BRITISH OFFENSIVE.
TERRIFIC HAVOC OF GUNS. ; CHAOS IN ENEMY TRENCHES GERMAN OFFICER'S STORY. A graphic account of the terrible destruction wrought by the Anglo-French artillery in the offensive in the Somme region came to hand by the last mail. It is written by a German officer, Lieutenant Dambitsch, one of the editors of the Zeitung am Alittag, whose company was stationed in the trenches near the Somme River. . The lieutenant was wounded in the preparatory bombardment, but was there long enough to see the almost indescribable destruction wrought in the front line trenches by the artillery. Writing under date July 7, he says the massively built position.-, bad been regarded as virtually indestructible and impregnable, but the event proved that the progress in the development of offensive tactics since the September offensive hao not been realised. '•Right at the beginning of the artillery preparation," says the lieutenant, "the enemy showed the Germans a new thing in the destruction of observation balloons. An aviator swooped down on one of these and shot fire balls from above, a burst of flame marking the end of the balloon. ' BOMB-PROOFS BLOWN ALOFT. "The second day's bombardment, Jun<» ; 20, brought another surprise in the shape of aerial mines of unheard-of calibres, which were thrown in incredible numbers. The explosion of the first air torpedo shattered by its tremendous detonation, the windows of the bomb-proofs and threw up a massive pillar of black earth, perhaps a hundred yards. This showered the whole neighborhood with roofs, bricks, and' earth. This was a regular Vesuvius eruption. ''The destructive effects of this uninterrupted throwing of the heaviest mines were almost immediately visible. The entrances to the bomb-proofs were buried, and the inmates had to be removed.'' A few minutes later an orderly, sent with a message to the left of a company, returned, reporting that the trench had been completely levelled. Lieutenant Dambitsch, going to observe, saw as far as the eje could reach crater after crater, six feet deep, the earth between being lorn up in a wild, high chaos of trench timbers and wire entanglements. MONTHS OF WORK GONE. ''The work of clay and night for nine months," says the chronicler, ''was destroyed in a few minutes. Report after report arrived of bomb-proofs demolished by aerial torpedoes, burying the inmates. The trenches became rapidly levelled. The third lines were so heavily shelled that it was impossible to traverse them. "An orderly sent to a captain was hours under way. On the left flunk the company irench was so obliterated that it was dillicult to trace it. The only means of progress was to dash from crater to crater fully exposed to the enemy fire while crossing the intervening ridges. Finally he arrived after a period of intense danger and found the left platoon of the company in the same condition as the right platoon. A number of men were still buried in the demolished bomb-proofs. Their comrades worked for hours extricating thero
EVERY YARD OF GROUND ROUNDED. ''During this work an intrepid battalion surgeon arrived with an oyygen apparatus and stood for hours under a heavy artillery fire ministering to the half-buried and attempting to revive those asphyxiated. "The bombardment continued without cessation, aerial torpedoes being hurled from ranges such as were never before known for mine throwers. The French artillery pounded every yard of ground with an intense fire of big shells." The lieutenant describes how welcome lcinforcements were' sent that night, "quite as much to assist in digging out those buried as to contribute to the defence." He was leading them to positions among the demoralised trenches, when he and his orderly were wounded by an exploding torpedo. They were sent to the hospital, thus missing tbu infantry attacks.
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Taranaki Daily News, 25 August 1916, Page 3
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624BRITISH OFFENSIVE. Taranaki Daily News, 25 August 1916, Page 3
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