief protection from
+the southeast, was practically in reach of the Russian guns. In this
+sector the front was somewhat more than thirty miles long and ran
+along the Narayuvka River. The newly organized Russian forces had been
+formed into three armies and were continuing to pound away at their
+adversaries. There was considerable fighting near Stanislau on July 7,
+1917. Austro-Hungarian regiments in hand-to-hand encounters repulsed
+several Russian divisions whose storming waves, broken by destructive
+fire, had pushed forward as far as the Austrian position. Near Huta,
+in the upper valley of the Bystritza Solotvina, another Russian attack
+was repulsed. Between the Stripa and the Zlota Lipa the Russians were
+apparently unable to renew their attacks in spite of their gains of
+the previous days. Near Zboroff a Russian attack without artillery
+preparation broke down with heavy losses.
+
+Farther north, in the Brzezany-Zlochoff sector, in the direction of
+Zlochoff the Germans launched energetic counterattacks on the front at
+Godov and the wood west of Koniuchy in an attempt to dislodge Russian
+troops. All these attacks were repelled. Assaults west of Bychka by
+troops in dense columns, supported by armored motor cars, were also
+repulsed.
+
+Not until then did it become known that the Russians, in the beginning
+of their offensive, had had the support of some of their allies.
+
+The Russian offensive had now been under way for more than a week. As
+so often in the past, it had been launched against that part of the
+front which was held chiefly by Austro-Hungarians, and also, as many
+times before, the troops of the Dual Monarchy had been forced to give
+way under the Russian pressure. German reenforcements, however, now
+began to arrive and the defense began to stiffen, bringing at the same
+time more frequent and stronger counterattacks.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCII
+
+THE CAPTURE OF HALICZ AND KALUSZ
+
+
+The surmise that Halicz, the important railroad point on the Dniester,
+was soon to fall into the hands of the Russians, provided they were
+able to keep up the strength and swiftness of their offensive, was
+proved correct on July 10, 1917. Late that day the news that Halicz
+had fallen on July 9, 1917, into Russian hands came from Petrograd.
+The Russians were fighting under General Kornilov and their attacks
+were so strong that the Austrians under General Kirchbach were unable
+to resist. In two days Austro-German positions seven miles deep and
+strongly fortified during a period of two years were overrun by the
+victorious Russians. More than 1,000 prisoners, seven guns, many
+trench mortars and machine guns, and a large booty of engineering
+materials and other military stores fell into the hands of the
+victors. The Austro-Hungarians were forced to retire behind the lower
+course of the Lomnitza River, and at the end of the day the road to
+Lemberg, only sixty-three miles northwest of Halicz, seemed seriously
+threatened from the south.
+
+Earlier in the day sanguinary battles occurred on the road to Halicz
+in the region of the villages of Huciska, Pacykov, and Pavelone. In
+the streets of Pavelone there was bayonet fighting, which ended in a
+complete rout of the Austrians. Toward evening the Russian troops
+reached the village of Bukovica, having occupied the villages of
+Viktarov, Majdan, Huciska, and Pacykov.
+
+South of Brzezany there was intense artillery fighting. In the
+direction of Dolina the army of General Kornilov continued its
+offensive in the region west of Stanislau. The Austro-Germans
+displayed energetic resistance which developed into stubborn
+counterattacks. Farther north, too, near Riga, Dvinsk, and Smorgon,
+the fighting activity increased.
+
+The Russians maintained their successes on the following day, July 10,
+1917. In the direction of Dolina they continued the pursuit
+northwestward toward Lemberg of the retreating enemy, who had been
+broken by General Kornilov's army on the Jezupol-Stanislau-Borgordchan
+front--a front of almost twenty miles.
+
+At midday troops led by General Tcheremisoff, who had accomplished the
+capture of Halicz, were thrown across to the left bank of the Dniester.
+Toward evening they reached the valley of the river Lomnitza on the
+front from the mouth of the river to Dobrovlany, and advance
+detachments, crossing over after a short engagement to the left bank of
+the river, occupied the villages of Bludniki and Babin. Russian troops
+advancing on the Borgordchan-Zolotvin front, having broken down the
+resistance of the enemy, reached the line of Posiecz-Lesiuvka-Kosmocz.
+This was a success in a new sector south of Halicz and threatened the
+approaches to the northern Carpathians.
+
+In the course of the day the Russians captured more than 2,000
+prisoners and about thirty guns. Altogether in the three days' battle
+from the 8th to the 10th in the direction of Dolina they took more
+than 150 officers and 10,000 men. Their captures also included about
+eighty guns, twelve of them of heavy caliber, and a large number of
+trench mortars and machine guns and a large quantity of engineering
+material and military stores. On the remainder of the front there was
+artillery firing, which was more intense in the direction of Zlochoff
+and south of Brzezany.
+
+These various operations continued to develop on July 11, 1917,
+especially among the rivers Dniester and Lomnitza. After a stubborn
+and sanguinary battle the Austrians were forced out of the town of
+Kalusz, which was occupied by the Russians. Kalusz, a town of about
+8,000 population previous to the war, is on the west bank of the
+Lomnitza and on the important railroad that runs from Stanislau to
+Lemberg south of the Dniester. Until the development of the Russian
+offensive it served as Austrian headquarters in this sector. To the
+west of Bohorodszany, on the Grabovka-Rosolna-Krivicz front, the
+Austrians taking advantage of the extremely intricate terrain,
+succeeded in holding back the Russian advance. Near Riga, Smorgon and
+Baranovitchy the artillery fighting was again spirited. Near Lutsk and
+in the East Galicia fighting area the firing also reached a point of
+considerable intensity at times. On the Ochtschara Russian chasseur
+troops were repulsed, as were local Russian attacks on the Stokhod.
+
+On July 12, 1917, the firing activity between the Zlota Lipa and the
+Narayuvka increased. Engagements developed also on the Honika River,
+northwest of Halicz. Russian troops crossed to the left bank of the
+river confluence and captured heights on the line of the river
+Dniester-Bukazowice-Bludniki. After a stubborn battle the Austrians
+were driven back from the heights to the northeast of Ehilus. The
+Russians occupied the villages of Studzianka and Podhorki.
+
+In the region of Kalusz a Bohemian regiment by means of a daring
+cavalry attack captured four heavy guns. Southeast of Kalusz, on the
+Landstru-Lazianya-Kraisne front, Russian troops engaged in battle with
+Austrian detachments who were protecting the crossings of the river
+Lomnitza on the road to Kornistov and Dolina. The crossings of the
+river at Perehinsko west of Bohorodszany were captured.
+
+In the region of Vladimir Volynski (Volhynia) southeast of Kiselin
+German detachments under cover of artillery fire attacked Russian
+positions and entered Russian trenches, but were expelled by reserves
+which came forward, immediately restoring the situation. On the Dvina
+near Smorgon and on the Shara there was spirited fighting, and also
+west of Lutsk there was a temporary revival of activity in consequence
+of reconnoitering thrusts.
+
+In describing the capture of Kalusz the "Russky Slovo" says that the
+Russian cavalry entered the town at noon and found it abandoned by the
+garrison. The Russians were soon attacked, however, by fresh enemy
+forces, which were rushed from the fortress. After a stiff fight the
+Russians were compelled to fall back. Reenforced, they returned and
+drove the Germans out. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon the Germans,
+supported by an armored train, counterattacked and again occupied
+Kalusz. But they were once more expelled with heavy losses. Sanguinary
+house-to-house fighting, mostly with the bayonet, ensued until 6
+o'clock in the evening.
+
+On July 13, 1917, it was reported that there was considerable rifle
+firing on the lower Lomnitza, between the confluence with the Dniester
+River and Kalusz. In the neighborhood of the town of Kalusz the
+Austrians made two attacks from the direction of Mosciska and near
+Gartenel and attempted to dislodge the Russian troops occupying
+Kalusz, but were repulsed. The Russians occupied, after fighting, the
+village of Novica, southwest of Kalusz. Heavy rains prevented
+extensive fighting at other points south of the Dniester. Near Dvinsk
+and Smorgon lively fighting activity continued. In eastern Galicia the
+gunfire was lively only in the Brzezany sector.
+
+Heavy rains continued and swelled the rivers Lomnitza and Dniester and
+the small streams running into them. Naturally this also affected the
+condition of the roads. In spite of the unfavorable weather there was
+considerable fighting on July 14, 1917. Southwest of Kalusz the
+Austrians several times attacked troops which were occupying the
+Dobrovdiany-Novica front. All the attacks were repulsed. As a result
+of the battles in this region the Russians captured sixteen officers
+and more than 600 of the rank and file. In the region of Lodziany
+(eighteen miles southwest of Kalusz) as the final result of a series
+of stubborn attacks Russian troops drove the Austrians from their
+positions and took more than 1,000 prisoners and a number of guns. At
+the crossing of the river Lomnitza, near Perehinsko, the Austrians
+launched an offensive with the object of throwing Russian detachments
+back to the right bank of the Lomnitza. The Russian offensive on the
+Slivkiasen front met with stubborn resistance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCIII
+
+THE COLLAPSE OF THE RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE
+
+
+The accomplishments of the Russian armies during the first two weeks
+of July, 1917, were little short of marvelous. Not only had they
+captured such important points as Halicz and Kalusz and had forced
+back the Austrian lines in southeastern Galicia for miles and miles,
+but they had also taken large numbers of prisoners and captured
+valuable booty. From July 1 to July 13, 1917, 834 officers and 35,809
+men were captured by the Russians, with ninety-three heavy and light
+guns, twenty-nine trench mortars, 493 machine guns, forty-three mine
+throwers, forty-five bomb mortars, three fire throwers, two
+aeroplanes, and much equipment.
+
+By the middle of July, 1917, however, the first fury of the Russian
+onslaught had spent itself, and then too, as so often before, the
+Central Powers had recovered from their first surprise and had
+succeeded, thanks to their superior transportation facilities, in
+bringing up strong reserves. For the first time since the beginning of
+the Russian offensive on July 15, 1917, there appeared definite signs
+that the German defensive was stiffening. On the lower Lomnitza there
+were fusillades and artillery bombardments. Northeast of Kalusz the
+Germans made energetic attempts to throw back the Russian troops on
+the Lomnitza. The battle on the Landes-Reuldzian-Kraisne front
+continued all day. After a severe engagement the Austrians were driven
+out of the village of Lodziany and pressed hard to the river Lomnitza,
+but owing to attacks made by their newly arrived reserves from the
+direction of Rozniazov, and in view of the great losses, the Russian
+troops were compelled to retire a short distance and intrench
+themselves in the eastern end of the Lodziany.
+
+Then on July 16, 1917, came the news that the Russians had been forced
+to evacuate Kalusz. Northeast of Kalusz the Germans had conducted
+persistent attacks which at first had been repulsed by the Russians.
+Finally, however, Russian troops occupying the left bank of the lower
+course of the river Lomnitza were transferred to the right bank,
+leaving Kalusz in Austrian hands and securing behind them the
+important crossing of the Lomnitza.
+
+In the Novica-Lodziany-Kraisne section the Russian troops continued
+their attacks, with the object of throwing the enemy back across the
+Lomnitza. The Germans made stubborn resistance. With the approach of
+evening, they counterattacked in dense waves from the direction of
+Selohy-Kagnka, and, pressing the Russians back, occupied the village
+of Novica, but were driven out again upon the arrival of fresh
+reserves. Farther north, too, the lively fighting activity at Riga,
+Dvinsk, and Smorgon continued. With the clearing of the weather the
+firing on the Narayuvka front became heavier than it had previously
+been.
+
+Once again on the following day, July 17, 1917, the Russians had to
+yield ground under the ever-increasing pressure from the Germans. In
+the north there was a still more noticeable increase in the fighting
+activity at Riga, south of Dvinsk, and at Smorgon. In eastern Galicia
+the firing was strong at Brzezany.
+
+In the Carpathian foothills Bavarian and Croatian troops in a combined
+attack captured the heights to the east of Novica, which were
+stubbornly defended by the Russians, and repulsed Russian
+counterattacks in the captured positions. At other points on the
+Lomnitza line also the Russians were forced back in local engagements.
+As the result of a night attack Russian detachments reoccupied the
+village of Novica to the south of Kalusz, but, suffering great losses
+in this operation, withdrew to the eastern end of the village. Two
+German attacks on these detachments were repulsed. Northwest of Lutsk
+and on the East Galician front operations carried out by Austro-German
+forces brought about an increase in artillery activity and resulted in
+the capture of numerous prisoners.
+
+The artillery activity south of Dvinsk and Smorgon, which had been
+lively for some days, continued.
+
+During the next few days fighting everywhere became more violent. Near
+Jacobstadt, Dvinsk, and Smorgon, along the Stokhod, and from the Zlota
+Lipa to south of the Dniester, the artillery activity increased
+considerably. Advances and reconnoitering operations often led to
+local engagements. Near Novica, on the Lomnitza front, new strong
+Russian attacks were repulsed with sanguinary losses.
+
+On July 19, 1917, east of Brzezany, to the south of Szybalin,
+Austro-German troops made repeated attacks and occupied a portion of
+the Russian first-line trenches. Austrian efforts to attack south of
+Brzezany were repelled by gun and rifle fire. West of Halicz
+detachments occupying the village of Bludniki retired, whereupon the
+Austrians, profiting by this movement, occupied the place. An effort
+to win back this village was unsuccessful. In the direction of Vilna
+there was animated artillery fighting throughout the day. After strong
+artillery preparation the Germans persistently attacked the Russian
+detachments on the Pieniaki-Harbuzov front, twenty miles south of
+Brody. At first all these attacks were repulsed. At 10 o'clock the Six
+Hundred and Seventh Mlynov Regiment, stationed between Bathov and
+Manajov, in the same region, left its trenches voluntarily and
+retired, with the result that neighboring units also had to retire.
+This gave the Germans opportunity for developing their success.
+
+The Russians explained this occurrence officially in the following
+statement:
+
+"Our failure south of Brody is explained to a considerable degree by
+the fact that under the influence of the Bolsheviki extremists
+(Anarchists) several detachments, having received a command to support
+the attacked detachments, held meetings and discussed the advisability
+of obeying the order; whereupon some regiments refused to obey the
+military command. Efforts of commanders and committees to arouse the
+men to fulfillment of the commands were fruitless."
+
+A similar incident, indeed, had happened during the German attacks
+against Novica on July 17, 1917. On that day when the Germans early in
+the evening had taken the offensive and had seized the height south of
+Novica, to the south of Kalusz, one of the Russian regiments began to
+leave. Major General Prince Gargarin, commander of the military
+district, perceiving that the situation was critical, at once moved
+forward a battalion of the Ukhnov regiment commanded by Second Captain
+Burishen, which had only recently arrived in the district. This
+battalion conducted an energetic attack. Simultaneously General Prince
+Gargarin threw troops into the attack on both flanks, advancing
+infantry and native cavalry regiments of Daghestanians on the right
+and Circassians and Kabardians on the left. The Ukhnov regiment and
+the natives rushed forward in a furious onslaught, carrying with them
+also the Russian regiment which had retired. The general assault soon
+changed the situation in favor of the Russians.
+
+These two occurrences were typical of many others of a like nature at
+various points of the entire front. The affected groups varied in
+extent, sometimes only small detachments would refuse to fight, while
+at other times entire companies or battalions and even whole regiments
+were affected.
+
+It now became quite evident that the Russian offensive had to come to
+a standstill, and that Russian disorganization not only set in again,
+but came much nearer to a total collapse than it had been previous to
+the beginning of the Russian offensive. At the same time the new
+German offensive developed in strength and extent. Even then it was
+likely that the Russians not only were to lose the territory which
+they had gained so recently, but possibly a large portion of East
+Galicia that had been occupied by them for a long time. Whether the
+Central Powers would be able to follow up their offensive in Galicia
+with similar undertakings at other points of the eastern front, of
+course, was a matter that depended not only on conditions at the
+eastern front, but also on how things were going in the west.
+
+The Austro-German forces made good use of the opportunity created for
+them by the defection rampant in the Russian armies. In East Galicia,
+on July 20, 1917, behind the hastily retreating Russian forces, of
+which only parts made a stand for rear-guard purposes, German troops
+in impetuous pursuit crossed the Zlochoff-Tarnopol road on both sides
+of Jezierna on a width of twenty-five miles. Wherever the Russians
+made a stand they were defeated in swift assaults; burning villages
+and great destruction showed the route of the retiring Russians.
+
+Again the Russians had to admit officially that their army
+organization was going to pieces. They did this, in regard to their
+retreat toward Tarnopol, in the following words:
+
+"Our troops on the whole did not show the necessary stability, and at
+some points did not fulfill military commands; consequently they
+continued to retire, and toward evening they paused on the line
+Renov-Hlatiki-Pokropuvia-Vybudow."
+
+North of Brzezany Austro-Hungarian troops after hard fighting
+recaptured positions they lost on July 1, 1917. North of the Dniester
+Russian attacks broke down before the Austrian lines. South of the
+river the Russians were driven out of Babin. At Novica German and
+Austro-Hungarian troops stormed the Russian height positions in spite
+of a stubborn defense. From the Stokhod to the Baltic the activity of
+the artillery increased occasionally. It reached special intensity
+between Krevo and Smorgon and at Dvinsk.
+
+At this critical point the Provisional Government again decided to
+make a change in the command of the Russian armies fighting in
+Galicia. Early in June, 1917, General Gouter had been placed in
+supreme command in this section. Lieutenant General L. G, Kornilov,
+then commander of the Eighth Russian Army, with which he had gained in
+the first part of July, 1917, the successes on the Halicz-Stanislau
+line, was now intrusted with the chief command of all Russian troops
+fighting in Galicia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCIV
+
+THE RUSSIAN ROUT IN GALICIA AND THE BUKOWINA
+
+
+Day by day the Russians' disorganization became worse. Instances of
+defection became more frequent as the German offensive movement
+increased in violence. With their usual thoroughness, and with almost
+incredible swiftness, the forces of the Central Powers struck. Again
+the Russian Government was forced to admit officially that Russian
+commanders had lost control over their troops.
+
+By July 21, 1917, the Germans and Austrians in the region west of
+Tarnopol managed to reach the Brzezany-Tarnopol railway at several
+points. Near Brzezany the Seventh Russian Army also began to yield to
+increasing pressure on its flanks. The number of prisoners and the
+amount of booty were large. At Jezierna rich supplies of provisions,
+munitions, and other war stores fell into German hands.
+
+[Illustration: The Russian Offensive and Retreat in Galicia.]
+
+Late in the afternoon the Germans forced their way forward from
+Tarnopol to as far as the Sereth bridgehead. During the fight the
+railway line from Kozowa to Tarnopol was reached at several points.
+The Russian masses southeast of Brzezany began to yield. The town of
+Tarnopol and numerous villages east of the Sereth soon were in flames.
+On the lower Narayuvka River the artillery duel increased to
+considerable intensity. On the river Lomnitza after a bombardment the
+Germans took the offensive in the regions of the villages of Babino
+and Studzianka and forced Russian troops to evacuate Babino and cross
+the right bank of the Lomnitza. By the end of the day the whole
+Russian front from the Zlota Lipa close up to the Dniester was
+wavering under the pressure of the German-Austrian attack on the
+Sereth.
+
+In the north, however, the Russians were still fighting back, though
+unsuccessfully. Between Krevo and Smorgon the Russians after a strong
+artillery preparation attacked with a strong force. Their assaults
+broke down with heavy losses on the German troops. After an agitated
+night fresh fighting broke out at that point. Northward as far as
+Naroz Lake and also between Drysviaty Lake and Dvinsk increased
+artillery fighting continued.
+
+The offensive movements undertaken by the Russians in the northern
+sector were continued on July 22, 1917. In the direction of Vilna, in
+the neighborhood of Krevo, Russian troops attacked and occupied German
+positions in the district of Tsary-Bogushi, penetrating to a depth of
+two miles in places. Over one thousand Germans were taken prisoner.
+
+However, the spirit of disobedience was gradually spreading among the
+Russian troops. "The development of a further success is being
+jeopardized by the instability and moral weakness of certain
+detachments. Particularly noteworthy was the gallant conduct of the
+officers, great numbers of them perishing during the fulfillment of
+their duties," says the official Russian statement. On the upper
+course of the Sereth, from Zalovce to Tarnopol, there was considerable
+rifle firing. South of Berezovica-Velka the Germans conducted an
+intense artillery fire. Between the rivers Sereth, Stripa, and Zlota
+Lipa they continued their offensive, occupying the villages of
+Nastasov, Beniave (on the Stripa), Uvse, and Slavintin. The strategic
+effect of the German operations in East Galicia was continually
+becoming more powerful. The Russians began retreating from the
+northern Carpathian front. From the Sereth to the wooded Carpathians
+the Germans were pressing forward over a front of 155 miles wide.
+
+By July 23, 1917, the victorious German army corps had forced their
+way over the Sereth, crossing to the south near Tarnopol. Near
+Trembowla desperate Russian mass attacks were repulsed. The Germans
+advanced beyond Podhaytse, Halicz, and the Bystritza Solotvina River.
+The booty was large. Several divisions reported 3,000 prisoners each.
+Numerous heavy guns, including those of the largest calibers, railway
+trucks filled with foodstuffs and fodder, munitions, armored cars and
+motor lorries, tents, articles left on the field, and every kind of
+war material were captured.
+
+Archduke Joseph's north wing now joined in a movement which had
+commenced to the south of the Dniester. There was strong Russian
+firing activity along that whole front.
+
+In the north the fighting, too, was severe. In some places the
+Russians made decided gains, only to lose them again by the refusal of
+certain troops to obey their commanders. Southwest of Dvinsk Russian
+detachments, after strong artillery preparation, occupied German
+positions on both sides of the Dvinsk-Vilna railway. After this
+success entire units, without any pressure on the part of the Germans,
+voluntarily returned to their original trenches. A number of these
+units refused to carry out military commands during the battle.
+
+Detachments of the Twenty-fourth Division, the Tulsk, Lovitsky, and
+Saraosky regiments, and the "Battalion of Death," consisting of women,
+acted especially heroically, and as at other points the gallantry of
+the officers was noteworthy. Their losses were large. In the direction
+of Vilna and in the region north of Krevo the Germans delivered a
+number of counterattacks, and succeeded in occupying one of the
+heights north of Bogush, which had been captured by the Russians on
+the previous day, July 22, 1917. Heroic exertion by the Russian
+officers was required to restrain the men from withdrawing to the rear
+in great numbers.
+
+The German successes became more and more important and the Russian
+route more and more complete. Stanislau and Nadvorna were now in
+German hands and German forces were rapidly approaching Buczacz.
+
+In the Carpathians, too, the Russians began to give way.
+
+Prime Minister Kerensky had rushed to the Galician front as soon as
+news had reached him of the Russian debacle. However, even his
+presence could not stem the Austro-German advance and the Russian
+flight. It was reported that he had even risked his life in this
+attempt.
+
+On July 25, 1917, the Austro-German successes were still farther
+extended. During stubborn engagements Austro-German divisions gained
+heights west of Tarnopol and the Gniza River sector to the
+Trembowla-Husiatyn road. Farther southwest Buczacz, Tiumacz, Ottynia,
+and Delatyn were taken.
+
+The Russian Carpathian front, owing to the pressure on the north of
+the Dniester, now commenced to weaken to the south of the Tartar Pass.
+The Russians were retreating there in the direction of Czernowitz.
+
+In the north, south of Smorgon, concentrated German artillery fire
+partly closed up the breach in the German lines made by the Russians.
+The latter were compelled to retreat, and the Germans regained almost
+all of their former positions.
+
+July 26, 1917, brought still further defeats to the Russian forces in
+Galicia. In a bitter struggle near Tarnopol, German divisions extended
+their gains by a powerful attack at the bridgehead on the eastern bank
+of the Sereth, which recently had been contested hotly. Farther
+south, in spite of stubborn resistance of Russians, who were sent
+forward regardless of the fact that thousands upon thousands of them
+were being mowed down under destructive German fire, the Germans
+captured the Gniza and Sereth crossings from Trembowla to Skomorocze.
+They were also advancing rapidly on both sides of the Dniester.
+Kolomea was captured by Bavarian and Austro-Hungarian troops. In the
+northeastern portion of the wooded Carpathians Austrian troops were
+following on the heels of the Russians who retreated in the direction
+of the Pruth.
+
+[Illustration: The Entire Eastern Battle Front, August 1, 1917.]
+
+Without let-up the Germans and Austrians continued to press back the
+disorganized Russian armies. By July 27, 1917, the Austro-German
+divisions under General von Boehm-Ermolli had crossed the
+Jablonica-Horodenka-Zablowow line. Austrian troops on the northern
+wing were drawing close to the Pruth Plateau below Kolomea. West of
+Seletyn-Fundul, on the Moldavian Road in the wooded Carpathians,
+German and Austro-Hungarian troops wrested some heights positions from
+the still resisting Russians.
+
+By July 28, 1917, the Russians on both sides of Husiatyn had retired
+behind the frontier. German corps had reached Zbrocz. Others
+approached the confluence of the northern Sereth and the Dniester.
+Between the Dniester and the Pruth the Russian rear guard made a
+stand. The Germans in a powerful attack broke through their positions
+and pursued the Russians on both banks of the Dniester. In the
+Cheremosh Valley Kuty was taken. Above and below the town a crossing
+of the river was effected by the Austrians.
+
+In the last days of July, 1917, the Russian resistance stiffened
+slightly. Still the Teutonic forces gained new successes in eastern
+Galicia and Bukowina. The river Zbrocz was crossed at many points by
+German and Austro-Hungarian divisions from above Husiatyn to south of
+Skala, on a front of thirty-one miles, in spite of the bitter
+resistance of the Russians. Between the Dniester and the Pruth the
+allied Teutonic troops captured Werenocanka and Sniatyn, in the
+direction of Czernowitz.
+
+In a strong assault German chasseurs broke through Russian rear-guard
+positions near Visnitz. The Russians were thereby forced to evacuate
+the Cheremosh line and retired toward the east. Also in the wooded
+Carpathians, on the upper course of the southern Sereth, and on both
+sides of the Moldava and the Suczawa, the Austro-Germans gained ground
+in an attack toward the east. Under pressure of this success the
+Russians abandoned their first-line positions in the Meste-Canaste
+sector.
+
+That the Russian rout was not worse, and that they managed to save a
+large part of their armies, was due largely to the assistance rendered
+by Belgian and British armored cars.
+
+
+
+
+PART XI--AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCV
+
+STALEMATE ON THE ITALIAN FRONTS
+
+
+On February 1, 1917, on the northern slopes of Monte Maso, along the
+Posina Torrent, and in the Astico Valley Italian patrols destroyed
+Austrian outposts, taking eleven prisoners. In the Sugana Valley
+Austrian artillery bombarded Italian positions on Monte Lebre and
+Ospedaletto and in Pesino Hollow with gas shells. On the Julian front
+there were minor artillery actions and activity by patrol. At one
+point a bombardment of the Austrian lines resulted in a small
+ammunition dump being blown up.
+
+On the Trentino front even the artillery was handicapped by snowfall
+on February 3, 1917. In the upper Comelico Valley Italian troops
+repulsed a surprise attack. On the Julian front there was the usual
+artillery firing.
+
+On February 6, 1917, on the Trentino front the artillery fighting was
+more intense in the Astico Valley. In the Sugana Valley an Austrian
+detachment which attempted to attack advanced Italian positions on
+Monte Maso was put to flight, leaving arms and ammunition on the
+ground. On the Julian front artillery fighting occurred, during which
+the Austrians bombarded Goritz for a short time.
+
+In the Sugana Valley, after a violent bombardment, the Austrians at
+dawn on February 7, 1917, attempted another attack on one of the
+Italian positions on the right bank of the Brenta. It failed in its
+inception, however, owing to the combined action of Italian infantry
+and field batteries. A similar operation attempted by the Austrians on
+the Freikofel had a like result. In the Posina Valley, at Astico, in
+the Plezza sector, before Sagora, and in the vicinity of Boscomalo and
+Hudilog, the activity of Italian reconnoitering patrols led to minor
+skirmishes.
+
+During the next few days there were desultory artillery actions in the
+Trentino. Italian batteries shelled Austrian positions on Monte Creino
+and dispersed supply columns on the northern slopes of Monte Pasubio.
+
+On the Julian front the Austrian artillery showed increased activity.
+In the area east of Goritz on the night of February 10, 1917, after
+heavy artillery and trench mortar preparations, the Austrians in
+considerable forces attacked the Italian positions on the western
+slopes of Santa Caterina, northwest of San Marco, and east of
+Vertoibizza, between Sober and the Goritz-Dornberg railway. After
+heavy fighting the Austrians were repulsed nearly everywhere. However,
+the Austrians succeeded in entering several portions of Italian
+trenches, inflicted heavy losses upon the Italians and captured
+fifteen officers and 650 men, ten machine guns, two mine throwers and
+much other war material.
+
+This slight success gained by the Austrians resulted in an intense
+bombardment and violent counterattacks on the part of the Italian
+forces during February 11, 1917. The latter entirely reestablished
+their lines and completely repulsed the Austrians, inflicting upon
+them serious losses and taking more than a hundred prisoners, among
+whom were a few officers. In the Trentino there was moderate
+artillery activity. Detachments of Austrian ski runners attempted to
+approach the Italian lines on the Pasubio. They were repulsed and
+dispersed by a few well-directed shots. In the upper valleys of the
+But and Fella there were continuous artillery duels. The Italians
+reached the station of Tarvia with their fire. In the Vedel zone,
+after throwing hand grenades, an Austrian detachment attacked. It was
+speedily repulsed in violent hand-to-hand fighting. The detachment was
+pursued and decimated by Italian fire. The few survivors were
+captured.
+
+On the Trentino front the activity of the artillery increased again on
+February 12, 1917, especially in the Tonale Pass, on the western
+slopes of Monte Zugna, in the Lagarina Valley, in the upper
+Travignola, and in the Cordevole Valley. In the Arsa Valley and on the
+upper Coalba Torrent, on the right bank of the Brenta, Austrian raids
+were repulsed. In the upper But Valley the artillery was active.
+Italian batteries set fire to some Austrian barracks behind Val
+Piccolo.
+
+The following day, February 13, 1917, Italian artillery fire again
+reached and hit the station at Tarvia. In the zone north of Sober, in
+the Goritz district, an Austrian attack was repulsed. In the Wippach
+Valley lively artillery engagements continued. The Italians fired
+numerous gas grenades. Italian attacks from the district of St. Peter
+were repulsed. Near Tonale Pass Austrian troops surprised an Italian
+point of support and took twenty-three Italian prisoners.
+
+Similar events of minor local importance occurred during the next few
+days. Thus, on February 16, 1917, the Adige Valley was the scene of
+considerable activity by the artillery. Italian batteries caused fires
+to break out on the Austrian Zugna line. Minor encounters favorable to
+the Italian forces were reported from various places. On the Julian
+front there were the usual artillery actions. The railway station at
+Santa Lucia di Tolmino was hit by Italian fire.
+
+Increased activity of reconnoitering parties led to small successful
+encounters during February 17, 1917, at Cavento Adamello Pass, near
+Forcellina di Montozzo, at Valcamonica in Vallaria, in the upper
+Posina at Astico, and at Felizon in the Boite Valley, and in Frigido
+Valley. In the upper But and on the Carso considerable artillery
+actions were reported. During the next few days the Italian artillery
+was again lively on several sectors of the mountain front. Tarvia was
+repeatedly shelled. On February 19, 1917, Austrian patrols made
+twenty-two prisoners as the result of an enterprise against Italian
+positions east of Monte Zebio and north of Assio.
+
+During the following night Austrian detachments entered through
+galleries dug under the snow one of the Italian trenches near Casere
+Zebio Pastorile. After heavy hand-to-hand fighting they were repulsed
+with considerable loss, leaving some prisoners in the hands of the
+Italians.
+
+On February 20, 1917, the Austrians attempted attacks on the left bank
+of the Maso Torreni and east of the Vertoibizza Torrent in the Frigido
+Valley. There were desultory artillery actions. They became especially
+intense in the south Loppio Valley in the upper Vanol, and on the
+Carso.
+
+Other raids attempted by the Austrians during February 21 and 22,
+1917, against the Italians on the Zugna in the Adige Valley, between
+Strigne and Spera in the Sugana Valley, and on the slopes of Monte
+Cadini in the upper Boite Valley, failed owing to firm resistance. In
+the Col di Lana area an Austrian detachment by a sudden attack
+occupied one of the Italian outposts. The detachment was at once
+counterattacked and driven off.
+
+Again on February 23 and 24, 1917, the usual artillery actions took
+place, particularly in the Sugana Valley, in the Plava sector, and
+east of Goritz. Raids attempted by the Austrians against Italian
+positions on the northern slopes of Col Bricon, in the Travignola
+Valley, at Navagiust in the upper Degano, and on the slopes of Monte
+Nero were repulsed. In the area southeast of Goritz Austrian
+detachments, after a violent bombardment, attacked one of the advanced
+Italian positions south of Vertoiba. They were driven back and
+dispersed.
+
+During the last few days of February, 1917, the weather cleared up
+somewhat and brought increased artillery activities. The artillery
+duel was more intense in the zone east of Goritz. Some shells fell on
+the town. At the confluence of the Vertoibizza and Frigido the
+Italians repulsed Austrian detachments that were attempting to
+approach their lines. On the northern slopes of San Marco an Italian
+detachment made a surprise attack and penetrated into the Austrian
+trenches, which were destroyed and the occupants driven out.
+
+The month of March, 1917, opened in the same manner in which February,
+1917, had closed. There were intermittent artillery actions all along
+the front. Italian batteries destroyed advanced Austrian posts on
+Marmolado Mountain, near the upper Avisio River (Trentino front),
+causing fires at various places. Detachments of Italian infantry on
+March 2, 1917, successfully raided Austrian trenches at different
+points, destroyed defensive works, and captured ammunition and other
+war material. Austrian patrols made several similar raids.
+
+On March 4, 1917, artillery activity increased noticeably on the
+Trentino front from the Travignola Valley to the upper Cordevole. In
+the upper part of the San Pellegrino Valley, in the Avisio district, a
+brilliant attack by Italian troops resulted in the occupation of a
+strong position at an altitude of almost 9,000 feet on the Costabella
+group. The Italians captured sixty-one men and one machine gun. On the
+Julian front there were again intermittent artillery actions. Italian
+batteries caused explosions and fires in the Austrian lines near
+Castagnievizza on the middle Isonzo. Austrian detachments that
+attempted to approach the Italian positions southeast of Vertoiba were
+repulsed.
+
+During the night of March 9, 1917, Austrian detachments, in the midst
+of a violent snowstorm, entered advanced positions on the southern
+slopes of Cima di Bocche. They were driven out by a counterattack.
+There were also the usual artillery duels. Italian batteries shelled
+the station at Santa Lucia di Tolmino and the Austrian lines in the
+Castaomavilla sector with good results. Not even minor engagements
+were reported on the following day, March 10, 1917. But on March 11,
+1917, an Austrian detachment, in the Concei-Ledro Valley, in the
+Westerdak, after violent artillery and trench-mortar bombardment
+against Bezzecoa and Mount View, attacked the Italian position in the
+small valley of Vai, northeast of Lenzumo. The Austrians were repulsed
+and a few prisoners were taken. On the remainder of the Trentino front
+there were patrol encounters and increased artillery activity. In the
+Travignola Valley of the Avisio, after trench-mortar preparation
+against the southern slopes of Cima di Bocche, the Austrians attacked
+toward Peneveggio. They were driven off. There were the usual
+artillery actions along the Julian front. In the Castagnievizza
+sector, on the Carso, the Italians surrounded an outpost and captured
+the garrison, comprising nine men and one officer.
+
+On March 12, 1917, there was the usual artillery activity in the
+Trentino. The Austrian batteries showed increased activity in the
+Tolmino Basin on the Julian front. On the Carso an Italian detachment
+raided the Austrian lines southwest of Lucati and destroyed the works.
+The dugouts were burned and twenty-four prisoners and one machine gun
+captured. An Austrian counterattack failed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCVI
+
+SPRING ON THE AUSTRO-ITALIAN FRONT
+
+
+With the approach of spring, which of course comes late in the
+mountainous regions in which the Austrians and Italians were fighting,
+a quickening of all fighting activities became noticeable. Artillery
+duels became more frequent and violent, scouting expeditions more
+extensive and daring, and air reconnaissances an almost daily
+occurrence. All this pointed to the coming of a new offensive. Rumors
+were flying around almost as thickly as shells and bullets and they
+credited equally both sides with making preparations. However, for
+quite some time conditions continued very much in the same way in
+which they had been running along during the winter.
+
+In the Monte Forno zone, on the Asiago Plateau, an Austrian detachment
+during the night of March 15, 1917, made a surprise irruption into
+one of the Italian trenches, but was promptly repulsed by a
+counterattack. In the upper Cordevole Valley small patrol engagements
+occurred on the slopes of Monte Sief. On the Julian front there were
+lively actions by both the artillery and by small infantry
+detachments.
+
+In the Adige Valley zone there was intense artillery activity on both
+sides on March 16, 1917. Italian artillery bombarded the railway
+station at Calliano and Austrian cantonments in the environs of Villa
+Lagarina. Minor encounters of infantry occurred at Serravalle, Val
+Lagarina, on the slopes of Monte Sief, in the upper Cordevole, near
+the lower Studena, at Ponteblana Fella, and on the heights of Hill 126
+on the borders of the Carso Plateau. Artillery and mine-throwing
+engagements on the Carso Plateau and in the Wippach Valley went on day
+and night. On the Cima di Costabella a minor Italian attack was
+repulsed.
+
+East of Monte Forno, at the north of the Asiago Plateau, detachments
+of an Austrian regiment, advancing through snow tunnels, penetrated
+into the Italian trenches, destroyed the dugouts, and inflicted
+considerable losses upon the Italians.
+
+On March 17, 1917, after violent artillery preparation the Austrians
+attacked Italian positions at the head of the small valley of Coalbo,
+in the Sugana, but were driven off with heavy losses. On the preceding
+night the Austrians destroyed, by heavy artillery fire, the defensive
+works of the position gained by the Italians in the San Pellegrino
+Valley on March 4, 1917, and succeeded in occupying the upper portion
+of it. On the Julian front increased artillery and trench-mortar
+fighting was reported. In the Plava sector the Italians repulsed an
+Austrian detachment which attempted to raid positions near Pallioca.
+East of Vertoiba an Italian patrol entered the Austrian lines, which
+were set afire. Ammunition and war material were taken. In the
+district of Kostanjevica an Italian attack preceded by strong
+artillery fire was repulsed before the village. On the Tyrolean front
+Italian long-range cannon shelled Arco and Villa Lagarina.
+
+On the whole front there was increased activity of the artillery on
+March 18, 1917. It was most marked in the Lagarina Valley. Italian
+field hospitals at Goritz and Ronchi were struck, causing a few
+casualties. The Austrians attempted raids in the Giumella Valley and
+in the Lucati sector, but were checked.
+
+On March 19 and 20, 1917, there was again considerable artillery
+activity in the Trentino. On Costabella Massif, after a violent
+bombardment with gas shells, the Austrians repeatedly attacked
+advanced Italian positions. They were repulsed with heavy loss. The
+usual artillery actions and patrol encounters were reported on the
+Julian front. Two Italian patrols entered the enemy lines in the Goritz
+area and destroyed them.
+
+Comparative inactivity was the rule during the following week. But
+during the night of March 27, 1917, Austrian detachments in the Sugana
+Valley attempted to approach Italian positions on the left bank of the
+Maso Torrent west of Samone. They were driven off and dispersed by the
+Italian fire.
+
+There was also considerable artillery activity on the Julian front. At
+dusk the bombardment was extremely severe in the section between the
+Frigido and Dosso Faiti. After destroying the Italian defenses the
+Austrians launched two attacks in force, one against Hill 126, where
+they succeeded in occupying some advanced trenches, and the other
+toward Dosso Faiti, which was repulsed.
+
+Nothing of any importance occurred anywhere on the Austro-Italian
+front during the last few days of March, 1917.
+
+April brought somewhat warmer weather, resulting in the beginning of
+the spring thaws. This made military operations even more difficult
+and brought about a very noticeable reduction in all activities on
+both sides. Not until April 6, 1917, was there anything of any
+importance whatsoever to report, and even then the operations were
+only of minor importance. On that day there were desultory artillery
+actions along the front, although the prevailing bad weather greatly
+interfered with operations.
+
+During the afternoon the Austrians exploded a large mine in the
+vicinity of advanced Italian positions on the second summit of Monte
+Colbricon. The Italians suffered no serious damage and no casualties.
+On the Carso a small detachment of Italian troops surprised and
+occupied an advanced Austrian post north of Boscomalo, capturing the
+entire garrison.
+
+On April 10, 1917, the artillery activity, normal on the remainder of
+the front, was more lively west of Lake Garda and in the Lagarina
+Valley. The Austrians having renewed their attack with medium-caliber
+guns on Limone Garda, Italian batteries replied by shelling the
+Austrian lines in the vicinity of Arco and Rovereto. On the Carso
+Italian patrols pushed back advanced positions of the Austrians at
+many points.
+
+During the night of April 11, 1917, the Austrians, after violent
+artillery and trench-mortar preparations, succeeded momentarily in
+entering one of the advanced Italian trenches to the east of Vertoiba,
+but were immediately driven off on the arrival of Italian reserves.
+
+Artillery was again active on April 12, 1917, on the Trentino front
+between the Adige and San Pellegrino Valleys. Italian medium-caliber
+batteries employed effective bursts of fire against the railway
+station of Calliano, where an unusual movement of trains had been
+observed. On the Colbricon Massif, in the upper Cismon Valley, the
+Austrians had been mining toward Italian advanced positions. During
+the night the Italians exploded a countermine, which destroyed the
+Austrian gallery. The edge of the crater was occupied by Italian
+troops and the position established. On the Julian front artillery
+duels were reported in the Plava area, to the east of the Vertoibizza
+Torrent and in the northern sector of the Carso. The Italians repulsed
+minor attacks in the vicinity of Della Tolmino, and against the
+position which they had captured on April 7, 1917, north of Boscomalo.
+
+On April 13, 1917, the railway station at Calliano and moving trains
+in the neighborhood were repeatedly hit, an ammunition depot was blown
+up, and a fortified position destroyed in the Zugna area. On the
+remainder of the Trentino front bad weather interfered with all
+operations.
+
+On the Colbricon Massif, in the upper Cismon, Austrian detachments
+attempted to attack the position which the Italians had captured on
+the preceding night after the explosion of their mine. They were
+repulsed with loss. On the Julian front artillery duels took place in
+the Goritz Basin.
+
+Again on April 16, 1917, Italian artillery in the Lagarina Valley
+renewed the bombardment of the station at Calliano, damaging the
+building, putting trains and motor lorries to flight and dispersing
+troops. Encounters among small groups of infantry were reported.
+
+In the upper part of the Aravionodo Valley in the midst of a heavy
+storm an Austrian detachment made a surprise attack and penetrated one
+of the advanced Italian positions west of Lake Bocete. They were
+driven back to their own lines. On the Julian front the artillery
+fighting was more intense in the vicinity of Goritz.
+
+Bad weather once more interfered seriously with all operations for a
+few days. On April 20, 1917, however, there was again lively artillery
+fire on the whole front. Italian batteries shelled Austrian camps in
+the Lagarina Valley, dispersed Austrian detachments on the northern
+slopes of Monte Pasubio and at various points on the Carnia front, and
+checked Austrian fire in the Goritz area and on the Carso.
+
+For the next two days only artillery duels were reported. These were
+continued on April 23, 1917, in the Sugana Valley, where extensive
+movements of troops behind the Austrian lines were reported. In the
+upper Cordevole Valley an Austrian detachment, which attempted to
+penetrate one of the Italian positions in the Campo zone, was
+counterattacked and dispersed, abandoning some arms and munitions. An
+Austrian attack at Gabria, northwest of Tolmino, had a like result,
+the Austrians suffering appreciable losses.
+
+On April 29, 1917, an Austrian detachment entered one of the advanced
+Italian positions at Tonale Pass in the Camonica Valley.
+Notwithstanding a violent barrage fire from the Austrian batteries,
+Italian reenforcements at once reoccupied the position. The artillery
+activity was continued in a desultory way. It was somewhat more
+lively, however, in the Travignola Valley, at the head of the
+Costeana stream, and in the Goritz area. Reconnaissance patrols were
+active along the entire front.
+
+The first definite signs of an impending Italian drive on the Julian
+front appeared on May 12, 1917. Along the whole front between Tolmino
+and the sea the Italians were active with artillery and mine throwers.
+The fire lasted through the entire night. It caused explosions and
+fires in the Austrian lines and was continued with unabated vigor in
+spite of prompt response from the Austrian guns during May 13, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCVII
+
+THE ITALIAN DRIVE AGAINST TRIESTE
+
+
+It now became quite evident that the Italians once more were ready to
+attempt to reach their goal, Trieste. More and more violent became
+their bombardment of the Austrian lines on the Isonzo front. On May
+14, 1917, on the Julian front from Tolmino to the sea the destructive
+fire of the Italian artillery, directed against strong Austrian
+positions, reached great intensity and was vigorously answered by
+numerous Austrian batteries of all calibers. Toward noon Italian
+infantry made several raids on various points along the front, which
+led to considerable progress in the Plava area, on the slopes of Monte
+Cucco, and on the hills east of Goritz and Vertoibizza. At the same
+time other Italian troops made a thrust in the northern sector of the
+Carso and reached the wrecked Austrian lines east of Dosso Faiti,
+capturing prisoners. The infantry actions continued during the entire
+day, supported by artillery and trench mortars, which were keeping the
+Austrian artillery in check.
+
+On the remainder of the front the Austrians attempted various attacks
+in force on advanced positions northwest of Tolmino and on the Asiago
+Plateau. All were unsuccessful and resulted in severe casualties to
+the assailants.
+
+This offensive action, it now appeared, had really begun on May 12,
+1917, when, in the morning, fire was opened along the whole line from
+Tolmino to the sea. It was maintained with a regularly quickened
+rhythm until the morning of May 14, 1917, when it was intensified to a
+powerful drum fire. During the first part of the bombardment the
+Austrians reacted but feebly. It seemed as though the Austrians had
+been taken by surprise, but their reply was more vigorous on May 13,
+1917, and extremely violent on the morning of the 14th. Austrian
+batteries then opened a heavy curtain of fire, pouring thousands of
+projectiles on the trenches in the Italian line.
+
+Undeterred by this tempest of fire, the Italian infantry, toward noon,
+leaped over the parapets and dashed forward toward the objectives
+previously assigned. These positions were almost all difficult ones,
+and some of them hitherto had been regarded as impregnable; such, for
+instance, as the heights on the left bank of the Isonzo, from Plava to
+Salcano Pass. The steep slopes, covered with rocks and dotted here and
+there with thick clumps of brush, constituted a formidable obstacle to
+an infantry advance. Successive lines of trenches, prepared months
+before above deep caverns, well supplied with defensive and offensive
+material, were defended by seasoned troops and protected by batteries
+placed so as to flank attacks with their fire. Notwithstanding these
+conditions, the Italian infantry advanced.
+
+This vigorous offensive movement was continued by the Italian troops
+on May 15, 1917. Ably supported by artillery, they succeeded in
+establishing themselves on the steep and wooded heights along the
+eastern bank of the Isonzo, north of Goritz, which had been
+transformed by the Austrians into a formidably fortified defensive
+position. On the left wing one of the Italian columns, after forcing a
+passage across the river between Loga and Bombrez, captured the
+last-named village and fortified itself there.
+
+In the center the heights of Hill 383, northeast of Plava, were
+captured, while the Florence infantry brigade and the Vaellino
+brigade, after taking by assault the villages of Zagora and Zagomila,
+which were infested by machine guns, carried the crests of Monte Cucco
+and Monte Vodice with great dash.
+
+On the right wing the other Italian columns made considerable progress
+on the steep slopes of Monte Santo. Fierce Austrian counterattacks,
+prepared and supported by a bombardment of exceptional violence, were
+all repulsed.
+
+In the area east of Goritz the Messina brigade conquered Hill 174
+north of Tivoli, which was strongly fortified and stubbornly held by
+the Austrians, whose insistent counterattacks were beaten back.
+
+The city of Goritz suffered a heavy bombardment from Austrian
+batteries, and some buildings were seriously damaged.
+
+On the remainder of the front down to the sea there were lively
+artillery actions. The Austrian rear lines were again effectively
+bombed by air squadrons and during the night by airships.
+
+In the first two days of their advance the Italians made 3,375
+prisoners, among them ninety-eight officers. They also captured a
+mountain battery, about thirty machine guns, and much war material,
+including arms and ammunition.
+
+On the following day, May 16, 1917, the Austrian resistance stiffened
+somewhat. In spite of this the Italian advance continued. Fighting in
+the zone between Monte Cucco and Vodice was bitter and lengthy.
+Considerable Austrian masses, supported by the fire of numerous
+batteries, were repeatedly launched against Italy's new positions.
+Each time they were repulsed, and the Fochux bastion of Monte Cucco
+from Height 611 to Height 525 remained firmly in Italian hands.
+Moreover, the Italians made appreciable progress toward the important
+summit of Height 652, on the Vodice.
+
+In the zone east of Goritz Austrian counterattacks, directed
+particularly against the summit of Height 174 and to the east of the
+Vertoibizza Torrent, broke down under Italian fire. Afterward Italian
+infantry, assuming a counteroffensive, occupied the important height
+to the south of Grazigna after a desperate conflict.
+
+On the Carso Plateau the Austrians, with the evident object of
+lessening the Italian pressure in the region of Goritz, attempted a
+powerful effort against positions at Monte Vuocgnacco and Monte Faiti,
+on the northern sector of the plateau. Successive waves of Austrian
+infantry were broken down by well-directed fire, or rolled back in
+disorder after having suffered serious losses.
+
+On the whole front from Tolmino to the sea there were continuous
+actions by artillery of all calibers. The Austrian artillery continued
+its work of devastation on the city of Goritz.
+
+On May 17, 1917, the Italian troops were engaged in fortifying the
+important position captured east of Goritz and organizing
+communication with the rear. The Austrians attempted but failed to
+hinder the work of the Italian forces.
+
+During the night the Austrians under cover of darkness attempted
+surprise attacks upon positions on the bridgehead of Bodrez (on the
+Isonzo seven miles southwest of Tolmino), on the Vodice, Hill 592, and
+at Grazigna. In the morning the Austrians brought up strong
+reenforcements and renewed their attack, which was particularly
+violent in the Vodice region and south of Grazigna. Shattered by
+Italian battery fire the Austrian masses were counterattacked and
+repulsed by infantry, who at several points surrounded their
+assailants and forced them to surrender.
+
+The number of prisoners by now had increased to 6,432, including 143
+officers.
+
+All along the front from Tolmino to the sea the artillery continued
+very active. Goritz again suffered very heavy damage.
+
+Surprise attacks during the night of May 17, 1917, on Italian
+positions on the heights of Hill 592 on Monte Vodice were repulsed. In
+the morning of May 18, 1917, Italian troops opened a vigorous attack,
+with the object of capturing the heights of Hill 652 on Monte Vodice,
+the key to the Austrian defenses north of Monte Santo. The stubborn
+resistance of the Austrians, supported by numerous batteries of all
+calibers, which kept up a continuous fire from the rear, rendered the
+action long and severe. Advancing from rock to rock, expelling the
+Austrians from trench and cavern, destroying their machine guns,
+Italian infantry by evening succeeded in reaching the crest of the
+long-contested heights and maintaining the position against the
+concentrated fire of Austrian batteries.
+
+With the capture of the ridge between Monte Cucco and Monte Vodice,
+the task of diverting the Austrian attention, which was assigned to
+the troops in the sector between Bodrez and Loga, was completed, and
+they withdrew to the right bank of the Isonzo without molestation from
+the Austrians.
+
+In the region east of Goritz the Italians maintained all their
+positions against persistent attacks, which were particularly violent
+south of Grazigna and on the heights of Hill 174 south of Tivoli.
+
+On the remainder of the front incessant artillery duels occurred. The
+Austrian fire was especially violent against Goritz and the
+surrounding villages.
+
+In the area north of Goritz the Italian troops on May 19, 1917,
+extended their positions on Hill 652, on the Vodice (a ridge which
+links captured Monte Cucco with Monte Santo, the immediate Italian
+objective in this region). Dense masses of Austrians preceded by a
+heavy barrage fire counterattacked in an attempt to stop the Italian
+progress, but each time were driven back with heavy loss. In the
+evening the Austrians withdrew their infantry, and concentrated a
+strong artillery fire on the lost positions. These the Italians firmly
+maintained. They captured two 4-inch guns, two 6-inch mortars, trench
+mortars and machine guns, and a large quantity of arms and ammunition.
+In the area east of Goritz Italian troops broke into the Austrian line
+and took some prisoners. On the Trentino front the Austrians attempted
+a diversion by a heavy bombardment and by local infantry attacks
+without success.
+
+These attempts were resumed on May 20, 1917, in the Trentino, in the
+Campo area, in the Daone Valley, southeast of Lake Loppio, at Rio
+Cameras, in the Adige Valley, and on the Maso Torrent line in the
+Sugana Valley. Late in the evening masses of Austrian troops
+vigorously assaulted Italian positions on the Pasubio, west of Monte
+Dente. After heavy hand-to-hand fighting, the Austrians, suffering
+severe loss, were completely driven back all along the line of attack.
+On the Julian front, Austrian attacks on the northern slopes of San
+Marco, east of Goritz, between Monte Vuocgnacco and Monte Faiti, and
+in the neighborhood of Hill 268 were repulsed. The Italians took Hill
+363, between Palieva and Britof, east of Plava, and extended their
+positions still more on the Vodice.
+
+On May 21, 1917, the Austrians on the Trentino front, notwithstanding
+the repulse so far suffered, persisted in making desultory and
+fruitless attempts to divert the Italians from their main objectives.
+Raids were made in force against the advanced Italian line at Caventro
+Pass, Adamello, Pluberga Bridge, in the Chiesa, and in the Giumella
+Valley, at Rio Pionale. All were repulsed. Between Lake Garda and the
+Adige the Austrians, after an intense and prolonged bombardment with
+artillery of all calibers, attacked positions on Monte Dosso Alto,
+southwest of Loppio Lake, and on Monte Zugna. They were driven back
+with heavy loss. Other local attacks which were attempted in the
+Posina Valley, on the Asiago Plateau, and in Carnia failed. On the
+Julian front, in the sector north of Goritz, the artillery duel,
+already spirited, became more intense, but was not followed by
+infantry action. The position which the Italians captured on Hill 363,
+east of Plava, was consolidated.
+
+East of Goritz the Austrians attempted repeatedly to recapture Hill
+126, south of Grazigna, but failed on account of the effective action
+of Italian artillery reserves.
+
+A slight lull set in on May 22, 1917, except that the Italians opened
+a very heavy fire against the Austrian positions on the Carso Plateau.
+
+This bombardment continued on May 23, 1917, and after ten hours of
+violent bombardment, the troops of the Third Italian Army assaulted
+and broke through the well-organized Austrian lines from
+Castagnievizza to the sea. While they were heavily engaging the
+Austrians on the left, other troops, after carrying trenches in the
+center and on the right, occupied part of the area south of the
+Castagnievizza-Boscomalo road, passed Boscomalo and captured Jamiano,
+the important and strongly fortified heights of Hill 92 east of
+Pietrarossa, Hill 77, Hill 58, Bagni, and Hill 21. The Austrians, at
+first surprised by the sudden onslaught, toward evening
+counterattacked in force, supported by an exceptionally heavy
+bombardment. They were repulsed with severe loss.
+
+During the day the Italians captured more than 9,000 prisoners,
+including more than 300 officers. In the Goritz area Italian troops
+repulsed heavy attacks, captured a strong point on the northwest
+slopes of San Marco, and after severe fighting made considerable gains
+in the Monte Santo and Vodice areas.
+
+It was also announced officially that ten British batteries assisted
+in the fighting of these days.
+
+On May 24, 1917, the battle continued to rage along the Julian front
+from the sea to Plava. Italian troops, advancing over very difficult
+and intricate ground, fought their way, yard by yard, through a deep
+labyrinth of fortifications stubbornly defended by strong,
+well-trained forces.
+
+In the sector between the sea and the Jamiano-Brestovizza road large
+Italian forces, supported by some field batteries which advanced with
+the infantry, drove the Austrians back as far as Foce Timavo, Flondar,
+and Hill 31, a line south of Jamiano.
+
+North of Jamiano, after heavy fighting, the strongly fortified heights
+Hills 235 and 247 were carried and the Italian positions extended as
+far as the outlying houses of Versic.
+
+The Austrians attempted to lighten the Italian pressure on the
+southern Carso by violent counterattacks from Castagnievizza to
+Frigido. All these efforts failed. East of Goritz persistent Austrian
+raids were repulsed during the night on Hill 174, north of Tivoli, and
+at Grazigna. In the region of Monte Cucco and Monte Vodice the
+Austrians vainly made every effort to retake captured positions. An
+Austrian column attempted a surprise attack against Italian lines east
+of Hill 652 on the Vodice. It was counterattacked and driven back to
+its point of departure, which was then carried and held by Italian
+troops. East of Plava the Italians extended their occupation on Hill
+363.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCVIII
+
+THE HEIGHT OF THE ITALIAN OFFENSIVE
+
+
+The struggle which had now been raging for almost a fortnight
+continued with unabated strength. Although the Austrians put up a most
+gallant and determined resistance, they could not keep back the
+Italian advance, which apparently was made with superior infantry and
+artillery forces.
+
+On May 25, 1917, heavy fighting continued on the Carso. After intense
+artillery preparation lasting until 4 o'clock in the afternoon,
+infantry of the Seventh Italian Army Corps vigorously attacked and
+carried the network of trenches extending from the mouth of the Timavo
+River to a point east of Jamiano and took possession of the heights
+between Flondar and Medeazza.
+
+Farther north, after severe hand-to-hand fighting, the Austrian
+defenses at the labyrinth east of Boscomalo were broken and Hill 220,
+southeast of the village, and trenches around Castagnievizza were
+taken. The operations on the northern sector of the Carso were
+confined almost exclusively to artillery actions. The Italians
+extended their positions on Hill 174, north of Tivoli.
+
+The fighting was very heavy in the Vodice area, where the Austrians
+made every effort to dislodge the Italians from the important point
+Hill 652, which, however, remained firmly in Italian possession. After
+violent artillery preparation dense masses of Austrian troops
+attempted repeatedly and stubbornly to attack the Italian lines.
+
+In the Plava zone the Italians made farther progress on the slopes of
+Hill 363 in the Rogat Valley. The total number of prisoners captured
+so far on the Julian front from May 14 to 25, 1917, was 22,419,
+including 487 officers.
+
+It was now the fourth day of this new Carso battle. Still the Italians
+extended their positions. On May 26, 1917, artillery action all along
+the line continued fiercely from sunrise until evening. In the
+afternoon between the coast and Jamiano Italian infantry by a
+brilliant assault succeeded in reaching a point beyond the railway
+from Monfalcone to Duino, northeast of San Giovanni, and carried the
+strongly fortified Hill 145 southwest of Medeazza. They established
+themselves a few hundred yards from the village.
+
+North of Jamiano violent attacks and counterattacks followed in
+succession all day, supported by artillery fire. Castagnievizza also
+was reached and passed, but the persistent and concentrated shelling
+by a number of Austrian batteries compelled the Italians to evacuate
+ground there. The latter maintained a hold on the western boundary,
+however.
+
+In the area east and north of Goritz the artillery action was intense.
+The Italians shelled the basins of Cargaro and Britof, in which the
+Austrian supplies centered.
+
+In the Plava sector Italian infantry carried the heights at the head
+of the Palieva Valley, thus connecting their Monte Cucco lines with
+those on Hill 363.
+
+Weather conditions on May 27, 1917, slowed down the fighting
+everywhere, but did not prevent the Italians from extending their
+various successes slightly in all directions.
+
+On May 28, 1917, however, the Isonzo battle was resumed for the third
+time. A new and large Italian attacking wave was directed against the
+heights of Vodice and Monte Santo. An Italian attack launched at noon
+against the north slope was preceded by powerful artillery fire. It
+extended along the entire sector.
+
+During the afternoon it resulted many times in severe hand-to-hand
+fighting, which also raged during the night. Especially violent
+fighting occurred in the region of Hill 652. The entire extent of the
+Austrian front, however, now offered iron resistance to all Italian
+efforts.
+
+South of Jamiano the Italians attacked Austrian positions four times,
+losing, besides heavy casualties, fifteen officers and 800 men as
+prisoners. The number of prisoners brought in by the Austrians since
+the commencement of the Isonzo battle amounted to 14,500 men,
+according to their official statements.
+
+The Italian offensive now began to come to a stop. The hard fighting
+naturally had exhausted the Italian forces and munitions and by now
+strong Austrian reserves had come up and made the resistance
+sufficiently strong to stop further advances. On May 29 and 30, 1917,
+artillery was not very active on the Trentino front and in the Carnia,
+but was very heavy on the Julian front, particularly in the sector
+from Monte Cucco to Vodice and east of Goritz.
+
+On May 31, 1917, considerable artillery activity developed in the
+northern sector of the Carso and on the line from Goritz to Plava. In
+the Vodice area numerous massed troops of the Austrians made a violent
+attack upon Italian positions on Hills 592 and 652. The attack,
+prepared by intense artillery fire and carried out with stubbornness,
+failed.
+
+On June 1 and 2, 1917, the activity on the whole front was confined
+for the most part to the artillery, which was especially active
+against Italian positions east of Plava, in the Vodice area, and in
+the northern sector of the Carso.
+
+On the Carso, after several days of violent artillery preparation, the
+Austrians attacked in mass on June 4, 1917, from Dosso Faiti to the
+sea. Although the Dosso Faiti positions were completely destroyed,
+they were strenuously defended by the Italians. The latter also
+resisted determined attacks from Castagnievizza to the ridges north of
+Jamiano and by counterattacks and heavy hand-to-hand fighting
+succeeded in maintaining their positions and even in occupying new
+advanced positions near Castagnievizza and Versic.
+
+South of Jamiano, while maintaining their wing positions, the Italians
+were obliged to rectify somewhat the center of their new line to avoid
+the Austrian fire, at the same time carrying out frequent
+counterattacks, effectively stopping the Austrians.
+
+It apparently was now the Austrians' turn. The Italians began to
+report slight withdrawals. On June 5, 1917, lively artillery duels
+continued on the front from the Monte Nero area to the heights of
+Goritz. On the Carso the violent shelling of Italian positions from
+Versic to Jamiano was resumed, provoking an energetic reply from their
+batteries.
+
+South of Jamiano the fighting was less intense. The new Italian line
+fronting Flondar, however, was withdrawn slightly to a position more
+advantageous tactically.
+
+The struggle continued during the next few days, especially near
+Jamiano. Positions changed hands frequently, but the advantage now
+seemed to be slightly with the Austrians, though neither side
+registered any extensive successes. The fighting gradually slowed down
+to the type which had been employed previous to the Italian drive.
+Most of the positions which the Italian forces had gained, remained,
+however, securely in their hands.
+
+On June 10, 1917, there was a slight revival of more extensive
+operations, especially in the Trentino. Throughout the whole of the
+mountain zone of operations there was more fighting than usual,
+especially between the Adige and Brenta Rivers. In the night the
+Austrians were driven back and followed up at the Tonale Pass, in the
+upper Chiesa Valley, on the slope of Dosso Casino, and in the Posina
+Valley.
+
+On the Asiago Plateau Italian artillery destroyed the Austrians'
+complex system of defenses at several points. Italian infantry,
+attacking during a violent storm in the direction of Monte Zebio and
+Monte Forno, carried the pass of Agnello, and captured nearly the
+whole of Monte Ortigara, 6,924 feet high, east of Cima Undice.
+
+On the remainder of the front there were desultory concentrations of
+fire on the part of the Austrian batteries, to which the Italians
+replied. On the Carso attacks on the Italian line south of
+Castagnievizza were completely repelled.
+
+During the balance of June, 1917, only isolated actions of importance
+occurred. On June 15, 1917, east of the Adamello Massif in the eastern
+Trentino, Italian Alpine detachments and skiers advanced over very
+difficult ground, notwithstanding furious resistance, and attacked the
+strongly fortified positions of Corno Cavento, at an altitude of 3,400
+meters. The position was carried. The Italians captured what was left
+of the enemy garrison and two 75-mm. guns, one trench mortar, four
+machine guns, and a large quantity of supplies and ammunition. On the
+front of the Asiago Plateau the Austrian artillery continued to show
+great activity. Patrol attacks on Italian positions on Monte Zebio
+were repulsed.
+
+On the Ortigara at dawn Italian positions on Hill 2,101 were again
+attacked with extreme violence. From 2.30 o'clock onward the
+Austrians, continually reenforced, redoubled their efforts, but they
+all failed.
+
+In the San Pellegrino Valley an attack upon advanced Italian positions
+on the massif of Costabella was repulsed.
+
+On the southern slopes of Monte Rombon the Italians occupied by
+surprise advanced posts, and maintained the same in spite of the
+concentrated fire of the Austrians.
+
+On the Julian front the artillery fire was especially noticeable in
+the Tolmino sector, and on the heights northeast of Goritz. Columns of
+Austrian motor lorries were dispersed, and troops assembled east of
+Castagnievizza were shelled.
+
+Again on June 20, 1917, the Italians renewed their activity in the
+Trentino. After twenty-four hours of artillery preparation, an Italian
+infantry attack on Sette Communi Plateau began early in the morning,
+and was carried out with the greatest display of effort, especially on
+the northern wing in the region of Monte Forno and the frontier ridge.
+All the assaults failed. A local success which gave the Italians a
+gain of about 100 yards was nullified by a counterattack. Nothing of
+importance occurred on the Isonzo front.
+
+On the Asiago Plateau fighting was resumed on June 25, 1917. All night
+Italian troops opposed the desperate efforts of the Austrians, who,
+notwithstanding heavy losses, were attempting to retake the positions
+recently lost in the Monte Ortigara sector. Attacks and counterattacks
+were continuously made on the contested positions. Diversions at the
+same time by the Austrians on other portions of the front were
+completely stopped.
+
+On June 28, 1917, the artillery struggle was fairly active on the
+whole front. In answer to the fire directed by the Austrians against
+Ala the Italians repeatedly shelled the railway station at Calliano.
+On the Asiago Plateau the Austrians concentrated a violent fire on
+Agnello Pass. Near Santa Lucia, in the Tolmino region, traffic was
+interrupted repeatedly by Italian fire.
+
+Throughout the last few days of June, 1917, and all of July, 1917,
+only minor operations were undertaken by either side. Artillery
+activity varied in extent and frequency from day to day, and so did
+the operations of outposts and patrols. In a general way, however,
+there was no readjustment of the positions which had been established
+by the latest Italian drive.
+
+On March 10, 1917, Austria-Hungary issued a proclamation, ostensibly
+to the Albanians, but obviously addressed to the whole world, that
+Albania was to enjoy local autonomy under an Austro-Hungarian
+protectorate. In June, 1917, Italy responded with a similar
+proclamation, granting Albania independence under Italian protection.
+At the time the announcement was made a semiofficial interview was
+granted to the representative of a London newspaper by Deputy Eugenio
+Chiesa, who had recently returned from a tour of inspection of the
+parts of Albania held by the Italian army:
+
+"The Italian occupation in Albania and northern Epirus," he said,
+"extends well into the Greek kingdom. Not only have the Italians
+occupied Valona and its hinterland, but they have passed a long way to
+the south of the boundary between Greece proper and northern Epirus at
+Cape Stylos and have extended in a northern direction as far as the
+river Kalamas, opposite the south end of Corfu, which was intended by
+the thirteenth protocol of the Berlin Congress of 1878, and by the
+Berlin Conference of 1880, to have been the northwestern frontier of
+Greece, but which, since the last Balkan wars, has been well within
+the enlarged northwestern boundary. I am opposed," continued Signor
+Chiesa, "to the permanent occupation of these places, nor do I believe
+the Italian Government intends to retain them. I consider as sincere
+the manifesto of the commandant of Valona, but Valona Kanina, north
+of Valona, the surrounding districts, and the isle of Saseto must
+remain Italian, not only for strategic but for sanitary reasons, owing
+to the necessity of draining the pestilential marshes which affect the
+health of Valona. Venizelos, with whom I spoke at Saloniki, frankly
+recognized this occupation of Valona, Saseto, and the territory about
+Valona. The Italians have already constructed over 400 kilometers of
+roads and opened over 125 schools, where both Italian and Albanian are
+taught.... Corfu cannot remain Italian, it ought to be Greek."
+
+
+
+
+PART XII--WAR ON THE SEA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XCIX
+
+SUBMARINE WARFARE
+
+
+The six months' period from February 1, 1917, to August 1, 1917,
+covers a more intensified submarine activity than any other period
+since the beginning of the war. It was on February 1, 1917, that the
+so-called unrestricted submarine warfare was initiated by the German
+Government. As was to be expected, losses resulting from this new type
+of "frightfulness" quickly became very large. As time went on,
+however, it became evident that the Germans were unable to maintain
+their submarine sinkings on an equal basis at all times. Losses varied
+greatly from week to week. However, even at that they soon became so
+severe as to cause grave difficulties to the countries fighting
+against Germany and her allies, which before long were joined by the
+United States as a result of Germany's new submarine policy.
+
+Difficult as it had been in the past to compile an accurate account of
+submarine losses, such an attempt became even more impossible now.
+All the governments involved soon followed Great Britain's lead and
+stopped the publication of detailed data concerning their respective
+maritime losses. Figures, it is true, were published, at least by
+England, at regular intervals. But they were far from complete or
+accurate. It is now next to impossible to give even an approximate
+idea of the total losses.
+
+The following data come as close to being correct as a careful
+consultation of official statements permits. They must, however, not
+be considered complete.
+
+Up to the date of writing the United States had not published any
+official figures covering the losses incurred by the American merchant
+marine. From newspaper and other accounts, however, it appears that
+between February 1, 1917, and July 16, 1917, from thirty to forty
+American ships of more than 100,000 tons were lost. The first of these
+was the steamer _Housatonic_, sunk on February 3, 1917, near the
+Scilly Islands without loss of life. The sailing schooner _Lyman M.
+Law_ was sent to the bottom of the sea on February 12, 1917, off the
+coast of Sardinia in the Mediterranean, also without loss of life.
+Next on the list was the steamer _Algonquin_, sunk on March 12, 1917,
+near the Scilly Islands without loss of life. Four days later, March
+16, 1917, the steamer _Vigilancia_ went down with a loss of fifteen
+men. On March 17, 1917, the _City of Memphis_ was torpedoed, and on
+March 18, 1917, the _Illinois_, both without loss of life. The sinking
+of the steamer _Healdon_ in the North Sea on March 21, 1917, however,
+brought about the loss of twenty-one members of her crew, seven of
+whom were Americans. On April 2, 1917, the sinking of the armed
+steamer _Aztec_ was reported. With her twenty-eight of the crew,
+including a U. S. N. boat-swain's mate, perished. The _Missourian_
+went down on April 4, 1917, and the _Seward_ on April 7, 1917, both in
+the Mediterranean. On April 24, 1917, the sinking of the schooner
+_Percy Birdsall_ was reported. The crew was rescued. Later that month
+another small schooner, the _Woodward Abrahams_ was sent to the
+bottom. On April 28, 1917, off the north coast of Ireland, the oil
+tanker _Vacuum_ was sunk. As a result of exposure in lifeboats,
+seventeen of her crew, including some naval gunners, died. On May 2,
+1917, the loss of the steamer _Rockingham_ was reported, two of her
+crew being lost. During May, 1917, the following American-owned boats
+were sunk: _Hilonian_, _Harpagus_, _Dirigo_, _Frances M._, _Barbara_,
+and _Margaret B. Rouss_. Between June 12, 1917, and July 16, 1917, the
+American merchant marine lost, besides some small boats, the following
+eight vessels with a total tonnage of over 38,000: _Hansau_,
+_Haverford_, _Bay State_, _Moreni_, _Petrolite_, _Massapequa_,
+_Orleans_, and _Grace_.
+
+The following list shows the losses of the British merchant marine
+during the period from February 25, 1917, to July 22, 1917. The
+figures are those published weekly by the British admiralty. During
+the month of February, 1917, 110 British ships of varying size and of
+a total tonnage of 316,204 were sunk:
+
+ Week Ending Over Under Fishing
+ 1,600 Tons 1,600 Tons Vessels
+
+ March 4 14 9 3
+ March 11 13 4 3
+ March 18 16 8 21
+ March 25 18 17 10
+ April 1 18 13 3
+ April 8 17 2 6
+ April 15 19 9 12
+ April 22 40 15 9
+ April 29 38 13 8
+ May 6 24 22 16
+ May 13 18 5 3
+ May 20 18 9 3
+ May 27 18 1 2
+ June 3 15 3 5
+ June 10 22 10 6
+ June 17 27 5 0
+ June 24 21 7 0
+ July 1 15 5 11
+ July 8 14 3 7
+ July 15 14 4 8
+ July 22 21 3 1
+ July 29 18 3 0
+
+These figures show that in twenty-two weeks England lost 438 vessels
+over 1,600 tons, 170 vessels under 1,600 tons, and 187 fishing
+vessels. The average tonnage of vessels over 1,600 tons has been said
+to be 4,500. On that basis the loss in this class alone would amount
+to about 2,000,000 tons. If we add to this the total loss during
+February, 1917, and an approximate figure representing the loss of
+vessels under 1,600 tons and of fishing vessels, it is safe to assume
+that the total loss suffered by the British merchant marine between
+February 1, 1917, and July 29, 1917, was about 2,650,000 tons.
+
+On June 30, 1917, the German admiralty claimed that since the
+beginning of the war more than 5,500,000 tons of shipping available
+for Great Britain's supply of food, munitions, and materials had been
+destroyed up to June 1, 1917, and that, on that date, there was
+available for this purpose from all sources only about 4,500,000 tons
+which, it was claimed, could be destroyed at the rate of from 800,000
+to 1,000,000 tons a month.
+
+Of the other Allied countries only France supplied from time to time
+definite figures. During February, March, and April, 1917, seventeen
+French vessels were sunk while nine others were attacked, but escaped.
+During May, 1917, twenty-eight French vessels were attacked. Of these
+eighteen escaped and ten were sunk. In June, 1917, fourteen French
+boats were sunk and twenty escaped. During the early part of July,
+1917, two more French steamers were reported sunk having a tonnage of
+almost 10,000. On June 22, 1917, a debate in the French Chamber of
+Deputies developed the fact that the French merchant fleet was
+2,500,000 tons at the beginning of the war and since that time had
+lost 560,000 tons, 460,000 by acts of war. During the same period
+680,000 tons had been built or bought and another 140,000 was on the
+stocks, so that the fleet was actually greater now than before the
+war.
+
+The grand total of submarine operations during February, 1917,
+according to figures compiled by the British admiralty, showed the
+following results:
+
+Number of ships sunk--British, 110; American, 2; other belligerents,
+20; neutrals, 51.
+
+Total tonnage destroyed--British, 316,204; American, 3,322; other
+belligerents, 44,272; neutrals, 93,019. Grand total February 1-28,
+456,817 tons.
+
+On the other hand the German admiralty made the following official
+announcement on March 19, 1917; "In February 368 merchant ships of an
+aggregate gross tonnage of 781,500 were lost by the war measures of
+the Central Powers. Among them were 292 hostile ships, with an
+aggregate gross tonnage of 644,000 and seventy-six neutral ships of an
+aggregate gross tonnage of 137,500."
+
+The State Department in Washington on April 10, 1917, gave out the
+following official figures regarding neutral losses inflicted by
+submarines:
+
+"Information has been received by the department that since the
+beginning of the war, including April 3, a total of 686 vessels have
+been sunk by German submarines, as follows: Norwegian, 410; Swedish,
+111; Dutch, 61; Greek, 50; Spanish, 33; American, 10; Peruvian, 1;
+Argentine, 1; total, 686. Neutral vessels attacked and escaped:
+Norwegian, 32; Swedish, 9; Danish, 5; Greek, 8; Spanish, 2; Argentine,
+1; Brazilian, 1; American, 8; total, 66."
+
+On May 8, 1917, a debate in the Reichstag brought out the fact that
+the German admiralty claimed to have sunk during February, March, and
+April, 1917, 1,325 vessels of all sizes and nationalities with a
+tonnage of 2,800,000.
+
+Denmark on May 22, 1917, announced that since the beginning of the war
+150 ships had been lost and 210 Danish seamen had perished.
+
+On May 28, 1917, the Athens newspaper "Patris" printed a list of 102
+Greek ships of a total tonnage of 300,000 which had been sunk by
+submarines, leaving 149 Greek ships with a displacement of 500,000
+tons still afloat.
+
+Norway during March, 1917, lost sixty-four ships, during April, 1917,
+seventy-five; and during May, 1917, forty-nine.
+
+On June 25, 1917, it was announced that from the beginning of the war
+up to that date Norway had lost 572 vessels of 815,000 tons, 431 of
+these of 680,000 tons being steamers. This made Norway by far the
+heaviest loser among all neutrals.
+
+From all various sources it appears that the total tonnage sunk during
+the six months from February 1, 1917, to July 31, 1917, amounted to
+somewhere between five and six millions.
+
+Of course the submarine fleet of the Central Powers suffered severe
+losses during the six months' period, February to August, 1917. The
+means employed to put submarines out of business were manifold. Large
+flotillas of small but swift patrol boats, squadrons of destroyers,
+guns mounted forward and aft on merchantmen, dragnets, mine fields,
+and last but not least aeroplanes, all contributed their share toward
+the combating of submarine warfare. Just how many submarines have been
+sunk or captured is not even approximately known. From good
+authorities, however, it appears that the Germans up to now have been
+able to put new submarines into commission at a greater rate than the
+Allies have been able to maintain in destroying them.
+
+Only one case of a submarine fighting and destroying another submarine
+became known. This occurred on June 2, 1917, when a French submarine
+sank a hostile submarine just as it was sailing out of the harbor of
+Cattaro on the Dalmatian (Austro-Hungarian) coast of the Adriatic Sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER C
+
+NAVAL OPERATIONS
+
+
+The principal feature of naval warfare, aside from that conducted by
+and against submarines, was the absence of major engagements. Such
+engagements as occurred were of a minor nature and confined to
+meetings between patrol units or to local raids.
+
+On February 25, 1917, German destroyers bombarded Broadstairs and
+Margate on the English coast. Two deaths but no material damage
+resulted.
+
+About the same time it was announced that on February 15, 1917, a
+British cruiser had fought a successful engagement against three
+German raiders off the coast of Brazil, damaging two of them. The
+third escaped.
+
+Not until March 22, 1917, did the German Government announce that the
+raider _Moewe_ had returned to her home port from a very successful
+second raiding trip in the Atlantic Ocean which had yielded
+twenty-seven captured vessels, most of which of course had been sunk.
+
+Still another German raider was heard of on March 30, 1917. On that
+day the French bark _Cambronne_ arrived at the Brazilian port of Rio
+de Janeiro, having on board the crews of eleven vessels which had been
+captured and sunk by the raider. The latter was said to have been the
+former American bark _Pass of Balmaha_ which had been captured by the
+Germans in August, 1915, and at that time had been taken into
+Cuxhaven. She had been renamed _Seeadler_ and was a three-master of
+about 2,800 tons, square rigged, with a speed of about twelve knots,
+and was equipped with a powerful wireless plant. Her armament was said
+to have consisted of two 105-mm. guns and sixteen machine guns, and a
+crew of sixty-four men. The boat apparently had left Germany in
+December, 1916, escorted by a submarine, and had successfully evaded
+the British patrol, not mounting her guns until she had run the
+British blockade. The eleven ships known to have been sunk by the
+_Seeadler_ were:
+
+_Antonin_, French sailing vessel, 3,071 tons, owned in Dunkirk; 31 men
+on board.
+
+_British Yeoman_, British sailing vessel, 1,963 tons, owned in
+Victoria, B. C.; 21 men.
+
+_Buenos Ayres_, Italian sailing vessel, 1,811 tons, owned in Naples;
+21 men.
+
+_Charles Gounod_, French sailing vessel, 2,199 tons, owned in Nantes;
+24 men.
+
+_Dupleix_, French sailing vessel, 2,206 tons, owned in Nantes; 22 men.
+
+_Gladys Royle_, British steamship, 3,268 tons, owned in Sunderland; 26
+men.
+
+_Horngarth_, British steamship, 3,609 tons gross, owned in Cardiff;
+33 men.
+
+_Lady Island_ (or _Landy Island_), 4,500 tons; 25 men.
+
+_La Rochefoucauld_, French sailing vessel, 2,200 tons; owned in
+Nantes; 24 men.
+
+_Perce_, British schooner, 364 tons, owned in Halifax; 6 men, 1 woman.
+
+_Pinmore_, British sailing vessel, 2,431 tons, owned in Greenock, 29
+men.
+
+_The Cambronne_, which on her arrival at Rio de Janeiro had on board
+263 men, had been brought up by the raider on March 7, 1917, in the
+Atlantic Ocean in latitude 21 south, longitude 7 west, or almost on a
+straight line with Rio, but twenty-two days east.
+
+During March, 1917, the British Government announced an extension of
+the danger area in the North Sea, which affected chiefly the protected
+area off Holland and Denmark. On March 28, 1917, German warships,
+cruising off the south coast of England, attacked and sank the British
+patrol boat _Mascot_.
+
+On April 8, 1917, an engagement occurred between British boats and
+German destroyers off Zeebrugge on the Belgian coast. One of the
+German destroyers was sunk and another was seriously damaged.
+
+Various raids were carried out during April, 1917, against the English
+coast. On April 21, 1917, six German destroyers attempted an attack on
+Dover. Two of them were sunk by British destroyers. The Germans also
+claimed to have sunk two British patrol boats. Six days later, on
+April 27, 1917, another German destroyer squadron attacked Ramsgate,
+killing two civilians before they were driven off by land batteries.
+During another engagement a few days later between British light
+cruisers and destroyers and eleven German destroyers off Holland, one
+German boat was damaged.
+
+Both Calais and Dunkirk were bombarded by German destroyers. In the
+former town some civilians were killed. As a result of the attack on
+Dunkirk one French destroyer was sunk.
+
+On May 10, 1917, a squadron of eleven German destroyers about to sail
+out of Zeebrugge was attacked by a British naval force and forced back
+into the former Belgian harbor, then serving as a German naval base.
+Two days later, May 12, 1917, the same British force assisted by an
+air squadron successfully attacked Zeebrugge, destroying two submarine
+sheds and killing sixty-three persons.
+
+During May, 1917, it was also announced that American warships had
+arrived safely in British waters and had begun patrol operations in
+the North Sea. At about the same time Japanese warships made their
+appearance at Marseilles to assist in the war against submarines
+operating off the French coast.
+
+On May 15, 1917, Austrian light cruisers operating in the Adriatic
+Sea, sunk fourteen British mine sweepers, torpedoed the British light
+cruiser _Dartmouth_, and sunk an Italian destroyer.
+
+An engagement occurred between a French and a German torpedo-boat
+flotilla on May 20, 1917, during which one of the French boats was
+damaged. A few days later British warships bombarded Ostend and
+Zeebrugge. Six German destroyers engaged in a running fight with a
+British squadron, as a result of which one German destroyer was sunk
+and another damaged. On May 29, 1917, a Russian squadron, operating
+along the Anatolian (south) coast of the Black Sea bombarded four
+Turkish-Armenian ports and destroyed 147 sailing vessels carrying
+supplies.
+
+Thirteen Bulgarian ships successfully bombarded the Greek port of
+Kavala, then occupied by Allied forces.
+
+Fort Saliff on the Red Sea was captured by British warships. Fort
+Saliff is a Turkish fortress on the Arabian coast of the Red Sea.
+
+Nothing of importance happened during June, 1917.
+
+Early in July, 1917, a German submarine bombarded Ponta Delgada in the
+Azores, but was beaten off by ships lying in the harbor, including an
+American transport.
+
+On July 17, 1917, it was announced that British destroyers had
+attacked a flotilla of German merchant ships on their way from the
+Dutch port of Rotterdam to Germany, sinking four and capturing four
+others.
+
+Mines, submarines, and explosions also made inroads on the naval
+establishments of the various belligerents. During February, 1917, the
+Russian cruiser _Rurik_ was damaged by a mine in the Gulf of Finland.
+On February 28, 1917, a French torpedo destroyer was sunk by a
+submarine in the Mediterranean.
+
+On March 19, 1917, the French warship _Danton_ was torpedoed in the
+Mediterranean, 296 of her crew having perished.
+
+A mine was responsible for the sinking of a British destroyer on May
+4, 1917, causing the loss of one officer and sixty-one men.
+
+Mines also were responsible for the sinking of the French armored
+cruiser _Kleber_ off Point St. Mathieu on June 27, 1917, with a loss
+of thirty-eight men, of a British destroyer and of a German torpedo
+boat in the North Sea, and, on June 30, 1917, of a Russian torpedo
+boat in the Black Sea.
+
+A torpedo sent the British auxiliary cruiser _Hilary_ to the bottom of
+the North Sea with the loss of four men, while a collision was the
+cause of the loss of a British torpedo boat.
+
+On July 9, 1917, the British battleship _Vanguard_ of the dreadnought
+class, 19,250 tons, was destroyed by an internal explosion while at
+anchor in a British port.
+
+According to figures compiled by the New York "Times" the naval losses
+at the end of the third year of the war (August 1, 1917) had reached
+approximately the following figures: Allied navies, 120 ships with a
+total tonnage of 662,715; Central Powers, 122 ships with a total
+tonnage of 387,911.
+
+
+
+
+PART XIII--WAR IN THE AIR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER CI
+
+AERIAL WARFARE
+
+
+As the war progressed the use of aeroplanes of all kinds became more
+and more extensive. This was due chiefly to the wonderful progress
+which had been made in aeronautics, the full story of which will not
+be told until the end of the war has come. Not only have aeroplanes,
+since the beginning of the war, become safer, but they have also
+become marvelously swifter and more powerful. As this is being written
+news comes from Washington that some recently imported very big and
+powerful Italian aeroplanes have made successfully a flight from
+Newport News to the Federal capital--a distance of some 150 miles--at
+the rate of 135 miles per hour and carrying ten passengers. This is
+typical of the recent development in the science of flying.
+
+The result of this development has been the more varied uses to which
+aeroplanes are now being put. Not only do they continue to act as
+observers of hostile positions and movements and as guides to
+artillery operations, but they have also come into vogue as offensive
+weapons. With increased carrying capacity and extended radius of
+action it has become possible to utilize aeroplanes extensively for
+the bombardment of important positions or localities far behind
+hostile lines. Even for the purpose of hunting down and destroying
+submarines aeroplanes are being used to-day, and frequently they
+cooperate with naval forces in strictly offensive operations.
+
+The six months' period covering February, 1917 to August, 1917,
+therefore, shows the greatest activity of the various aerial forces
+since the beginning of the war. On the other hand there has been a
+greater lack of news and an extreme scarcity of details concerning
+aerial operations than ever before. However, in spite of this latter
+condition, it is possible to state that aeroplanes were used more
+frequently and more extensively than ever before on all fronts,
+especially the western front. From such reports as are available it
+appears that the combined English and French aerial forces have become
+superior, both in number and in efficiency, to those of Germany. The
+latter, however, have maintained a remarkably high standard.
+
+It is impossible from the reports which are available to give anything
+like a complete history of aerial warfare during the period from
+February to August, 1917. Throughout February, 1917, English, French,
+German, Italian, Russian, and Austrian aeroplanes were extensively
+employed wherever and whenever conditions permitted. Furnes in
+Flanders was one of the places frequently bombed by German aeroplanes,
+while British planes with even greater frequency visited the harbor of
+Bruges (Zeebrugge) where heavy damage was inflicted on German torpedo
+boats, docks, and railway lines. Zeebrugge is the German submarine
+base in Belgium.
+
+On February 10, 1917, aeroplanes were especially active on the western
+front. German machines unsuccessfully attacked Nancy and Pont St.
+Vincent. During the same night French air squadrons visited many
+places in Lorraine and bombed factories at Hauts Fourreaux, La Sarre,
+Hagodange, Esch, and Mezieres-les-Metz. A fire was caused in the
+neighborhood of the Arnaville station. The aviation ground at Colmar
+and the fort of Zeebrugge were likewise bombarded.
+
+February 13, 1917, was an especially active day for Russian aeroplanes
+on the eastern front. They dropped bombs on the Povursk railway
+station, east of Kovel, and on the depots north of the Povursk
+station. Bombs were dropped on the station at Rodenrois, east of Riga;
+on the little town of Lihinhof, in the vicinity of Friedrichstadt; on
+Valeika, the village of Sviatica, north of Vygonov Lake, south of
+Kiselin; on Radzivilov, and in the regions south of Brody.
+
+On the same day French and German aviators were busily attacking many
+places on the western front. A German aviator dropped bombs on
+Dunkirk. There were no victims and no damage was done. In the vicinity
+of Pompey, Meurthe-et-Moselle, bombs were dropped. Two civilians were
+killed and two were wounded. Nancy, too, was visited. During the night
+French air squadrons dropped projectiles on aviation grounds at
+Etreillers (Aisne), and Rancourt (Somme), on the railway stations at
+Athies, Hombleux, Voyenne, Curchy, St. Quentin, and Ham; and also on
+manufactories east of Tergnier, where several explosions occurred.
+
+Similar activities were reported almost daily, and of course
+observation flights were made continuously by the aerial forces of all
+the belligerents.
+
+On February 25, 1917, a French dirigible was shot down by German
+antiaircraft guns near Weelferdingen, west of Saargemund, in Lorraine.
+It was completely destroyed and its entire crew of fourteen perished.
+
+On February 28, 1917, the German admiralty made the following
+announcement:
+
+"In the northern AEgean Sea a German seaplane successfully dropped
+bombs on a hostile transport. Notwithstanding the fact that it was
+fired on by artillery and pursued by two enemy aeroplanes, the
+seaplane returned safely."
+
+This well illustrates the superiority which aeroplanes had achieved
+when they could, far from their base, successfully attack steamships
+guarded in every possible way.
+
+During the great advance of the Allied troops in France in March,
+1917, unusual activity in the air played an important part. This was
+especially the case on March 17, 1917, when the British either
+destroyed or damaged sixteen German planes, the French ten, and the
+Germans accounted for a total of twenty-two British and French
+machines. At this time aeroplanes were active not only in
+reconnaissance work, but even attacked with bombs and machine guns
+smaller units of the retreating Germans. The British official report
+covering March 18, 1917, for instance, contains the following passage:
+"Our aeroplanes did much valuable work yesterday in cooperation with
+our infantry. Enemy troops were engaged successfully with machine
+guns, and bombs were dropped on a number of places behind the enemy
+lines," while the French report says: "During the evening of March 17
+and the following night a French air squadron bombarded the factories
+and blast furnaces at Thionville and in the Briey Valley, as well as
+certain convoys of enemy troops which were marching in the region of
+Guiscard."
+
+The same kind of aerial activity was an almost daily occurrence during
+April, 1917. The last days of that month, however, were red-letter
+days for military aeronautics. On April 29, 1917, the British claimed
+to have winged twenty German machines, while the Germans stated that
+they had shot down during April 28 and 29, 1917, a total of
+thirty-four British and French planes.
+
+Again on May 7, 1917, the British accounted for fifteen German
+machines, while the French claimed to have brought down during the
+week May 1 to 7, 1917, seventy-six German aeroplanes, of which
+twenty-five were known to have been destroyed.
+
+During the last days of May, 1917, Allied aeroplanes were especially
+active in Belgium. On May 26 and 30, 1917, Hest, Blankenberghe,
+Zeebrugge, and Ghent were attacked and considerable damage was
+inflicted on railway stations, docks, and other buildings of military
+value.
+
+Again on June 4, 1917, British aeroplanes attacked and severely
+damaged German vessels in Zeebrugge.
+
+French airmen were busy, too, in June, 1917. The French War Office on
+June 21, 1917 published the following statement covering their
+activities:
+
+"Fourteen aeroplanes and a German captive balloon were destroyed on
+our front in the period from June 8 to 20. Eleven of these machines
+were brought down by our pilots during aerial combats, and three of
+them by the fire of our machine or antiaircraft guns. In addition,
+seven enemy machines seriously damaged fell in our lines.
+
+"In the same period our squadrons effected numerous sorties. They
+bombarded notably the railroad station at Bensdorf, factories at
+Hayatge-Jesuf at Moyeuvre, blast furnaces at Burbach and in the Saar
+Valley, railroad stations at Bethienville, Chatelet-sur-Retourne,
+Bethel, Mezieres, Charleville, and Molshelm; the bivouacs in Suippes
+Valley, and munitions depots in the region of Laon, etc. Thirteen
+thousand kilograms of projectiles were dropped during the expeditions,
+which caused serious damage to enemy establishments."
+
+British, French, and German air squadrons continued their activities
+throughout June and July, 1917. July 12, 1917, was particularly
+successful for the British airmen, who claimed to have brought down
+near Ypres thirty-one German planes without loss to their own forces.
+
+On the Russian and Italian fronts and in the Balkans and the Near East
+aerial activities were slightly fewer and less extensive than on the
+western, due to the difference in conditions, such as the greater
+scarcity of machines and the greater distance from the source of
+supplies.
+
+A novel use of aeroplanes was made after the entrance of the United
+States into the war. On April 4, 1917, it was stated that British and
+French aviators dropped large numbers of German translations of
+President Wilson's war message over the German lines and Italian
+aviators did the same over the Austrian lines.
+
+On a few occasions aircraft violated the neutrality of countries
+adjoining belligerent territory. In one case a French aeroplane
+dropped bombs on a Swiss town. A prompt and complete apology on the
+part of the French Government followed. On March 13, 1917, Dutch
+troops shot down a German plane which had flown over Sluis in Holland,
+ten miles northeast of Burges. Before they could capture the aviator,
+he succeeded in restarting his machine and in making his escape to
+the German lines. On June 1, 1917, a Zeppelin appeared first over
+Swedish territory near Malmoe and then over Danish territory south of
+Copenhagen. Swedish torpedo boats and Danish troops fired on it
+successively and it quickly disappeared in a southerly direction.
+
+One remarkable enterprise of Russian airmen was reported officially on
+April 3, 1917, from Petrograd and deserves, on account of its highly
+adventurous nature, detailed repetition. The statement read: "On the
+Black Sea on March 27, 1917, during a raid by our seaplanes on Derkas,
+one of them was hit by the enemy. The petrol tank being punctured, the
+machine was compelled to descend.
+
+"The aviators, Lieutenant Sergeev and Sublieutenant Thur, seeing a
+Turkish schooner, attacked it by opening machine-gun fire. The crew
+thereupon left the schooner. Our aviators, having sunk their machine
+after taking from it the compass, machine gun, and valuable
+belongings, boarded the schooner and set sail for our shores.
+
+"They encountered a heavy storm during their adventure, but arrived
+with the schooner at the Duarlidatch Peninsula, west of Perekop, on
+Sunday. From this place our aviators returned to Sebastopol on a
+torpedo boat. The only provisions available on the schooner consisted
+of a few pieces of bread and a little fresh water."
+
+Naturally interest in the activities of American airmen in the French
+service continued unabated. They continued to cover themselves with
+glory. During the second half of May, 1917, members of the Lafayette
+Escadrille engaged in twenty-five combats with German machines.
+Adjutant Raoul Lufbery was engaged five times, Sergeant Willis
+Haviland (Minneapolis) twice, Sergeant Dovell three times, Corporal
+Thomas Hewitt (New York) twice, and Corporal Kenneth Marr (San
+Francisco) twice.
+
+As a result of these activities an official report announced the
+decoration of Adjutant Lufbery with the Military Medal by the King of
+England, and cited the meritorious conduct of this aviator and also of
+Sergeant Haviland, Sergeant Charles Johnson (St. Louis), and
+Lieutenant William Thaw (Pittsburgh).
+
+In June, 1917, the American aviators flying under the French flag
+were even more active. In the short period from June 10 to 16, 1917,
+they made fifty-four patrol flights and fought nine air battles, of
+which Adjutant Raoul Lufbery, Edwin Parsons, and Sergeant Robert
+Soubiran each fought two, and Stephen Bigelow, Sergeant Walter Lowell
+and Thomas Hewitt each fought one.
+
+Unfortunately death claimed two American flyers. On April 16, 1917,
+Pilot Edmond C. C. Genet of Ossining, N. Y., was killed during a fight
+with a German aeroplane over French territory. Genet was twenty years
+old and was the great-great-great-grandson of Governor Clinton and the
+great-great-grandson of Citizen Genet, who was French Minister in the
+days of Washington. He had originally fought in the Foreign Legion,
+but had later been transferred to the aviation service.
+
+In March, 1917, Sergeant J. R. McConnell, also a member of the
+Escadrille, had been killed in action. On May 24, 1917, it was
+announced that the commander of the Escadrille, Captain de Laage of
+the French army, had been killed while flying near Ham on the Somme
+front.
+
+Another death of interest to this country and caused by aerial
+operations was that of H. E. M. Suckley of Rhinebeck, N. Y., who was
+in charge of a unit of the American Ambulance Field Service. He was
+wounded while on duty near Saloniki by an aeroplane bomb and died the
+following day. He was thirty years old and had been with the Ambulance
+Service almost from the beginning of the war, first in the Vosges,
+then at Pont-a-Mousson, and finally with General Sarrail's army.
+
+Regarding the losses suffered by the various aerial forces, authentic
+information available is very scant and incomplete. Up to February 1,
+1917, the Germans claimed to have destroyed 1,002 Allied aeroplanes
+and to have put out of commission a total of 1,700, valued at
+$12,500,000. During April, 1917, according to the London "Times," a
+total of 714 machines was brought down on the western front. These
+were distributed as follows: German machines, 366; British, 147;
+French and Belgian, 201. Of the 366 German aeroplanes brought down 269
+fell to the British, ninety-five to the French, and two to the
+Belgians. British airmen accounted for 263 German aeroplanes and
+antiaircraft gunners for six. On the other hand the Germans admitted
+the loss of only seventy-four machines, but claimed to have brought
+down 362 Allied aeroplanes and twenty-nine captive balloons.
+
+During May, 1917, according to London newspapers, 713 aeroplanes were
+brought down on the western front. Of these 442 were said to have been
+German and 271 French and British.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER CII
+
+AIR RAIDS
+
+
+The second phase of aerial warfare was represented by the raids
+carried out by the various belligerents over enemy territory at a
+considerable distance from the actual theaters of war. In these
+operations the Germans, as in the past, were the most active and
+England was the greatest sufferer. But unlike their previous custom,
+the Germans, during the period from February to August, 1917, used
+aeroplanes more frequently than Zeppelins.
+
+On February 25, 1917, British naval aeroplanes raided iron-works near
+Saarbruecken in Rhenish Prussia, about fifty miles beyond the border.
+
+On March 1, 1917, one German plane bombed Broadstairs, an English
+watering place on the island of Thanet off the Kentish coast.
+
+During the night of March 4-5, 1917, French aeroplanes bombed
+Freiburg-im-Breisgau (Black Forest) and Kehl near Strassburg.
+
+German airships bombed the southeastern counties of England during the
+night of March 16-17, 1917. Margate was attacked by a German seaplane
+at the same time. One of the Zeppelins was brought down later by
+French antiaircraft guns near Compiegne, northeast of Paris, its
+entire crew being killed.
+
+A French aeroplane bombed Frankfort-on-the-Main on March 17, 1917,
+causing only little damage.
+
+On April 5, 1917, a German aeroplane again bombed the Kentish coast
+town without causing any damage.
+
+Freiburg-im-Breisgau was once more the object of an attack by English
+aeroplanes, made, as announced later, in reprisal for the torpedoing
+of British hospital ships. Ten civilians and one soldier were killed,
+and twenty-seven civilians, mostly women and children, wounded. Three
+of the British aeroplanes were shot down. Considerable damage to
+public buildings was caused.
+
+On May 5, 1917, Odessa, the Russian port on the north shore of the
+Black Sea, was visited for the first time by a German aeroplane.
+
+On May 14, 1917, British naval forces detected a Zeppelin in the act
+of approaching the English coast. The alarm was given immediately and
+a squadron of British seaplanes was sent after the invader. The fire
+from the machine gun of one of these soon reached the big airship, and
+before long the latter was seen to burst into flames and disappeared.
+
+During the night of May 23, 1917, four or five Zeppelins appeared over
+East Anglia and penetrated some distance inland. Bombs were dropped in
+a number of country districts. One man was killed, but otherwise the
+damage was negligible.
+
+Two days later, May 25, 1917, early in the evening, seventeen
+aeroplanes appeared over Folkestone on the southeast coast of England.
+They dropped about fifty bombs. As a result seventy-six persons were
+killed and 174 injured, most of them civilians, and a large percentage
+of these women and children. The returning German aeroplanes were
+pursued by machines of the British Naval Air Service from Dunkirk and
+attacked. Three German machines were shot down.
+
+Again on June 5, 1917, sixteen German aeroplanes appeared over Essex
+and the Medway. They succeeded in dropping a large number of bombs
+which caused two casualties and considerable material damage and
+injured twenty-nine persons before antiaircraft guns and British
+planes drove them off. At least four German machines were shot down.
+
+On June 11, 1917, a British patrol boat sighted five German
+aeroplanes off Dover. Attacking them at once, the British craft
+destroyed two of the machines and captured their pilots. The remaining
+three German machines fled.
+
+At noon of June 13, 1917, London was subjected to the most extensive
+and destructive raid in its experience. In the middle of a beautiful
+summer day fifteen German aeroplanes appeared over London and
+dispatched their death-dealing burden of explosives on England's
+capital; 157 men, women, and children were killed, and 432 injured.
+Considerable material damage was caused, although the raid lasted only
+fifteen minutes. All but one of the German planes escaped. The East
+End, London's tenement district, inhabited chiefly by the poor, was
+the principal sufferer.
+
+On the same day British naval forces attacked and brought down a
+Zeppelin in the North Sea. The airship was a total loss and apparently
+the entire crew perished.
+
+On June 16, 1917, two Zeppelins attacked the East Anglian and Kentish
+coast. Considerable damage was done by the bombs dropped. Three deaths
+and injuries to about twenty people resulted. A British aeroplane
+succeeded in bringing down one of the Zeppelins, which, with its crew,
+was destroyed completely.
+
+Three times in July, 1917, German aeroplane squadrons appeared in
+England. On July 4, 1917, about twelve attacked Harwich, a port in
+Essex; two of the planes were shot down, but not until the attackers
+had inflicted considerable damage, killed eleven people and injured
+thirty-six. Three days later, July 7, 1917, twenty aeroplanes bombed
+London, forty-three people were killed and 197 injured, while three of
+the German planes were destroyed. Again on July 22, 1917, fifteen to
+twenty German aeroplanes reached the English coast. Felixstowe and
+Harwich were raided. Eleven persons were killed and twenty-six
+injured. On the way back to their base one of the German planes was
+brought down off the Belgian coast.
+
+During the third year of the war, that is from August, 1916, to
+August, 1917, air attacks on England caused death to 393 people and
+injuries to 1,174, according to figures compiled by the New York
+"Times." The same source claims that from the beginning of the war up
+to August 1, 1917, or during a period of practically three years, 751
+people were killed and 2,007 injured in England as a result of German
+air raids, of which there were officially recorded eighteen in 1915,
+twenty-two in 1916, and eleven in the first seven months of 1917.
+
+A fitting end to this chapter is the record of the deaths at the age
+of seventy-nine of the Zeppelin's inventor, Count Ferdinand von
+Zeppelin, which occurred at Charlottenburg on March 8, 1917, as a
+result of an attack of pneumonia.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Abyssinia, Italian defeat in, I, 192
+
+ Adige River, fighting along, V, 280
+
+ Adige Valley, operations in, VI, 460
+
+ Admiral Sims, commanding American destroyer flotilla, VI, 357
+
+ Aerial combats, number of, V, 426
+
+ Aerial maneuvering, French, IV, 55
+
+ Aerial raids, VI, 492
+
+ Aerodromes, attacks on, IV, 473
+
+ Aerodromes, German, IV, 470
+
+ Aeroplane attack by Germans on Lemnos, VI, 169
+
+ Aeroplane coast battle, IV, 471
+
+ Aeroplanes, losses in, VI, 255
+
+ Aeroplanes, number of, V, 420
+
+ Aeroplanes, western front, VI, 486
+
+ Aeroplanes and submarines, I, 23
+
+ Aeroplane warfare, VI, 168-181
+
+ Aeroplane warfare on submarines, V, 414
+
+ Africa, British possessions in, I, 181
+
+ African coast, operations on, III, 493
+
+ Agadir, I, 140
+
+ Agar Khan, III, 24
+
+ Aircraft, losses in, IV, 479; VI, 51
+
+ Air fighting, strategy and tactics of, IV, 459
+
+ Air fights along the Somme, VI, 50
+
+ Air raids on England, IV, 16
+
+ Air raids on Paris, IV, 19
+
+ Aisne, battle of, II, 130-135
+
+ Aisne, counterattacks on the, VI, 248
+
+ Alaska, garrisons in, I, 11
+
+ Albania, Austrian advance, IV, 336
+
+ Albania, Serbian retreat, IV, 303
+
+ Albania, withdrawal of Serbian forces from, IV, 337
+
+ Albanian uprising, I, 247
+
+ Albanians, racial characteristics, I, 220
+
+ _Alcantara_, merchantman, V, 59
+
+ Alexander II, assassination, I, 152
+
+ Alexander III and France, I, 152
+
+ Alexandretta, III, 503
+
+ Alexiev, General, commander in chief Russian army, VI, 429
+
+ _Algonquin_, sinking of, by German submarine, VI, 317
+
+ Allenstein, capture of, II, 437
+
+ Allied aviators, work of, V, 421
+
+ Allied commands in Champagne, IV, 80
+
+ Allied demands on Greece, V, 224-227
+
+ Allied nations, policy of, I, 105
+
+ Allied offensive, March, 1915, IV, 45
+
+ Allied raid, Houlthulst Forest, IV, 56
+
+ Allies, withdrawal of, into Greece, IV, 308
+
+ Alsace, French in, IV, 40
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine, conditions in, I, 138
+
+ Alsace and Lorraine, campaign in, II, 38-45
+
+ Altkirch, capture of, IV, 40
+
+ American airmen in France, VI, 490
+
+ American army, I, 11
+
+ American aviators, VI, 181, 490
+
+ American citizens, rights of, defended by President Wilson, IV, 503
+
+ American Commission to Russia, VI, 416
+
+ American Congress, resolution on sinking armed merchantmen, IV, 502
+
+ American destroyer flotilla, VI, 357
+
+ American expedition in France, VI, 357
+
+ American Government's assertion of neutral rights at sea, IV, 480
+
+ American merchant marine, VI, 476
+
+ American navy, strength of, I, 11
+
+ American navy, work of, in foreign waters, VI, 357
+
+ American negotiations over _Ancona_ sinking, IV, 490-496
+
+ American note to Austria on _Ancona_ issue, character of, IV, 492
+
+ American war preparations, VI, 328
+
+ American Prussian treaties, VI, 298
+
+ American response to German note on _Sussex_, V, 458
+
+ American second note on _Ancona_ issue, IV, 494
+
+ American training camp in France, VI, 361
+
+ American troops, transportation of, to France, VI, 358
+
+ American vessels sunk, VI, 202
+
+ American warships in European waters, VI, 482
+
+ Anafarta Ridge, attack on, IV, 352
+
+ _Ancona_, destruction of, IV, 490
+
+ _Ancona_, yielding of Austria-Hungary on issue, IV, 494
+
+ Ancre, British gains in, VI, 223
+
+ Anglo-American trade balance, V, 52
+
+ Anglo-Chinese conference, I, 184
+
+ Anglo-French agreement, I, 136
+
+ Anglo-Russian agreement, I, 136
+
+ Anti-Catholic movement in France, I, 163
+
+ Anti-Serbian riots, I, 260
+
+ Antwerp, Belgian withdrawal to, IV, 40
+
+ Antwerp, fall of, II, 167
+
+ Anzacs, heroism of, III, 460, 462
+
+ _Appam_, capture of, IV, 160
+
+ _Arabic_, sinking of, IV, 150, 480-490
+
+ _Arabic_, German version, IV, 483
+
+ Arabs, assistance given British in Mesopotamia, IV, 423
+
+ Arabs, confederation of, IV, 429
+
+ Arbitration, failure of, I, 14
+
+ Archibald papers, V, 11
+
+ Area of British Empire, I, 286
+
+ Area of France, I, 286
+
+ Area of German Empire, I, 286
+
+ Area of Russia, I, 286
+
+ Argechu River, VI, 117
+
+ Argonne, activity in, III, 158
+
+ Argonne, campaign in, II, 193-194
+
+ Argonne Forest, fighting in, IV, 48
+
+ Argonne, German attacks in, in September, 1915, IV, 55
+
+ Argonne, operations in, V, 375
+
+ _Argyll_, loss of, IV, 154
+
+ Armed-merchantman resolution, final form of, in Congress, V, 439
+
+ Armed-merchantmen resolutions, debate in Congress, V, 434-435
+
+ Armed neutrality, address of President Wilson, VI, 304
+
+ Armed-shipping resolution in Congress, V, 436
+
+ Armenian atrocities, III, 472
+
+ Armenians, massacre of, IV, 378
+
+ Army, American, strength of, I, 11
+
+ Arras, Canadian victories at, VI, 56
+
+ Arras, fourth blow by Haig, VI, 256
+
+ Arras, operations around, IV, 127
+
+ Arras, operations around, VI, 39
+
+ Arras, second phase of, VI, 249
+
+ Artillery, II, 366
+
+ Artillery activity on the western front in September, 1915, IV, 55
+
+ Artois, British successes in, IV, 85
+
+ Artois, fighting in, III, 121-128
+
+ Artois, French campaign in, IV, 85
+
+ Artois sector, V, 373
+
+ Asia Minor, Germany in, I, 50
+
+ Asiago, Austrian advance, V, 256
+
+ Asiatic Turkey, disorders in, IV, 377
+
+ Asphyxiation from gas, I, 53
+
+ Assassination of crown prince, Austrian report on, I, 350
+
+ Athens, street fighting in, VI, 147
+
+ Atkutur, battle at, III, 474
+
+ Aubers Ridge, attacks on, III, 128
+
+ Augustovo, Battle of, II, 444
+
+ Ausgleich, I, 146
+
+ Australians at Suvla Bay, IV, 356
+
+ Australian troops at Pozieres, V, 409
+
+ Austria and Prussia, I, 127
+
+ Austria-Hungary, American relations with, VI, 328
+
+ Austria-Hungary, area of, I, 286
+
+ Austria-Hungary, explanation of sinking of _Ancona_, IV, 465
+
+ Austria-Hungary, position of, I, 142
+
+ Austria-Hungary, request for recall of Dr. Dumba, V, 10
+
+ Austrian air attacks on Italian cities, V. 291
+
+ Austrian army, I, 309
+
+ Austrian armies in Poland and Galicia, command of, IV, 181
+
+ Austrian army in Serbia, IV, 259
+
+ Austrian and Balkan nationality, I, 258-259
+
+ Austrian captures of Durazzo, IV, 338
+
+ Austrian note, July 27, 1914, I, 270
+
+ Austrian counterattack, repulsed by Italians, V, 269
+
+ Austrian defenses in Alps, IV, 394
+
+ Austrian demands on Serbia, I, 261-265
+
+ Austrian fleet in the Danube, VI, 97
+
+ Austrian forces along the Italian front, increase of, V, 245
+
+ Austrian-Italian aviators, V, 428
+
+ Austrian-Italian front, V, 229
+
+ Austrian losses at Lutsk, V, 159
+
+ Austrian losses in Serbia, II, 343
+
+ Austrian naval strength, II, 206
+
+ Austrian note to Serbia, I, 261
+
+ Austrian offensive in Trentino, V, 246
+
+ Austrian offensive in Trentino, increase of, V, 235
+
+ Austrian offensive in Volhynia, V, 138
+
+ Austrian press, accusations, I, 353
+
+ Austrian proposals to Rumania, III, 377
+
+ Austrian raids on Italian coast, III, 394
+
+ Austrian rupture with the United States, VI, 328
+
+ Austrian squadron shells Italian coast cities, IV, 168
+
+ Austro-German capture of Bucharest, VI, 119
+
+ Austro-Hungarians defeated near Kuty, V, 190
+
+ Austro-German invasion of Serbia, IV, 263
+
+ Austro-German resistance to the Russians, VI, 73
+
+ Austro-Hungarian press, I, 351
+
+ Austro-Hungarian reply to _Ancona_ note, IV, 492
+
+ Austro-Italian line, V, 233, 234
+
+ Austro-Russian front, III, 236
+
+ Austro-Russian operations, resumption of, V, 133-141
+
+ Aviators, loss among, V, 425-426
+
+ Avlona, battle between Austrians and Italians near, V, 220
+
+ Avlona, Italians at, IV, 327
+
+ Avocourt Wood, German occupation of, V, 351
+
+ Aylmer, General, IV, 446
+
+ Azerbayan, failures in, III, 477
+
+
+ Babuna Pass, resistance of Serbians, IV, 283
+
+ Bagdad, British at, IV, 419-425
+
+ Bagdad, expedition against, I, 62
+
+ Bagdad, Russian advance, V, 330
+
+ Baiburt, capture of, by Russians, V, 337
+
+ Balfour, Arthur J., reply to Churchill, V, 61
+
+ Balkan League, I, 248
+
+ Balkans, conditions in, 1916, V, 212
+
+ Balkans, countries, II, 275-286
+
+ Balkans, diplomacy in, I, 59
+
+ Balkans, summary of first year's conditions, IV, 255
+
+ Baltic Sea, operations in, III, 191
+
+ Ban-de-Sapt, attacks on, III, 164
+
+ Bapaume, capture of, VI, 232
+
+ Basra, capture of, II, 508
+
+ Battle cruisers, British, lost in Jutland naval battle, V, 90-91
+
+ Battle cruisers, importance of, I, 21
+
+ Battle line on eastern front, II, 262
+
+ Battle line on the eastern front in the spring of 1916, V, 116
+
+ Battleships and fortifications, I, 24
+
+ Battleships, advantages of, I, 21
+
+ Battleships at Jutland battle, V, 80
+
+ Bavarians, bravery of, at Eaucourt, VI, 30
+
+ Beatty, Admiral, movements at Jutland naval battle, V, 75-78
+
+ Beaucourt, attacks on, VI, 218
+
+ Beaumont, abandonment of, by French, IV, 142
+
+ Belgian coast, bombardment of, by British fleet, IV, 60, 112
+
+ Belgian neutrality, I, 276
+
+ Belgian neutrality, unity of powers, I, 476
+
+ Belgian territory, alleged violation of, I, 283
+
+ Belgian envoys, visit of, to United States, VI, 352
+
+ Belgian withdrawal, IV, 40
+
+ Belgium, American lessons from, I, 12
+
+ Belgium appealed to powers guaranteeing neutrality, I, 384
+
+ Belgium, area of, I, 287
+
+ Belgium, location of, I, 197
+
+ Belgium, attacks in, July, VI, 279
+
+ Belgium, German attacks on the French lines in, VI, 250
+
+ Belgium, operations in, VI, 61
+
+ Belgium, German proposals to, I, 281
+
+ Belgrade, bombardment of, IV, 265
+
+ Belgrade, capture of, II, 347, 353
+
+ Belgrade, riot following assassination of crown prince, I, 346
+
+ Benckendorff, A., I, 320
+
+ Berchtold, L., I, 324
+
+ Berlin, Treaty of, I, 228
+
+ Bernhardi, I, 83
+
+ Bertie, Sir Francis, I, 317
+
+ Bethlehem, efforts to start munition strikes in, V, 9
+
+ Bethmann-Hollweg, I, 323
+
+ Bethmann-Hollweg, circular letter to powers, I, 368
+
+ Bethmann-Hollweg's statement in Reichstag, I, 498
+
+ Beyers, General, III, 70
+
+ Bieberstein, Marshal von, II, 496
+
+ Bight, Battle of, II, 208
+
+ Bismarck Archipelago, II, 243
+
+ Bismarck, growth of power of, I, 127
+
+ Bismarck, retirement of, I, 134
+
+ Bitlis, massacre at, IV, 378
+
+ Bitlis, occupation of, by Russians, V, 293
+
+ Blockade against Germany, III, 181
+
+ _Bluecher_, sinking of, II, 255
+
+ Bolimow, fighting around, II, 470
+
+ Bombs in trenches, I, 74
+
+ Bosnia, annexation of, I, 147
+
+ Bosnia, fighting in, II, 360
+
+ Botha, General, III, 74
+
+ Boy-Ed, Karl, activities, V, 14
+
+ Brabant, abandonment of, by French, IV, 140
+
+ Bregalnitza, battle of, I, 257
+
+ _Bremen_, exploits of, VI, 190
+
+ Brenta River, fighting along, V, 278
+
+ Brescia, bombardment of, IV, 468
+
+ Breslau, II, 494
+
+ Brest-Litovsk, II, 447
+
+ Brest-Litovsk, capture of, IV, 196
+
+ Briand, resignation of, I, 170
+
+ British in Macedonia, VI, 135
+
+ British advance on Arras, VI, 251
+
+ British aerodromes, IV, 473
+
+ British air raids, IV, 18
+
+ British, mobilization of, I, 304
+
+ British attack around Lens, IV, 82
+
+ British attacks on the Stuff Redoubt, VI, 49
+
+ British attacks on Zeebrugge, VI, 482
+
+ British cabinet declaration, I, 473
+
+ British declaration of war against Germany, I, 283
+
+ British East Africa, I, 180
+
+ British Empire, area of, I, 286
+
+ British expeditionary force, II, 34
+
+ British expeditionary force landing in France, IV, 40
+
+ British fleet shells Zeebrugge, V, 67
+
+ British forces, disposition of, V, 380
+
+ British and French offensive, VI, 27
+
+ British and French successes, VI, 17
+
+ British gains on the Somme, VI, 14
+
+ British guns at Gallipoli, IV, 359
+
+ British losses at Jutland naval battle, V, 94-98
+
+ British losses to 1916, IV, 117
+
+ British navy, effect on war, I, 18
+
+ British offensive in Artois, IV, 82
+
+ British operations south of the Ancre, VI, 39
+
+ British policy of isolation, I, 42
+
+ British position, August 1, 1915, IV, 46
+
+ British position in Persia, IV, 419
+
+ British prize court, proceedings, effect of, in United States, V, 32
+
+ British raids on the German trenches, VI, 32, 39, 57
+
+ British reverses in Belgium, VI, 281
+
+ British seizure of ships of American registry, V, 49
+
+ British shipping, loss to, IV, 170
+
+ British squadron bombards Belgian coast in November, 1915, IV, 112
+
+ British statement in regard to Greece, IV, 312-313
+
+ British successes in Artois, IV, 85
+
+ British successes near Ypres, VI, 264
+
+ British at Jutland battle, V, 98-104
+
+ British troops on the Ancre, successes of, VI. 224
+
+ British troops, suffering of, at Kut-el-Amara, V, 320
+
+ British use of tanks, VI, 21
+
+ Brody, battle near, IV, 204
+
+ Bruges, occupation of, II, 168
+
+ Brussels, surrender of, II, 31
+
+ Brussilov, in Galicia, V, 167
+
+ Bryan, William Jennings, connection with peace propaganda, VI, 295
+
+ Buchanan, Sir George, interview with Sazonof, I, 376
+
+ Bucharest, capture of, VI, 119
+
+ Buczacz, capture of, by Russians, V, 160
+
+ Bukoba, capture of, III, 494
+
+ Bukowina, operations in, IV, 227
+
+ Bukowina, Russian occupation, III, 238
+
+ Bukowina, Russian reconquest of, V, 162-172
+
+ Bulgar attacks on Rumania, VI, 98-102
+
+ Bulgaria, after second Balkan war, I, 257
+
+ Bulgaria, conditions for neutrality, IV, 257
+
+ Bulgaria, position of, III, 370
+
+ Bulgarian army, IV, 270
+
+ Bulgarian bombardment of Galatz, VI, 121
+
+ Bulgarian declaration of war on Serbia, IV, 269
+
+ Bulgarian demands, III, 378
+
+ Bulgarian movements in Serbia, IV, 305
+
+ Bulgarian pursuit of Serbians, IV, 209
+
+ Bulgarians cross Greek frontier, V, 221
+
+ Bulgarians, defeat of, in November, 1916, VI, 138
+
+ Bullecourt, occupation of, VI, 261
+
+ Burian, Baron, letter of Ambassador Dumba proposing munition
+ strikes in United States, V, 9
+
+ Bzura, battle along, II, 492
+
+
+ Cadorna, General, III, 404
+
+ Caillette Wood, German repulse at, V, 354
+
+ Calais, air raids on, IV, 24
+
+ Calais, bombardment of, by destroyer flotilla, VI, 482
+
+ _California_, destruction of, VI, 292
+
+ Cambon, J., I, 328-330
+
+ Cameroons campaign, III, 62, 481
+
+ Campbell-Bannerman, Sir, I, 185
+
+ Canadians at Arras, VI, 56
+
+ Canadians' capture of Vimy, VI, 241
+
+ Canadians, raids by, VI, 222
+
+ Candler, Edmund, description of operations in Mesopotamia, IV, 448
+
+ _Canopus_, sinking of, II, 223
+
+ Carency, surrender of, III, 125
+
+ Carinthian front, bombardment by Italian artillery, V, 230
+
+ Carlos I, murder of, I, 204
+
+ Carnic Alps, conditions in, V, 289
+
+ Carpathian fighting, VI, 91, 442
+
+ Carpathian Mountain passes, advance of Russians toward. V, 207
+
+ Carpathian Mountains, II, 275
+
+ Carpathians, campaign in, III, 235-241
+
+ Carso Plateau, attack on, by Italian artillery, VI, 155, 464
+
+ Castelnau, General de, II, 43
+
+ Catholics, movement against, in France, I, 163
+
+ Cattaro, bombardment of, II, 359
+
+ Caucasus, campaign in, IV, 380
+
+ Caucasus, operations in, III, 9
+
+ Caucasus, reasons for Russian offensive against, IV, 382
+
+ Caucasus, the, II, 286
+
+ Cavell, Edith, case of, IV, 98-101
+
+ Central powers, area of, I, 286
+
+ Central powers, homogeneity of, I, 291
+
+ Central powers, military plans of, I, 33
+
+ Central powers, position of, on the eastern front, V, 117-121
+
+ Champagne campaign, IV, 62
+
+ Champagne, French in, VI, 249
+
+ Champagne, German attacks in, March, 1917, VI, 230
+
+ Champagne offensive, IV, 61
+
+ Charleroi, battle of, II, 54-59; IV, 40
+
+ Charles Francis Joseph, Archduke, V, 249
+
+ Chemistry in war, I, 11
+
+ Chicago meat packers' cases, V, 47
+
+ Chino-Russian treaty, I, 154
+
+ Church and State, separation of, I, 168
+
+ Churchill, Winston Spencer, V, 61
+
+ "Circular Note" to powers, I, 270
+
+ Citizen soldiery, training of, I, 12
+
+ _City of Memphis_, sinking of, VI, 317
+
+ Climate in Mesopotamia as a factor in war, IV, 421
+
+ Col di Lana, attack on, V, 231
+
+ Collo, Italian successes in, IV, 413
+
+ Colonial beginnings of Germany, I, 133
+
+ Colonial possessions of Great Britain, I, 174
+
+ Combes, I, 167
+
+ Combles, British attack on, VI, 26
+
+ Combles, repulse of German attack on, VI, 18, 25
+
+ Concentration camps, VI, 350
+
+ Confederation of North German States, I, 128
+
+ Congress, American, McLemore resolution in, IV, 505
+
+ Congress, opposition of, to President Wilson's policies, VI, 306
+
+ Congress, war discussion in, V, 433-438
+
+ Constantine of Greece, IV, 341
+
+ Constantinople, operations in, IV, 475
+
+ Constanza, attacks on, VI, 110
+
+ Contalmaison, capture of, V, 397
+
+ Cossacks, II, 383
+
+ Cossacks, repulse of Turkish troops by, V, 303
+
+ Cotes de Meuse, attack at, V, 348
+
+ Council of Workingmen and Soldiers, VI, 405-410
+
+ Courcelette, capture of, by the British, VI, 23
+
+ Courland coast, bombardment of, by Russian torpedo boats, V, 194
+
+ Courland, invasion of, III, 337
+
+ Courland, operations in, IV, 185
+
+ Cracow, attack on, II, 414-416
+
+ Craiova, capture of, VI, 114
+
+ Craonne, capture of, VI, 256
+
+ Craonne, German attacks on, VI, 252
+
+ Craonne sector, operations around, July, 1917, VI, 282
+
+ Ctesiphon, battle of, IV, 437-443
+
+ Cumieres, German attempts to retake, V, 347
+
+ Curtain of fire, I, 74
+
+ Cyril, Grand Duke, II, 486
+
+ Czar of Russia, escape from aeroplane bomb, V, 429
+
+ Czarina, influence of, VI, 373
+
+ Czernowitz, capture of, V, 169
+
+ Czernowitz, retreat at, II, 413
+
+
+ Dankl, retreat of, II, 392
+
+ Danube, Rumanian raid across the, VI, 102-111
+
+ Dardanelles, aeroplanes at, I, 23
+
+ Dardanelles campaign, abandonment of, reasons for, IV, 363
+
+ Dardanelles, naval attacks, III, 174-179
+
+ Dates, important, I, 325-329
+
+ Death's Head Hussars, II, 154
+
+ Delarey, General, III, 73
+
+ Delcasse, Theophile, I, 319
+
+ Deniecourt, capture of, VI, 26
+
+ Denman, William, controversy with General Goethals, VI, 343
+
+ Destroyers, achievements of, I, 17
+
+ _Deutschland_, V, 111-112
+
+ De Wet, General, III, 70
+
+ Diarbekr, struggle for, V, 299-306
+
+ Diplomacy in the Balkans, I, 59
+
+ Diplomatic exchanges, first, I, 322
+
+ Diplomatic papers, I, 313
+
+ Disraeli, I, 179
+
+ Dixmude, III, 166
+
+ Dixmude, British and French attacks at, VI, 287
+
+ Dixmude, German attack on, IV, 87
+
+ Djemel Pasha, II, 500
+
+ Doberdo, operations along, V, 232
+
+ Dobrudja, operations in, VI, 101
+
+ Dobrudja, situation in, October, 1916, VI, 109, 112
+
+ Dolomite district, Italian successes in, IV, 397
+
+ Dolomite passes, fighting in, III, 393
+
+ Dolomites, operations in, V, 243
+
+ Douai, aeroplane attack on, IV, 474
+
+ Douaumont, French attempts to retake, V, 363
+
+ Douaumont, French recapture of, VI, 34
+
+ Douaumont, German attack at, V, 344
+
+ _Dresden_, German raider, III, 182
+
+ Dreyfus affair, I, 165
+
+ Dubno, fortress, capture of, V, 161
+
+ Dubno, fortress, strength of, IV, 210-211
+
+ Dukla Pass, fighting at, III, 261
+
+ Duma, defiance of czar by, VI, 389
+
+ Duma, disturbance in, VI, 394
+
+ Duma, inability of, to meet crisis, VI, 392
+
+ Duma, meeting of, in 1916, VI, 383
+
+ Dumba, Dr., explanation of efforts to V, 9
+
+ Dumba, Dr., recall of, by Austro-Hungarian government, V, 11
+
+ Dunajec, battle of, III, 267, 273
+
+ Dunkirk, bombardment of, by German destroyers, VI, 482
+
+ Durazzo, Austrian capture of, IV, 328
+
+ Durazzo, evacuation of, IV, 414
+
+ Dvina, crossing, by Russians, VI, 89
+
+ Dvina, Russian attempt to cross, VI, 80
+
+ Dvinsk, fighting around, IV, 213
+
+ Dvinsk, fortress, strength of, IV, 214
+
+ Dvinsk, Russian bombardment around, V, 143
+
+
+ _E-13_, British submarine, IV, 153
+
+ Eastern battle front, conditions in spring of 1916, V, 116
+
+ Eastern front, winter on the, IV, 250-254
+
+ Eastern front, winter on the, VI, 93, 121-124
+
+ East Prussia, devastation in, winter battles in, III, 313, 317
+
+ Eaucourt l'Abbaye, British capture of, VI, 28
+
+ Edea, capture of, III, 67
+
+ Edward VII, I, 182
+
+ Effectiveness, naval, I, 19
+
+ Egypt, attack on, III, 15
+
+ Egypt, Turkish attack on, III, 507
+
+ El Kantara, fighting at, IV, 10
+
+ _Emden_, career of, II, 226
+
+ _Emden_, story of, III, 193-205
+
+ Emmich, General von, II, 18
+
+ England, air raids on, IV, 21
+
+ England, east coast, attacked by German Zeppelins, II, 460
+
+ Enver Pasha, II, 499
+
+ Epine de Vedegrange sector, movements in, IV, 68-70
+
+ Erzerum, beginning of Russian advance toward, IV, 383
+
+ Erzerum, evacuation of, IV, 389
+
+ Erzerum, operations around, III, 9
+
+ Erzerum, Turkish losses at, IV, 391
+
+ Erzerum, Turkish plan for defense of, IV, 387
+
+ Erzingan, capture of, by Russians, V, 339
+
+ Erzingan, Russian advance, V, 294
+
+ Espionage Bill, divisions of, VI, 338
+
+ Explosions at Messines, VI, 267
+
+ Explosives, quantity of, I, 68
+
+ Exports, embargo on, VI, 341
+
+ Eydtkuhnen, attack on, III, 317
+
+
+ Falkenhayn, stroke of, VI, 113
+
+ Falklands, battle off, II, 230
+
+ Fallieres, M., I, 168
+
+ Far eastern problem in 1910, I, 140
+
+ Farman speed plane, V, 421
+
+ Fashoda, I, 166
+
+ Faure, Felix, death of, I, 166
+
+ Fay, Robert, activities of, V, 15
+
+ Federal control for militia, I, 13
+
+ Ferdinand, King, decision to join central powers, IV, 257
+
+ Festubert, battle of, III, 128-134
+
+ Fighting on western front, August, 1915, character of, IV, 47
+
+ Finland, disturbances in, I, 156
+
+ Fire, curtain of, I, 74
+
+ Fire of machine guns, I, 67
+
+ First Ontario regiment, III, 143
+
+ First year's operations on eastern front, summary of, IV, 174-178
+
+ First year's operations on the western front, summary of, IV, 39-46
+
+ Fisher, Sir John, V, 61
+
+ Flags, neutral use of, III, 173
+
+ Flame jets, German use of, on the Somme, VI, 20
+
+ Flame projectors, German use of, IV, 58
+
+ Flanders, extensive operations in, VI, 286
+
+ Flanders sector, operations in, V, 376
+
+ Flers, capture of, by British, VI, 23
+
+ Fleury, German repulse at, V, 368
+
+ Floods on the eastern front, effect of, V, 141
+
+ Foch, General, II, 122
+
+ Ford peace expedition, V, 53
+
+ Ford permanent peace board, V, 55
+
+ Foreign policy of Russia, I, 151
+
+ Foreign trade of Germany, I, 49
+
+ Forges, German occupation of, V, 345
+
+ Fortifications, land, and battleships, I, 24
+
+ France, declaration of war, I, 281
+
+ Francis Ferdinand, assassination of, I, 260
+
+ Franco-Bulgarian operations, IV, 317-318
+
+ Franco-Prussian War, I, 128-129
+
+ Franco-Russian friendship, I, 154
+
+ Franz Ferdinand, diplomatic exchanges in regard to
+ assassination, I, 341
+
+ Frederick III, accession of, I, 134
+
+ French, Sir John, II, 34
+
+ French, Sir John, relieved of command, IV, 115
+
+ French advance in the Champagne VI, 231
+
+ French aerial maneuvering, IV, 55
+
+ French and British envoys, visit of, VI, 351
+
+ French armies, mobilization of, I, 297-303
+
+ French attack on Douaumont, account of, V, 342-344
+
+ French attacks in the Vosges in July and August, 1915, IV, 51
+
+ French attack on Souchez, IV, 84
+
+ French aviators, activity in December, 1915, and January, 1916, IV, 475
+
+ French aviators bombard Saarbruecken, IV, 48
+
+ French battle plane, V, 429
+
+ French campaign in Artois, IV, 46
+
+ French colonial expansion, I, 164
+
+ French fleet at Kronstadt, I, 154
+
+ French General Staff, V, 355
+
+ French in Alsace, IV, 40
+
+ French indemnity to Germany, I, 130
+
+ French in North Africa, I, 136
+
+ French influence on Dardanelles campaign, IV, 365
+
+ French occupation of Tunis, I, 163
+
+ French offensive, VI, 13
+
+ French progress in 1917, VI, 248
+
+ French strength in 1917, VI, 290
+
+ French troops in Serbia, IV, 279
+
+ Fresnoy, German success at, VI, 259
+
+ Fricourt, British attack upon, V, 393
+
+
+ Galatz, bombardment of, VI, 121
+
+ Galicia, operations in, IV, 185
+
+ Gallipoli, concentration of Turkish troops at, IV, 357
+
+ Gallipoli, conditions in, August, 1915, IV, 345
+
+ Gallipoli, landing on, III, 429-469
+
+ Gallipoli, Peninsula of, II, 285
+
+ Gallipoli, withdrawal from, IV, 366
+
+ Garua, capture of, III, 483
+
+ Gas, use and effects of, I, 53
+
+ Gas attack at Hooge, III, 148
+
+ Gastein Alliance, I, 132
+
+ George V, accident to, IV, 102-103
+
+ Gerard, Ambassador, request for passport from German
+ Government, VI, 297
+
+ German achievement in two years of war;
+ statement by Mumm von Schwarzenstein, V, 508-509
+
+ German aeroplanes, VI, 488
+
+ German airdrome, VI, 170
+
+ German and Austrian merchandise prohibited in Italy, IV, 410
+
+ German answer to American note on _Sussex_, V, 447
+
+ German armies in Poland, IV, 181
+
+ German armies, I, 292
+
+ German army in Belgium, II, 10
+
+ German artillery, II, 264
+
+ German attacks at Verdun, VI, 58
+
+ German attacks in Rumania, cessation of, VI, 120
+
+ German attacks near Dvinsk, V, 184
+
+ German capture of Craiova, VI, 114
+
+ German casualties in the Somme offensive, VI, 9
+
+ German claims of losses by submarines, VI, 478
+
+ Germans on the Aisne, VI, 248
+
+ German counterattacks on the Somme, VI, 16
+
+ Germans before Kovel, V, 178-183
+
+ German declaration of intentions toward Belgium, I, 487
+
+ German declaration of war, I, 278
+
+ German defenses of Messines Ridge, VI, 265
+
+ German edict against armed merchantmen, V, 50
+
+ German Empire, creation of, I, 130
+
+ German forces, disposition of, in the Somme sector, V, 378
+
+ German forces in Serbia, IV, 259
+
+ German foreign policy, I, 136
+
+ German foreign trade, I, 49
+
+ German intrigues in Mexico, VI, 312
+
+ German invasion of Luxemburg, I, 33
+
+ German losses, IV, 79-80
+
+ German losses at Jutland, V, 94-98
+
+ German losses in Russo-German campaign, II, 482
+
+ German merchant ships, V, 60
+
+ German naval policy, I, 46
+
+ German Navy League, I, 141
+
+ German offensive, IV, 79
+
+ German plots, in United States, in autumn and winter of 1915, V, 12
+
+ German position in 1915, IV, 46
+
+ German prisoners, VI, 217
+
+ German proposals to Belgium, I, 280
+
+ German raiders, damage by, III, 183
+
+ German raids on England, VI, 482
+
+ German rupture with the United States, VI, 205-216
+
+ German Samoa, II, 242
+
+ German Southwest Africa, III, 68
+
+ German steamers, requisition by Italian government, IV, 412
+
+ German submarines, VI, 202
+
+ German submarine campaign, IV, 166
+
+ German submarine decree on the United States, VI, 291
+
+ German submarine war zone, VI, 205
+
+ German tactics at Jutland, V, 104
+
+ German trenches, raids on, VI, 32
+
+ German version of the sinking of the _Arabic_, IV, 484
+
+ German vessels interned, VI, 329
+
+ Germany yielding to America, V, 451
+
+ Germany in Asia Minor, I, 50
+
+ Germany, Japanese declaration of war against, I, 284
+
+ Germany's declaration of war on Russia, I, 282
+
+ Ghent, air raids on, IV, 34
+
+ Ginchy, German operations, VI, 16
+
+ Givenchy, operations around, III, 187
+
+ Gladstone, I, 179
+
+ _Goeben_, German cruiser, II, 494
+
+ Gore, Senator, V, 436
+
+ Goritz bridgehead, V, 231
+
+ Goritz, capture of, VI, 149
+
+ Goritz, operations around, VI, 466
+
+ Gorizia, attacks on, III, 408
+
+ Gorringe, General, V, 314
+
+ Goschen, Sir Edward, I, 431
+
+ Gough, Sir Hubert, VI, 59
+
+ Gouraud, General, succeeded by General Sarrail, IV, 52
+
+ Government in Russia, VI, 395
+
+ Grand Duke Sergius, murder of, I, 157
+
+ Great Britain in Persia, I, 185
+
+ Greece, attitude of, IV, 280
+
+ Greek forces, V, 223
+
+ Greek frontier, V, 214
+
+ Greek government, attacked by Venizelos, IV, 311
+
+ Greek fleet, seizure of, VI, 137
+
+ Greek Macedonia, revolt in, VI, 128
+
+ Greek provisional government declares war on Germany, VI, 144
+
+ Greek troops surrender of, VI, 129
+
+ Grevillers, capture of, by British, VI, 230
+
+ Grey, Sir Edward, I, 281, 316
+
+ Grey, Sir Edward, note to American government, V, 30
+
+ Grodno, fall of, IV, 187
+
+ Guillemont, British attack on, VI, 12
+
+
+ Haig, Sir Douglas, promoted to commander in chief, VI, 59
+
+ Haig, Sir Douglas, succeeds Sir John French, IV, 116
+
+ Haldane, R. B., I, 315
+
+ Halicz, battle of, III, 249
+
+ Halicz, capture of, by Russians, VI, 437
+
+ Hamilton, Sir Ian, plans of, III, 437
+
+ Hamilton, Sir Ian, report of Gallipoli operations, IV, 362
+
+ _Hampshire_, cruiser, loss of, V, 108
+
+ Harrington, German raids on, IV, 149
+
+ Hartmannsweilerkopf, III, 115
+
+ Hartmannsweilerkopf, IV, 123
+
+ Haucourt-Malancourt, V, 351
+
+ Haumont, capture of, IV, 137
+
+ Herbecourt, capture of, V, 390
+
+ Hermannstadt, attack on, VI, 105
+
+ Herzegovina, annexation of, I, 147
+
+ Hill 304, battle of, V, 361-371
+
+ Hill 185, capture of, VI, 229
+
+ Hill 304, German attacks on, VI, 61
+
+ Hindenburg, General von, II, 439
+
+ Hindenburg, Von, offensive, V, 164
+
+ Hohenzollern, redoubt, V, 373
+
+ "Holy War," III, 21
+
+ Home Rule Bill in Ireland, I, 43
+
+ Hooge, operations at, III, 146-151
+
+ Hoover, Herbert C, named food administrator, VI, 335
+
+ Hostages at Gallipoli, French and British, IV, 359
+
+ _Housatonic_, sunk, VI, 292
+
+ House of Commons, Sir E. Grey's statement, I, 490
+
+ Hulluch, operations around, IV, 92
+
+ Humin, battle of, II, 470
+
+ Hungarian frontier, VI, 103
+
+
+ _Illinois_, sunk by submarine, VI, 317
+
+ Illuxt, Russian offensive near, V, 186
+
+ India, Russian invasion of, I, 62
+
+ Internal policy of Bismarck, I, 133
+
+ Ireland, situation in, I, 43
+
+ Irles, capture of by British, VI, 229
+
+ Isolation, British, I, 42
+
+ Isonzo, battles of, VI, 470
+
+ Isonzo front, Italian activity, V, 267
+
+ Isonzo frontier, battle on, IV, 394
+
+ Isonzo front, operation on, VI, 149
+
+ Ispaha, capture of, V, 334
+
+ Isvolsky, A. P., I, 320
+
+ Italian aeroplane service, IV, 469
+
+ Italian Alpine troops, V, 268
+
+ Italian army, strength of, III, 388
+
+ Italian cities shelled, IV, 168
+
+ Italian front, VI, 452
+
+ Italian landing at Avlona, IV, 327
+
+ Italian losses, offensive, V, 257
+
+ Italian navy, operations of, IV, 168
+
+ Italian objective in Istria, IV, 417
+
+ Italian offensive, VI, 468-473
+
+ Italian retreat in Trentino, V, 253
+
+ Italian strategy, III, 382
+
+ Italian Third Army, IV, 393
+
+ Italian war loans, IV, 411
+
+ Italo-Turkish War, I, 195
+
+ Italy, neutrality of, I, 281
+
+ Ivangorod, capture of, III, 365
+
+ Ivangorod, fighting around, II, 458
+
+
+ Jablonica, Russian advance against, V, 206
+
+ Jablonitza, evacuation of, by Russians, VI, 75
+
+ Jacobstadt, Russian attack on, V, 126
+
+ Jagow, von G., I, 323
+
+ Japan and Russia, friendly relations between, V, 61
+
+ Japanese declaration of war against Germany, I, 283
+
+ Jaroslov, recapture of, II, 411
+
+ Jellicoe, Admiral, V, 78-94
+
+ Jellicoe, Admiral, report by, V, 90
+
+ Jewish persecutions in Russia, I, 153
+
+ Joffre, General, II, 38
+
+ Joffre, General, IV, 41, 61, 115
+
+ Joffre, General, order before Champagne offensive, IV, 61
+
+ Joffre, plan of retreat, IV, 41
+
+ Judenich, General, IV, 385
+
+ Julian front, battles along, VI, 462
+
+ Jusserand, J. J., statement in regard to second anniversary
+ of the war, V, 504
+
+ Jutland Bank, battle of, V, 70-108
+
+ Jutland, engagement off, IV, 150
+
+
+ Kaiser and King of Belgium, I, 341
+
+ Kaiser Wilhelm Canal, I, 135
+
+ Kalkfield, capture of, III, 489
+
+ Kalusz, capture of, VI, 439
+
+ Kantara, aeroplane raid on, V, 431
+
+ Kara-Urgau, battle of, III, 12
+
+ Kars, attacks on, III, 471
+
+ Kasr-i-Shirin, capture of, V, 334
+
+ Katshanik Pass, IV, 293
+
+ Kerensky, Alexander, assumption of supreme command in Russia, VI, 412
+
+ Kermanshah, capture of, V, 332
+
+ _Kheyr-ed Din Barbarossa_, IV, 148
+
+ Kiao-chau, I, 285
+
+ _King Edward VII_, loss of, IV, 164
+
+ King Humbert, I, 192
+
+ King of Montenegro, IV, 330
+
+ Kitchener, Earl, II, 34
+
+ Kitchener, Earl, death of, V, 108
+
+ Kluck, Von, retreat of, II, 12
+
+ Knight, Rear Admiral, I, 17
+
+ Kolomea, capture of, V, 192
+
+ Koenigsberg, fighting around, II, 479
+
+ Kossovo plain, IV, 297-298
+
+ Kovel, resistance near, V, 167
+
+ Kovel, Russian attacks on, VI, 86
+
+ Kovno, capture of, IV, 183
+
+ Koziowa, attacks on, III, 246
+
+ Kragujevatz, capture of, IV, 280
+
+ Krasnik, battle of, III, 348
+
+ Krithia, attacks on, III, 454
+
+ _Kronprinz Wilhelm_, cruiser, II, 226
+
+ _Kronprinz Wilhelm_, raider, III, 187
+
+ Kronstadt, French fleet at, I, 154
+
+ Kronstadt, mutiny, VI, 414
+
+ Kuropatkin, General, V, 120
+
+ Kut-el-Amara, V, 307
+
+ Kut-el-Amara, British stand at, IV, 444
+
+ Kut-el-Amara, surrender of, III, 502
+
+ Kuty, capture of, V, 185
+
+
+ La Bassee, attacks on, II, 178-192
+
+ La Boisselle, attack upon, V, 385
+
+ Labor Peace Council, organization of, V, 24
+
+ Labyrinth, attacks on, III, 122-123
+
+ Labyrinth, IV, 108
+
+ _Laconia_, destruction of, VI, 293
+
+ Lafayette Escadrille, VI, 490
+
+ Lake Nyassa, battle on, II, 243
+
+ Lansing, Secretary, VI, 294
+
+ _La Provence_, sinking of, IV, 172
+
+ Ledro Valley, operations in, V, 237
+
+ Leman, General, II, 15
+
+ Lemberg, capture of, II, 387
+
+ Lemberg, drive against, VI, 70-76
+
+ Lemberg, V, 163
+
+ Lenine, influence of, in Russia, VI, 408
+
+ Le Mesnil, German attacks, IV, 107
+
+ Lens, attack around, IV, 82
+
+ Lens, conditions in, VI, 245
+
+ Les Eparges, fighting at, III, 118
+
+ Liberty Bond Loan, VI, 344
+
+ Lichnowsky, K. M., I, 323
+
+ Liege, capture of, II, 22
+
+ Liege forts, fall of, IV, 39
+
+ Linievka, capture of, V, 190
+
+ Lipa River, crossing of, V, 207
+
+ Lloyd-George, David, I, 185
+
+ Lombaertzyde, III, 156
+
+ London, air attacks on, VI, 174
+
+ London, Zeppelin raids, IV, 29, 463
+
+ Longueval, British recapture of, V, 408
+
+ Loos, capture of, IV, 83
+
+ Lorraine front, IV, 57-58
+
+ Lorraine, German successes in, VI, 219
+
+ Loubet, President, I, 166
+
+ Louvain, capture of, II, 28
+
+ Lowestoft, air raid on, IV, 22
+
+ Lowitz, fighting around, II, 465-467
+
+ Lukoff, capture of, IV, 194
+
+ Luneville, bombardment of, IV, 54
+
+ _Lusitania_, crisis, IV, 502-503
+
+ _Lusitania_ deadlock, IV, 496
+
+ _Lusitania_, sinking of, III, 185, 222
+
+ Lutsk, capture of, IV, 202
+
+ Lutsk, capture of, V, 158
+
+ Lutsk fortress, strength of, IV, 210
+
+ Lutsk, Russian attacks on, VI, 86
+
+ Lvov, Prince George, VI, 398
+
+ _Lyman M. Law_, VI, 293
+
+ Luxemburg, bombardment of, by aeroplanes, IV, 466
+
+ Luxemburg, invasion of, I, 280
+
+
+ McLemore resolution, in House of Representatives, IV, 505;
+ V, 440
+
+ McNeely, Robert N., IV, 157
+
+ Macedonia, invasion of, IV, 277
+
+ Macedonia, conditions in, V, 214
+
+ Macedonia, reforms in, I, 238
+
+ Macedonian Bulgars, II, 282
+
+ Macedonia, Allied forces in, VI, 124
+
+ Macedonia, Serbian advance in, VI, 132
+
+ Mackensen, in Dobrudja, VI, 109, 115
+
+ Madagascar, I, 164
+
+ Maldon, air raid on, IV, 22
+
+ Malines, Belgian control of, II, 32
+
+ Mama Khatum, V, 335
+
+ Mangin, General, plans of, VI, 35
+
+ Manoury, General, II, 134
+
+ Margate, air attack on, VI, 171
+
+ Mariakerke, V, 431
+
+ Maritz, Colonel, III, 70
+
+ Marne, battle of the, II, 88-138
+
+ Martinpuich, capture of, VI, 23
+
+ Massiges, German attack at, IV, 124
+
+ Massiges sector, IV, 76
+
+ _Matoppo_, British ship, V, 65
+
+ Maurepas, French capture of, VI, 15
+
+ Maximalists, in Russia, VI, 418
+
+ Mazurian Lakes, battles of, II, 439
+
+ Mazurian Lakes, battles of, III, 313
+
+ Memel, raid on, III, 334
+
+ Merchantmen, armed, V, 60
+
+ Merchantmen, submarine warfare on, IV, 499
+
+ Messines Ridge, attack on, VI, 264
+
+ Metzeral, capture of, III, 165
+
+ Meuse, battles on the left bank of, V, 345-348
+
+ Meuse, French successes, VI, 64
+
+ Microphone, I, 21
+
+ Milan, demonstrations in, III, 379
+
+ Military operations in the Balkans, V, 214
+
+ Military plans of Central powers, I, 33
+
+ Military training, I, 14
+
+ Militia under Federal control, I, 13
+
+ Milukov, Paul, VI, 398, 413
+
+ _Minneapolis_, sinking of, V, 64
+
+ Mitrovitza, capture of, IV, 300
+
+ Mlawa, movements before, III, 324
+
+ _Moewe_, German raider, achievements of, IV, 159
+
+ Monastir, capture of, VI, 141-143
+
+ Monchy, capture of, VI, 242
+
+ _Monmouth_, cruiser, II, 223
+
+ Monro, Sir Charles, IV, 366
+
+ Mons, battle of, II, 60-68
+
+ Monte Adamello zone, V, 243
+
+ Monte Altissimo, IV, 396
+
+ Monte Ancora, attack on, V, 243
+
+ Monte Barro, capture of, V, 258
+
+ Montenegrin surrender, IV, 336
+
+ Montenegro in the war, II, 358-361
+
+ Montenegro, conquest of, IV, 329
+
+ Monte Rombon, attacks on, V, 230
+
+ Mont St. Elio, III, 121
+
+ Morgenthau, Henry, IV, 359
+
+ Mort Homme, battles of, V, 345, 354, 360, 362
+
+ Motor-Zeppelins, V, 418
+
+ Mountain fighting, VI, 159-166
+
+ Mount Lovcen, effect of capture of, on Italian campaign, IV, 399
+
+ Muelhausen, capture of, IV, 40
+
+ Mueller, Captain von, II, 229
+
+ Mush, massacre at, IV, 378
+
+ Mush, Russian capture of, III, 479
+
+
+ Namur, capture of, II, 53
+
+ Narotch Lake, V, 124
+
+ _Natal_, British cruiser, destruction of, IV, 163
+
+ National growth in Balkans, I, 258
+
+ Nationality in Serbia, I, 259
+
+ Naval battle of Jutland, V, 70-108
+
+ Naval lessons of the war, I, 17
+
+ Naval losses, IV, 143-144;
+ V, 113-115;
+ VI, 484
+
+ Naval policy, German, I, 44
+
+ Naval strength of Austria, II, 206
+
+ Naval strength of Germany, II, 204
+
+ Naval strength of Great Britain, II, 197
+
+ Naval warfare, I, 26; VI, 480
+
+ Navy, American, strength of, I, 11
+
+ Navy, British, effect on war, I, 18
+
+ Navy, increase in personnel, VI, 362
+
+ Navy League, German, I, 141
+
+ Near East and Russia, I, 153
+
+ Near Eastern question, I, 131
+
+ Neutral shipping, loss of, IV, 170
+
+ Neutrality of Belgium, I, 276
+
+ Neutrality terms refused, I, 281
+
+ Neuve Chapelle, battle of, III, 83-92
+
+ Neuville St. Vaast, capture, III, 127
+
+ New Zealanders, gallantry of, at Suvla Bay, IV, 356
+
+ Nicholas II assumes command of Russian army, IV, 188
+
+ Nicholas, Grand Duke, II, 373;
+ IV, 189;
+ VI, 490
+
+ Nicholas, Grand Duke, transferred to the Caucasus, IV, 382
+
+ Nicholas, King of Montenegro, IV, 330
+
+ Nicholas II, abdication of, VI, 403
+
+ Nicholas II, indifference to conditions, VI, 385
+
+ Nicholas II, reply to kaiser's message, I, 440
+
+ Niemen, operations along, III, 330
+
+ Nieuport, attack on, III, 269
+
+ Nihilism in Russia, I, 153;
+ VI, 365
+
+ Nish, fall of, IV, 288
+
+ Nivelle, General, victories, VI, 246
+
+ Nixon, Sir John, available forces for capturing Bagdad, IV, 421
+
+ North Sea, battle of, II, 252
+
+ Notre Dame de Lorette, attacks on, III, 155;
+ IV, 88
+
+ Novo Georgievsk, capture of, III, 364;
+ IV, 184
+
+ Nuredin Pasha, IV, 426
+
+ _Nuernberg_, II, 224
+
+ Nyassaland, fighting in, III, 495
+
+
+ Odessa, bombardment of, VI, 493
+
+ Olti, battle of, III, 478
+
+ Ortelsburg, capture of, II, 437
+
+ Oslavia Heights, capture, IV, 408
+
+ Ossowitz, bombardment of, III, 328
+
+ Ostend, raids on, IV, 56;
+ VI, 173
+
+ Otavi, battle of, III, 490
+
+
+ _Palembang_, Dutch steamer, V, 62
+
+ Palmer, Frederick, the world's war, I, 31
+
+ Pan-Slavism, I, 153
+
+ Paris, air raids on, IV, 19, 462
+
+ Paris, arrival of American troops in, VI, 360
+
+ Paris, siege of, I, 129
+
+ Pashitch, N. P., I, 321;
+ IV, 289
+
+ Passes, battle of, III, 241-244
+
+ Peace of Tilsit, I, 84
+
+ Pegoud, Alfonse, IV, 50
+
+ Pepper Hill, successes at, V, 358
+
+ Persia, interests in, I, 185
+
+ Persia, British position in, IV, 419
+
+ Peronne, V, 390;
+ VI, 232
+
+ Pershing, General John J., commander of the American expeditionary
+ force, VI, 356
+
+ _Persia_, destruction of, negotiations over, IV, 500
+
+ _Persia_, British steamship, sinking of, IV, 157
+
+ Persian Gulf, importance of, II, 505
+
+ Perthes, III, 79; IV, 72
+
+ Petain, General, report on operations at Verdun, V, 358
+
+ Peter, King of Serbia, IV, 290, 302
+
+ Pinsk, IV, 205, 207
+
+ Pinsk marshes, Russian successes in, V, 197
+
+ Poland, campaigns in, II, 462;
+ III, 345
+
+ Poland, Austrian, II, 272
+
+ Political situation in Ireland, I, 43
+
+ Political conditions in Germany, I, 53
+
+ _Portugal_, sinking of, V, 64
+
+ Portuguese seizure of German merchant ships, V, 60
+
+ Power of Bismarck, growth of, I, 127
+
+ Powers, Central, military plans of, I, 33
+
+ Pourtales, F., I, 323
+
+ Pozieres, bombardment of, VI, 11
+
+ Pozieres Wood, advance on, V, 407
+
+ _Prinz Eitel Friedrich_, German raider, III, 179
+
+ Prinzip, Gabrilo, I, 260
+
+ Pripet Marshes, IV, 209
+
+ Pripet Marshes, operations in, V, 152;
+ VI, 81
+
+ Pro-German propaganda in United States, IV, 505
+
+ Protopopoff, treason of, VI, 388
+
+ Provisional Government in Russia, VI, 398
+
+ Prussian alliance with Italy, I, 127
+
+ Przasnysz, battles of, III, 324
+
+ Przemysl, II, 249, 405;
+ III, 324
+
+
+ Radautz, capture of, V, 183
+
+ Radoslavov, Premier of Bulgaria, III, 372
+
+ Ramsgate, air raids on, IV, 26
+
+ Rancourt, capture of, VI, 27
+
+ Rasputin, VI, 374-377, 385
+
+ Rawa-Russka, battle of, II, 395
+
+ Regime, new, in Russia, VI, 404
+
+ Reichstag, Bethmann-Hollweg's statement in, I, 502
+
+ Rennenkampf, General, II, 443
+
+ Revolution in Russia, VI, 390
+
+ Rheims, bombardment of, II, 146-153;
+ III, 152-154;
+ VI, 237
+
+ Rhodesia, border fighting in, III, 495
+
+ Rifles used in different armies, I, 26
+
+ Riga-Dvinsk sector, V, 125, 128, 204
+
+ Riga, Gulf of, Russian torpedo boats in, V, 151
+
+ Rockwell, Kiffin, death of, VI, 181
+
+ Rodzianko, Michael, VI, 391
+
+ Roosevelt, Theodore, efforts to take troops to France, VI, 335
+
+ Root, Elihu, arrival of, in Russia as American Commissioner, VI, 417
+
+ Rovereto, Italian attack on, IV, 396;
+ V, 244
+
+ Rovno fortress, strength of, IV, 212
+
+ Royal British Corps, loss in, V, 425
+
+ _Royal Edward_, sunk, IV, 149
+
+ Rozau, capture of, III, 361
+
+ Ruhl, Arthur, the war correspondent, I, 113
+
+ Rumania, III, 370;
+ VI, 93-96
+
+ Rumania, neutrality of, IV, 256
+
+ Rumanian raid across the Danube, VI, 106-110
+
+ Russia and Great Britain in Persia, I, 185
+
+ Russia and Japan, V, 61
+
+ Russia and the Near East, I, 153
+
+ Russia in European politics, I, 148
+
+ Russian advance on the eastern front, V, 120
+
+ Russian mobilization, I, 306
+
+ Russian army, rehabilitation of, VI, 428
+
+ Russian artillery activity, V, 134
+
+ Russian attempts to extend time limit for hostilities, I, 385
+
+ Russian autocracy, VI, 364
+
+ Russian defeat, effect of, IV, 364
+
+ Russian disorganization, VI, 422
+
+ Russian fleet, mutiny, VI, 414
+
+ Russian foreign policy, I, 151
+
+ Russian internal troubles, I, 155
+
+ Russian losses in August, 1915, IV, 202-203
+
+ Russian mobilization, I, 405
+
+ Russian offensive, VI, 431, 440
+
+ Russian offensive in the East, V, 154
+
+ Russian offensive, temporary lull in, V, 188-192
+
+ Russian people and German diplomacy, I, 56
+
+ Russian persecution of Jews, I, 153
+
+ Russian Poland, II, 268
+
+ Russian pursuit of Turks, V, 292
+
+ Russian retreat, IV, 229-239
+
+ Russian revolution, foreshadowing of, VI, 363-365
+
+ Russian rout in Galicia, VI, 445-447
+
+ Russian troops in Rumania, VI, 97
+
+ Russian troops on the Black Sea coast, V, 61
+
+ Russia's attitude on Serbia, I, 377
+
+ Russia's strategy in East, II, 433
+
+ Russky, General, II, 377
+
+ Russo-German treaty, I, 319
+
+ Russo-Japanese War, I, 155
+
+ Russo-Turkish War, I, 132
+
+
+ Saarbruecken, bombardment, IV, 48
+
+ St. Julien, assaults on, III, 102
+
+ St. Mihiel, salient, attacks on, III, 116
+
+ Sakharoff, General, V, 205
+
+ Salandra, I, 322
+
+ Salisbury, Marquis of, I, 179
+
+ Saloniki, II, 284;
+ IV, 261, 321;
+ V, 215, 429
+
+ Saloniki, German air raid on, V, 216
+
+ Saloniki, importance of, I, 61
+
+ Saloniki, Allies at, IV, 261
+
+ Samogneux, abandonment of, by French, IV, 137
+
+ Samsonoff, General, II, 436
+
+ San, battle of, III, 297-301
+
+ San, battles of the, II, 398
+
+ San Stefano, treaty of, I, 227
+
+ Sarafoff, Boris, I, 242
+
+ Sarajevo, I, 260;
+ II, 277
+
+ Sari Bair, attack on, IV, 348
+
+ Sarrail, General, commands French troops in Balkans, IV, 279;
+ V, 215
+
+ Sazonov, Russian Minister, VI, 380
+
+ Scarpe River, operations on, VI, 253
+
+ Scarborough, raids on, II, 247
+
+ Schiller, Ernest, V, 65
+
+ Schleswig-Holstein, war for, I, 127
+
+ Sea command and troop transportation, I, 24
+
+ Selective Draft Law, VI, 346
+
+ Semendria, bombardment of, IV, 269
+
+ Serbia, invasion of, II, 301;
+ IV, 177
+
+ Serbia, offers of peace, III, 376
+
+ Serbian retreat to Albania, IV, 303
+
+ Serbian army, strength of, in November, 1915, IV, 293-294
+
+ Serbian nationality, I, 258
+
+ Serbian reply to Austrian note, I, 265-270
+
+ Serbian resistance at Babuna Pass, IV, 283
+
+ Serbian troops, transport across Greek territory, V, 218
+
+ Serbians in Macedonia, VI, 132
+
+ Sereth River, crossing by Russian forces, V, 178
+
+ Servetsch region, V, 146
+
+ Sette Comuni Plateau, Italian successes on, V, 270
+
+ Shabatz, battle of, II, 317
+
+ Shevket Pasha, I, 244
+
+ Shipbuilding program, VI, 343
+
+ Shipping Board, creation of, VI, 213
+
+ Shipping, neutral loss of, IV, 170
+
+ Ships of American registry, seizure by British, V, 49
+
+ Shumadia division of Serbian army, heroism of, IV, 275
+
+ Sibert, General, with American expeditionary force, VI, 357
+
+ Siege of Paris, I, 129
+
+ Simonds, Frank H, summary of two years of war, V, 461-502
+
+ Simonds, F. H., the theatres of the wars' campaigns, I, 83
+
+ Sims, Admiral, commander of American destroyer flotilla, VI, 357
+
+ Smith-Dorrien, General, II, 60
+
+ Smoke screen, I, 74
+
+ Smorgon, fighting around, V, 179
+
+ Smorgon, operations around, VI, 80
+
+ Soissons, operations around, V, 376
+
+ Soldau, capture of, II, 437
+
+ Somme, British, and French offensive on the, VI, 27
+
+ Somme, battles of, beginning, V, 377
+
+ Somme, conditions in situation south of, on July 9, V, 399
+
+ Somme front, French and British gains, VI, 19
+
+ Somme offensive, German casualties in the, VI, 9
+
+ Somme offensive, object of Allies in, V, 377
+
+ Somme offensive, spring of 1916, VI, 9
+
+ Somme, second phase, V, 401
+
+ Souain sector, IV, 71-72
+
+ Souchez, attacks on, III, 124-125
+
+ Souchez, Canadian raids at, VI, 222
+
+ Souchez, French attack on, IV, 84
+
+ Southwest Africa, British conquest of, III, 484-493
+
+ Souville, attacks on, V, 368
+
+ Spee, Admiral von, II, 230
+
+ Speed plane, in warfare, V, 421
+
+ Stambuloff, I, 233
+
+ Stanislau, operations around, VI, 435
+
+ Stanislau, advance on, V, 193;
+ VI, 72
+
+ Steenstraete, capture of, VI, 287
+
+ Stokhod River, V, 198-207;
+ VI, 76-81, 423
+
+ Strikes in munitions factories, planned by Germans, V, 10
+
+ Strypa River, fighting along, IV, 223-229
+
+ Strypa River, Russian artillery attacks along, V, 138
+
+ St. Mihiel, French gains, VI, 231
+
+ St. Quentin, VI, 236
+
+ Stuff Redoubt, VI, 32, 49
+
+ Sturmer Boris, VI, 379
+
+ Stuttgart, bombardment of, by French aviators, IV, 60
+
+ Styr River, IV, 223-229;
+ V, 178
+
+ Submarine attacks on American transports, VI, 358
+
+ Submarine campaign, IV, 116
+
+ Submarine campaign against merchant ships, V, 59
+
+ Submarine, detecting, I, 21
+
+ Submarine, effectiveness of, I, 19
+
+ Submarine, efficiency of, IV, 145
+
+ Submarine negotiations, VI, 193
+
+ Submarine warfare, III, 209-222
+
+ Submarine warfare, VI, 182-188
+
+ Submarine warfare in 1917, VI, 475
+
+ Submarine warfare on armed merchantmen, IV, 499
+
+ Submarines, aeroplane warfare on, V, 414
+
+ Suchomlinof, V. A., I, 320
+
+ Suez Canal, defenses of, III, 18-19;
+ IV, 11
+
+ Summary of first year's operation on western front, IV, 39-46
+
+ _Sussex_, sinking of, V, 63, 443
+
+ Suvla Bay, IV, 346-356
+
+ Suwalki, occupation of, II, 448
+
+
+ Talaat Bey, II, 499
+
+ Tanks, VI, 21, 46
+
+ Tannenberg, battle of, II, 438
+
+ Tarnow, battles around, III, 286
+
+ Tergovistea, capture of, by Austro-Germans, VI, 117
+
+ Terrorism in Russia, I, 153
+
+ Thiepval, British successes around, VI, 17
+
+ Tigris River, IV, 426;
+ V, 326-330
+
+ Tigris valley, campaign in, V, 307
+
+ Tilsit, peace of, I, 84
+
+ Togoland, campaign in, III, 62
+
+ Townshend, General, V, 311
+
+ Trade, foreign, of Germany, I, 49
+
+ Transloy, British successes at, VI, 65
+
+ Transportation of troops, I, 24
+
+ Transports, protection of, I, 18
+
+ Trans-Siberian Railway, I, 153
+
+ Trebizond-Erzerum road, V, 299
+
+ Trebizond, occupation of, V, 297
+
+ Trench bombs, I, 76
+
+ Trench fighting, I, 68
+
+ Trentino, Austrian offensive in, V, 244-255
+
+ Trentino front, VI, 154, 455
+
+ Trieste, Italian drive, VI, 159, 452
+
+ Triple Alliance, I, 133, 141
+
+ Triple Entente, formation of, I, 158
+
+ Trones Wood, V, 402-403
+
+ Troops, transportation of, I, 24
+
+ Tsing-tau, defenses, attacks on, capture, III, 48, 52, 60
+
+ _Tubantia_, Dutch steamer, V, 62
+
+ Turkey, American relations with, VI, 328
+
+ Turkish navy, operations of, IV, 170
+
+ Turkish troops on the eastern front, VI, 83
+
+ Typhus, epidemic of, II, 356;
+ III, 475
+
+
+ Uganda, protectorate, I, 180
+
+ Undersea warfare, IV, 155
+
+ Unification of Germany, I, 130
+
+ Union of South Africa, rebellion in, III, 70
+
+ United States, development of pro-German propaganda in, IV, 505
+
+ _U-53_, exploits of, VI, 194
+
+ Union of Towns in Russia, VI, 377
+
+
+ Van, concentration of Armenians in, IV, 378
+
+ Van, Russian successes in, III, 477
+
+ Vaux, French defense of, V, 351, 367
+
+ Vaux Fort, French recapture of, VI, 37, 39
+
+ Veles, resistance at, by Serbians, IV, 278
+
+ Venice, air raids on, III, 426;
+ VI, 169
+
+ Venizelos, attacks of, on Greek Government, IV, 311
+
+ Venizelos, E., I, 60;
+ V, 217
+
+ Verdun, attack on, I, 64
+
+ Verdun, effect of five months' siege, V, 371
+
+ Verdun, French victories at, VI, 54
+
+ Verdun, operations around, VI, 19, 53, 281
+
+ Verdun, struggle for, IV, 131-142
+
+ Victor Emmanuel, address to army, V, 254
+
+ Victor Emmanuel III, I, 194
+
+ Vienna, congress of 1814, I, 260
+
+ _Vigilancia_, sunk, VI, 318
+
+ Vilna, campaign against, IV, 187, 192
+
+ Vimy Ridge, capture of, VI, 239
+
+ Viviani, Rene, I, 318
+
+ Viviani, instruction to French ambassador at Vienna, I, 379
+
+ Volhynia, Austrians in, V, 138
+
+ Von Bernstorff, note to Secretary Lansing in reply to _Lusitania_
+ protest in Germany, IV, 485
+
+ Von Bethmann-Hollweg, IV, 485
+
+ Von Buelow, Prince, I, 136
+
+ Von Caprivi, General, I, 134
+
+ Von Jagow, interviews with, I, 33, 502
+
+ Von Mackensen, commands German forces in Serbia, IV, 258
+
+ Von Papen, recalled, V, 26
+
+ Von Plehve, murder of, I, 156
+
+ Von Rintelen, Franz, V, 22-28
+
+ Von Tirpitz, Grand Admiral, attitude toward submarine warfare, IV, 484
+
+ Vosges, German activities in, IV, 51, 108
+
+ Vulkan Pass, capture of, by Germans, VI, 103
+
+
+ War, German declaration of, I, 278
+
+ War, declaration of, between United States and Germany, VI, 325
+
+ War Revenue Bill, VI, 333
+
+ War zone, establishment of, III, 170
+
+ Warsaw, attack on, II, 450
+
+ Warsaw, capture of, III, 366-368
+
+ Warsaw, movements upon, III, 346
+
+ Warsaw, occupation of, IV, 178
+
+ Washburn, Stanley, on conditions on eastern front, V, 180-183
+
+ Western front, summary of first year's operations on, IV, 39-46
+
+ Western front on February 1, 1916, IV, 126
+
+ What the war means to America, I, 9
+
+ Whitby, raids on, II, 247
+
+ Whitlock, Brand, efforts to aid Miss Cavell, IV, 100-101
+
+ William II, accession of, I, 134
+
+ Wilson, President, address before Congress, April, 1917, VI, 320-326
+
+ Wilson, President, on armed neutrality before Congress, VI, 304
+
+ Wilson, President, and British blockade of Germany, V, 457
+
+ Wilson, President, and Congress, V, 434
+
+ Wilson, President, denouncement of unpatriotism, V, 26
+
+ Wilson, President, letter to Congress, IV, 503
+
+ Wilson, President, note to Russia, VI, 415
+
+ Wilson, President, proclamation convening Congress, VI, 319
+
+ Wilson's address on relations with Germany, VI, 210
+
+ Windhoek, capture of, III, 489
+
+ Wood, Major General Leonard, what the war means to America, I, 9
+
+
+ Yarmouth, raids on, II, 246
+
+ _Yarrowdale_, prisoners, VI, 297
+
+ Younghusband, General, IV, 446
+
+ Yperlee Canal, III, 107
+
+ Ypres, attack on, II, 171, 172, 174
+
+ Ypres, bombardment of, III, 95
+
+ Ypres, British successes south of, VI, 264
+
+ Ypres, first battle of, IV, 44
+
+ Ypres, German success at, in February, 1916, IV, 122
+
+ Ypres, second battle of, III, 99-106
+
+ Ypres sector, operations in, in March, 1916, V, 372, 375
+
+ Yser, II, 169;
+ III, 167;
+ IV, 122
+
+ Yser region, flood in, IV, 117
+
+
+ Zanzibar, I, 180
+
+ Zeebrugge shelled, V, 67; VI, 482
+
+ Zeppelin attack on Warsaw, IV, 19
+
+ Zeppelin, Count Ferdinand, death of, VI, 494
+
+ Zeppelin raids on England, IV, 16, 466;
+ V, 422;
+ VI, 494
+
+ Zeppelin, value of, V, 412
+
+ Zeppelins, loss of, IV, 468;
+ V, 430;
+ VI, 179
+
+ Zugan Torta, V, 247
+
+ Zungar Valley, V, 247
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of the Great War, Volume VI
+(of VIII), by Various
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