THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 1758> Horatio Nelson is born. 1864 > Union tries to break stalemate in Virginia. 1913 > Inventor Rudolf Diesel vanishes. 1918 > Allied forces break through the Hindenburg Line. 1939 > Nazis and communists divvy up Poland. 1965 > Hanoi announces that downed pilots will be treated as war criminals. 1982 > Cyanide-laced Tylenol kills six. 1988> First American woman climbs Mt. Everest. 2005 > Reporter Judith Miller is released from prison. More from this day:http://histv.co/1h9fgjX
Sep 29, 1918:
Allied forces break through the Hindenburg Line
On this day in 1918, after a 56-hour-long bombardment, Allied forces breach the so-called Hindenburg Line, the last line of German defenses on the Western Front duringWorld War I.
Built in late 1916, the Hindenburg Line—named by the British for the German commander in chief, Paul von Hindenburg; it was known to the Germans as the Siegfried Line—was a heavily fortified zone running several miles behind the active front between the north coast of France and Verdun, near the border of France and Belgium. By September 1918, the formidable system consisted of six defensive lines, forming a zone some 6,000 yards deep, ribbed with lengths of barbed wire and dotted with concrete emplacements, or firing positions. Though the entire line was heavily fortified, its southern part was most vulnerable to attack, as it included the St. Quentin Canal and was not out of sight from artillery observation by the enemy. Also, the whole system was laid out linearly, as opposed to newer constructions that had adapted to more recent developments in firepower and were built with scattered "strong points" laid out like a checkerboard to enhance the intensity of artillery fire.
The Allies would use these vulnerabilities to their advantage, concentrating all the force built up during their so-called "Hundred Days Offensive"—kicked off on August 8, 1918, with a decisive victory at Amiens, France—against the Hindenburg Line in late September. Australian, British, French and American forces participated in the attack on the line, which began with the marathon bombardment, using 1,637 guns along a 10,000-yard-long front. In the last 24 hours the British artillery fired a record 945,052 shells. After capturing the St. Quentin Canal with a creeping barrage of fire—126 shells for each 500 yards of German trench over an eight-hour period—the Allies were able to successfully breach the Hindenburg Line on September 29.
The offensive was driven ahead by Australian and U.S. troops, who attacked the heavily fortified town of Bellicourt with tank, aircraft and artillery support. After four days of battle, with heavy losses on both sides, the Germans were forced to retreat. With Kaiser Wilhelm II pressured by the military into accepting governmental reform and Germany’s ally, Bulgaria, suing for an armistice by the end of September, the Central Powers were in disarray on the battlefield as well as the home front. The Allies, meanwhile, pressed their advantage on the Western Front throughout the following month, which would, against their predictions, turn out to be the final month of World War I.
This Week in History, Sep 29 - Oct 5
- Sep 29, 1918
- Allied forces break through the Hindenburg Line
- Sep 30, 1918
- Turks abandon Damascus as Allies approach
- Oct 01, 1918
- Crisis in Germany
- Oct 02, 1919
- U.S President Woodrow Wilson suffers massive stroke
- Oct 03, 1917
- War Revenue Act passed in U.S.
- Oct 04, 1918
- Germany telegraphs President Wilson seeking armistice
- Oct 05, 1915
- Britain and France commit troops to operation in Salonika, Greece
More on History.com
- Sep 29, 1939: Nazis and communists divvy up Poland (This Day in History)
- The Hottest Day on Earth, 100 Years Ago (History in the Headlines)
- Sep 29, 1942: JFK thanks Clare Booth Luce for good-luck coin (This Day in History)
- Sep 29, 1780: British spy sentenced to death (This Day in History)
- Sep 29, 1913: Inventor Rudolf Diesel vanishes (This Day in History)
- Entire Army Sacrificed in Denmark Returns to the Surface (History in the Headlines)
From Around the Web
- History's Most Infamous Executions (Learnist)
- The Hitler Pictures That Hitler Wanted Destroyed (Tablet Magazine)
- Israeli Strike Failed to Destroy Troublesome Missiles (Tablet Magazine)
- Israeli compassion amidst the atrocities (Times Of Israel)
- Famous Soldiers Killed in Battle (Learnist)
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