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The First World War (3): The Western Front 1917-1918 (Essential Histories)
 
 
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The First World War (3): The Western Front 1917-1918 (Essential Histories) [Paperback]

Peter Simkins (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

Essential Histories June 25, 2002
In this, the second volume covering the war on the Western Front, Peter Simkins describes the last great battles of attrition at Arras, on the Aisne and at Passchendaele in 1917. Then he moves on to relate the successive offensives launched by Germany in the spring and summer of 1918 in an effort to achieve victory or a favourable peace before American manpower proved decisive. Again, questioning and correcting several myths and long-held assumptions about the nature and conduct of war on the Western Front, the author also looks at the aftermath and legacy of the 'war to end wars'.


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From the Publisher

This unique series studies every major war in history looking at all the aspects of war, from how it felt to be a soldier to the lasting impact of the conflict on the world around it.

About the Author

Peter Simkins worked at the Imperial War Museum for over 35 years and was its Senior Historian from 1976 until his retirement in 1999. Awarded the MBE that year for his services to the Museum, he is currently Honorary Professor in Modern History at the University of Birmingham, a Vice-President of the Western Front Association and a Fellow of the Royal Historial Society. Peter Simkins is the author of numerous publications on the Great War, including the book Kitchener's Army (1988), which was awarded the Templar Medal by the Society for Army Historical Research, and hs is now working with Dr Gary Sheffield and John Lee, on a two-volume study, Haig's Army.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 96 pages
  • Publisher: Osprey Publishing (June 25, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1841763489
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841763484
  • Product Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.5 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,251,923 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Unabashed English View of the War - Part Two, May 31, 2004
This review is from: The First World War (3): The Western Front 1917-1918 (Essential Histories) (Paperback)
Peter Simkins, a former senior historian at the Imperial War Museum, picks up in this volume of Osprey's Essential Histories series where he left off at the end of 1916. As in the first volume, Simkins' narrative is clear and concise, but skewed with an Anglo-centric focus that downplays the participation of non-Englishmen on the Western Front.

Rather than the standard section on "background to war," Simkins begins this volume with a discussion of Allied and German strategic choices for 1917. Since this volume is a continuation of the first, the normal sections with background material on the warring sides and the political issues are omitted, which renders this volume less than ideal as a stand-alone. The author provides ten maps to support his narrative: the Western Front 1914-1918; the German withdrawal in 1917; the Battle of Arras; the Nivelle Offensive; the Third Battle of Ypres; Operation Michael; the end of Operation Michael; the German 1918 offensives; the Battle of Amiens; the final Allied offensives. As in the first volume, Simkins' Anglo-centric bias is evident in the maps, which primarily emphasize British offensives. The lack of any maps depicting the American St. Mihiel or Argonne offensives, or the Franco-American counterattack at Soissons are noteworthy omissions. Air operations are also slighted in this volume, as in the first.

Simkins' narrative begins with the German withdrawal to the Hindenburg Line in March 1917, followed by the British offensive at Arras and the French Nivelle offensive. Simkins is honest that the Arras offensive represented a mixed bag, with the capture of Vimy Ridge to its credit, but balanced against the highest daily casualty rate of the war for the British. Simkins also notes that the British were slow to modify their tactics, e.g. using tanks in "penny packets" over bad terrain. Although the author notes that the British had "ambiguous objectives and a faulty plan" in describing the follow-up offensive that resulted in the Third Battle of Ypres, his discussion fails to convey the utter stupidity of that offensive. Indeed, throughout the text, Simkins defends the British BEF commander, General Douglas Haig, despite enormous evidence that Haig's bull-headedness caused unnecessary loss of life by maintaining an almost religious belief that "one more push" would gain a breakthrough at Ypres. Nor does Simkins ever discuss whether Haig's belief that a breakthrough at Ypres would prove decisive was really justified other than a few small channel ports, no major objectives were near Ypres).

In covering the fighting in 1918, Simkins is honest about the defects in the British defenses that facilitated the initial German success in the spring offensives, although again he avoids mentioning mistakes made by higher British officers, i.e. Lieutenant General Gough. Simkins' coverage of the Allied efforts to blunt the German offensives is good, but he criticizes General Pershing's reluctance to send in the partly-trained American divisions piece-meal (failing to note that Pershing was planning for the long-term and that it was not his fault that the Allied front had virtually collapsed). It is also interesting that Simkins' map which depicts the final Allied offensive in September-November 1918 shows no French participation. American successes at St. Mihiel and in the Argonne are mentioned, but off to the side, as if they were sideshows. The crucial role played by the arrival of American forces in 1918 - often exaggerated by American authors - is minimized here. Simkins does fail to note that British forces held less of the front than either French or American troops at the end of the war.

In the final sections, Simkins once again displays unabashed Anglo-centrism with his "portrait of a soldier" (British Private Noakes) and "portrait of a civilian" (British munitions worker Caroline Webb). These characters are so similar to the two British characters described in the first volume (both soldiers were English privates born in 1896) that it is apparent that the author made no effort whatsoever to personalize the war from the French or German perspectives (or the loyal Canadians and ANZACs who came to defend the empire). Certainly Ernst Jünger's memoirs would have been a suitable basis for representing a German point of view, and there are numerous French memoirs as well. According to this type of historiography, the only people on the Western Front who mattered were Englishmen. The final section, on how the war ended skimps over unrest in Germany that led to the collapse of the monarchy and it is odd that there is no mention of the total casualties suffered by each of the combatants. A final section summarizing the human and financial costs of one of the most vicious wars in history would certainly seem appropriate, but it is not provided. Overall, this volume is not quite as good as the first.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On 15 and 16 October 1916, as the Somme offensive neared its end, Allied military and political leaders met at Chantilly and in Paris to discuss plans for 1917. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
forward zone, creeping barrage, storm troops
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Western Front, Fifth Army, Hindenburg Line, Fourth Army, Second Army, Lloyd George, French Army, Canadian Corps, Messines Ridge, Vimy Ridge, Chief of Staff, United States, Ypres Salient, Chemin des Dames, Essential Histories, French First Army, Australian Corps, Anzac Corps, Canal du Nord, Passchendaele Ridge, Villers Bretonneux, Caroline Webb, Central Army Group, Prince Max, War Cabinet
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