Pillars of Fire by Ian Passingham

Pillars of Fire by Ian Passingham

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Summary

Drawing material from a wide range of primary sources in England, Germany and Australia, the author looks at the action in this battle from all levels of command during the preparatory, battle and post-battle phases. The attack is also examined from the viewpoint of the defending German troops on the other side of the wire.

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Pillars of Fire by Ian Passingham

On June 7the 1917, General Sir Herbert Plumer's Second Army smashed the "impregnable" German defences along the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge in an assault where technology and innovative thinking were combined to produce an extraordinary success. Until 1918, Messines was the only clear-cut Allied victory on the Western Front. The victory came at a time when Britain and her allies needed it most; it boosted Allied morale and shattered that of the Germans. It was also a battle which brought together a commonwealth of nations, including Irishmen and Ulstermen, fighting alongside each other to defeat a common enemy. Plumer planned the battle as a composer might write the score of a symphony and assembled an "orchestra of war", with each "instrument" - artillery, engineers, infantry, tanks, aircraft and administrative units - playing its part at the right time to overwhelm the enemy. Messines became the first true all-arms modern battle. This detailed account of the battle for the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge examines it from the British/ANZAC and German perspectives. It explores why the name of Messines is not as familiar as The Somme, Passchendaele or Verdun, and why General Sir Herbert Plumer is not as widely known as Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig or even General Sir Hubert Gough. The author reassesses the reasons for General Plumer's success on the day, the implications of Haig's failure to exploit the success, and finally the legacy of the battle for the maturing of the BEF in 1918.
Ian Passingham was educated at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and Keele University, serving in the British Army for 18 years before leaving as a major to pursue a career as a professional historian and defence analyst. The author of Pillars of Fire, he leads battlefield tours to the Western Front for the celebrated 'Holt's Tours'. Ian lives in Shepperton, Middlesex.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780750917049
ISBN 10 0750917040
Title Pillars of Fire
Author Ian Passingham
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Hardback
Publisher The History Press Ltd
Year published 1998-11-19
Number of pages 256
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.