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DCM WW1 Trio Group to Walter Henry James - Canadian MGC

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    #16
    Before I zero in on the events that led to Walter being involved in the action that was to bring him the Distinguished Conduct Medal, I will briefly summarize the events and important dates of Walters WW1 Service. While it is hard to determine with 100% certainty that Walter was with the Regiments at all the actions they were involved in, it is possible he saw several of the major battles in 1916-1918.

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    NOTE* Dates are in format DD-MM-YY.

    Here is a timeline of WW1 Service. Listed are the major battles at which the Official History of the Great War indicates the presence of the 3rd Canadian Division, of which the 7 Brigade Machine Gun Corps were part of. 7 Brigade had six machine gun companies but it is almost impossible to tell if all six were present at each action.

    WW1 WAR SERVICE TIMELINE of WALTER HENRY JAMES DCM including the Battles at which the 3rd Canadian Division are shown to have been present.

    1916
    1-2-16 reprimanded for neglect of duty in the Field
    4-2-16 reverts to the ranks at own request
    26-4-16 transfers to 7th Brigade Machine Gun Company in the Field
    27-4-16 taken on the strength of 7th Brigade MGC

    BATTLE OF MOUNT SORRELL 2-6 JUNE 1916 (War Diary shows him Lance Corporal during this action)
    BATTLES OF THE SOMME 1 JULY-18 NOVEMBER 1916


    10-6-16 promoted to Sergeant in the Field
    19-8-16 awarded Distinguished Conduct Medal

    BATTLE OF FLERS-COURCELETTE 13-22 SEPTEMBER 1916
    BATTLE OF THIEPVAL 26-28 SEPTEMBER 1916
    BATTLE OF LE TRANSLOY 1-18 OCTOBER 1916
    BATTLE OF THE ANCRE HEIGHTS 1 OCTOBER-11 NOVEMBER 1916


    22-10-16 from base to hospital in the Field
    28-10-16 Convalescent Rest Station transferred No.10 Canadian Field Ambulance and discharged

    1917
    1-2-17 promoted to Company Sergeant Major in the Field
    12-1-17 to 15th Machine Gun Company
    15-1-17 re-joins unit
    3-2-17 granted leave of absence
    17-2-17 re-joins unit from leave
    4-3-17 Canadian Corps Training School
    17-3-17 re-joins unit

    BATTLES OF ARRAS 9 APRIL-4 MAY 1917
    BATTLE OF VIMY RIDGE 9-14 APRIL 1917
    THIRD BATTLE OF THE SCARPE 3-4 MAY 1917
    BATTLE OF HILL 70 15-25 AUGUST 1917
    BATTLES OF YPRES 31 JULY-10 NOVEMBER 1917


    11-8-17 reduced to rank of sergeant
    28-9-17 admitted to No.9 Canadian Field Ambulance
    2-10-17 discharged

    SECOND BATTLE OF PASSCHENDAELE 26 OCTOBER-10 NOVEMBER 1917


    7-11-17 admitted to No.9 Canadian Field Ambulance
    8-11-17 discharged to duty
    11-11-17 admitted to No.2 Field Ambulance Myalgia
    22-11-17 discharged to duty

    1918

    6-1-18 granted leave of absence
    8-1-18 re-joins unit from leave
    13-1-18 Canadian Command gas school
    26-1-18 reverts to ranks at own request
    26-1-18 re-joins unit from Command
    1-3-18 transfers to Canadian Machine Gun Company and posed to 15 Company
    19-3-18 absorbed into 3rd Battalion Canadian Machine Gun Company

    BATTLE OF AMIENS 8-11 AUGUST 1918
    SECOND BATTLE OF ARRAS 26 AUGUST-3 SEPTEMBER 1918
    BATTLE OF THE SCARPE 26-30AUGUST 1918
    BATTLES OF THE HINDENBURG LINE
    BATTLE OF THE CANAL DU NORD 27 SEPTEMBER-1 OCTOBER 1918
    BATTLE OF CAMBRAI 8-9 OCTOBER 1918
    BATTLE OF VALENCIENNES 1-2 NOVEMBER 1918


    22-11-18 granted leave of absence
    6-12-18 re-joins unit from leave
    10-12-18 to hospital sick
    14-12-18 BOULOGNE influenza
    Last edited by Darrell; 09-08-2012, 09:32 PM.

    Comment


      #17
      This would be as good a place as any to show the Service Records where most of the dates on note were taken:

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        #18
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          #19
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            #20
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              #21
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                #22
                6.
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                  #23
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                    #24
                    8.
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                      #25
                      9.
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                        #26
                        A few specific highlights of his service and his Regiments actions:

                        1916

                        Walter is reprimanded for neglect of duty. On the 26 April Walter transfers to the 7th Brigade Machine Gun Company and it is with this company that during the Battle of Mount Sorrell 2-6 June 1916 Walter is involved in the action for which he was later awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal. The Citation in the London Gazette 19 August 1916 reads “For conspicuous gallantry during an enemy attack. After his officer and sergeant had been wounded, he took command of four machine-guns and two Lewis guns, and successfully repelled a hostile attack, when the remaining infantry were badly shaken by mine explosions.”

                        After this action on Mount Sorrell, Walter was promoted to the rank of sergeant in the Field. During 1916 the 3rd Canadian Division were involved in the Battles of the Somme, Thiepval, Le Transloy and Ancre Heights. During October 1916 Walter is hospitalised with sore feet and after a period of convalescence is discharged back to his unit.

                        1917


                        Walter is promoted to Company Sergeant Major and transfers to the 15th Machine Gun Company in the 3rd Canadian Division. Walter is granted two weeks leave of absence in February and then spends two weeks in March at the Canadian Corps Training School. Walter was reduced to the rank of sergeant in August and again is hospitalised for a few days. Later in November a third spell of hospitalisation for a period of eleven days suffering from Myalgia and is discharged back to his unit on 26 November and is granted leave of absence from 22 December until 6 January.

                        During 1917 the 3rd Canadian Division are shown present at the Battles of Arras, Vimy Ridge, Scarpe, Ypres and Passchendaele.

                        1918

                        Walter re-joins his unit from leave on the 8 January and then spends two weeks at the Canadian Command Gas Training School and then transfers back to the Canadian Machine Gun Corps and is posted back to the 15th Company. Walter reverts to the ranks at his own request on the 26 January. Later in December 1918 Walter is found to be suffering from influenza and is sent first to Boulogne before transferring to West General Hospital in Manchester on 14 January 1919.
                        During 1918 the 3rd Canadian Division are shown present at the Battles of Amiens, Arras, Scarpe, Hindenburg Line, Cambrai and Valenciennes.

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Now time to focus in on the place, date and action which made Walter Henry James a War Hero.

                          BATTLE OF MOUNT SORRELL


                          The Battle of Mont Sorrel (Battle of Mount Sorrel, Battle of Hill 62) was a localized conflict of World War I between three divisions of the British Second Army and three divisions of the German Fourth Army in the Ypres Salient, near Ypres, Belgium, from 2 June 1916 to 14 June 1916.

                          In an effort to pull British resources from the observed build-up in the Somme, the XIII (Royal Württemberg) Corps and the 117th Infantry Division attacked an arc of high ground positions defended by the Canadian Corps. The German forces initially captured the heights at Mount Sorrel and Tor Top before entrenching on the far slope of the ridge. Following a number attacks and counterattacks, two divisions of the Canadian Corps, supported by the 20th Light Division and Second Army siege and howitzer battery groups, recaptured the majority of their former positions.

                          Background

                          Located in the Ypres Salient, 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) east of Ypres, Belgium, the Battle of Mount Sorrel took place along a ridge between Hooge and Zwartelee. The crest line of Mount Sorrel, nearby Tor Top (Hill 62) and Hill 61 rose approximately 30 meters higher than the shallow ground at Zillebeke, affording the occupying force excellent observation over the salient, the town of Ypres and approach routes. The peaks were the only portion of the crest of the Ypres ridge which remained in Allied hands.

                          In northern France, men and resources were being in preparation for the large-scale joint British-French Somme Offensive. The British and French build-up in the Somme did not go unnoticed by the German Supreme Army Command. German Second Army, which was holding the sector north of the Somme had observed preparations for a major attack since the end of February 1916. Short of resources due to operations at Verdun, the Germans could only mount local operations in an effort to divert British resources from the Somme.

                          On 28 May 1916, in an abrupt change of command, Lieutenant-General Edwin Alderson was appointed to the largely ceremonial post of Inspector General of Canadian Forces in England and was succeeded by Lieutenant-General Julian Byng as commander of the Canadian Corps.

                          SITUATIONAL MAP - Below:
                          Attached Files

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                            #28
                            Battle

                            German offensive

                            Byng inspected the Canadian Corps positions and noted that the Canadian troops were overlooked by German positions and under constant danger of enemy fire. He assigned 3rd Canadian Division commander, Major-General Malcolm Mercer to draw up a plan to overrun the more dangerous German positions in a local attack.

                            As the Canadians began preparations for an assault, the Germans were in the process of executing an assault plan of their own. The XIII (Royal Württemberg) Corps spent six weeks planning and carefully preparing their attack on the Mount Sorrel, Tor Top (Hill 62) and Hill 61 peaks. Their objective was to take control of the observation positions east of Ypres and keep as many British units as possible pinned down in the area, to avoid them transferring to the Somme region and assisting with the observed build-up in that area. The Germans constructed practice trenches resembling the

                            The Allies were not, however, completely unaware of the German activities. In mid-May, aerial reconnaissance near Mont Sorrel indicated that German forces were preparing for an offensive against Allied positions. Royal Flying Corps observers had noted the existence of works curiously resembling the Canadian positions well behind the enemy lines.The Germans were also observed digging new sap trenches which implied that an assault was intended. The Canadian Corps had just begun developing plans to overrun the more dangerous German positions when the Germans executed an assault of their own.

                            On the morning of 2 June the German XIII Corps began a massive artillery bombardment of heavy caliber shells against the Canadian positions. Nine-tenths of the Canadian forward reconnaissance battalion became casualties during the bombardment. 3rd Canadian Division commander Major-General Malcolm Mercer and 8th Canadian Brigade commander Brigadier-General Arthur Victor Seymour Williams had been conducting an inspection of the front line on 3 June when the shelling began. Mercer was wounded three times and died; Williams was wounded in the face and head and taken prisoner.

                            At 1:00pm, German pioneers detonated a series of four mines near the Canadian forward trenches before the Germans attacked with six battalions. Five more battalions were in support and an additional six in reserve. When the German forces attacked, mainly against positions held by the 8th Canadian Brigade, resistance at the front lines was "minimal". For several critical hours both the 3rd Canadian Division and the 8th Canadian Brigade were leaderless, and their level of defence suffered accordingly. Brigadier-General Edward Spencer Hoare Nairne, of the Lahore Divisional Artillery eventually assumed temporary command of the 3rd Canadian Division. However, German forces were still able to capture Mont Sorrel and Hill 61. After advancing up to 1,200 yards, the XIII Corps dug in. Although the road to Ypres was open and undefended, no German officer took the initiative to exceed instructions and capitalize on the success experienced by the German forces.

                            Picture: Destroyed dugouts and shelters. Prior to the war, most of the terrain here was heavily wooded.
                            Attached Files

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                              #29
                              Failed counterattack

                              Lieutenant-General Byng assembled a hastily organized counterattack in the early hours of 3 June. Owing to the 3rd Canadian Division’s heavy losses, two brigades of the 1st Canadian Division were temporarily placed under the control of Brigadier-General Hoare Nairne, who had assumed control of 3rd Canadian Division. The counterattack was scheduled to begin at 2:00 am on 3 June 1916. However, due to the distances that had to be covered by incoming units, the difficulties in communications and ever present enemy fire, the time allowed for assembly proved inadequate and the attack was postponed until 7:00 am. The signal to attack was to be six simultaneous green rockets. However, some rockets misfired and did not burst resulting in an uneven assault whereby each unit moved from their starting lines at different times. The four attacking battalions suffered heavy losses as they advanced over open ground in broad daylight. The attack failed to regain any lost territory. It did however manage to close a 600 yards (550 m) gap in the line and advance the Canadian front about 1,000 yards (910 m) from the positions it had retreated to after the German assault.

                              British reinforcements and second German attack

                              British Expeditionary Force commander General Douglas Haig and Second Army commander General Herbert Plumer both believed it necessary to expel the Germans from their newly captured positions. However, in view of the preparations for the Somme offensive, Haig did not wish to divert more forces than were necessary. Support was limited to a number of additional artillery units and an infantry brigade from the 20th Light Division. It was suggested that the next counterattack be carried out with the infantry available, with a particularly large emphasis placed on artillery.

                              The additional artillery units immediately went to work hampering the Germans' consolidation efforts by shelling their front and support lines and seeking out hostile batteries. The Germans sprung a surprise on the Canadians by exploding four large mines under trenches of the 2nd Canadian Division covering the spur at the eastern outskirts of the ruins of Hooge. A company of the Canadian 28th (North West) Battalion was wiped out in the explosions.The Canadians managed to hold their position and prevent the Germans from reaching their support line, but Byng ultimately decided to leave the Hooge trenches in German hands and to concentrate on regaining Mount Sorrel and Tor Top. To dissuade the Germans from more attacks on the Canadian Corps' left flank, the dismounted British 2nd Cavalry Brigade came on loan to the Canadian Corps as a counter-attack force.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Return to original lines

                                Byng ordered 1st Canadian Division commander Major-General Arthur Currie to organize a careful attack against the German positions at Mont Sorrel and Tor Top. Due to the casualties suffered during the unsuccessful counterattack of 3 June, Currie regrouped his stronger battalions into two composite brigades. Four intense bombardments of 30 minutes each were carried out between 9 and 12 June in an effort to deceive the Germans into expecting immediate attacks, which did not transpire. For ten hours on 12 June all the German positions between Hill 60 and Sanctuary Wood were shelled unremittingly. Particular attention was given to the Canadian Corps' flanks from which enfilade machine-gun fire might be expected. The following morning, the Germans were subjected to an additional 45 minutes of heavy artillery bombardment before the assaulting troops advanced behind a generated smoke screen. The Germans are believed to have been taken largely by surprise as they offered little resistance, and the Canadians were able to take approximately 200 prisoners. With the exception of the trenches at Hooge, the Germans fell back to the their original lines and in a little over an hour the assault was over. On 14 June the Germans launched two failed counterattacks after which they advanced their trench to within 150 meters of the Canadians but made no further assaults.
                                Aftermath

                                The Canadian Corps remained in the Ypres Salient in a stationary yet aggressive status until the beginning of September when the corps was transferred to the Somme. In the aftermath of the battle and in the wake of the death of Major-General M.S. Mercer, Canadian Corps commander Julian Byng was forced to address the politically sensitive topic of appointing a new 3rd Canadian Division commander. Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence Sam Hughes telegraphed Byng and insisted that his son, 1st Canadian Brigade commander Brigadier-General Garnet Hughes, be given command of the 3rd Canadian Division. However, to the fury of the minister Byng instead promoted 2nd Canadian Brigade commander Brigadier-General Louis Lipsett, a highly regarded pre-war British regular, to the post. The minister protested and confronted Byng in August 1916, however Byng did not relent insisting that "he had nothing against Garnet Hughes there was simply a better man for the post". The change in command between Lieutenant-General Edwin Alderson and Julian Byng was also used as an opportunity to make additional changes. Much to the displeasure of Minister Hughes and delight of the Canadian troops, the unreliable Canadian Ross Rifle began to be replaced with the British Lee-Enfield and the Colt machine gun with the Vickers and Lewis machine guns.

                                Picture - German trenches demolished by artillery:
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