Haig
'Good-morning; good-morning!' the General said When we met him last week on our way to the line. Now the soldiers he smiled at are most of 'em dead, And we're cursing his staff for incompetent swine. 'He's a cheery old card,' grunted Harry to Jack As they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack. But he did for them both by his plan of attack. Siegfried Sassoon
Haig and The Somme
Haig was unperturbed by the losses on the Somme,
despite Churchill’s criticism, and even though he lost the support of Lloyd
George. Haig had the
confidence of the king, and there was no-one to replace him.
Even so, he felt the need to defend himself.
In December he reported to the Cabinet what he claimed the battle
had achieved:
Source
A
The
Effects of the Battle of the Somme, according to General Haig A
considerable portion of the German soldiers are now practically beaten
men, ready to surrender if they could, thoroughly tired of the war and
expecting nothing but defeat.
It is true that the amount of ground we have gained is not great.
That s nothing. We
have proved our ability to force the enemy out of strong defensive
positions and to defeat him.
The German casualties have been greater than ours. Part of a report written in December 1916, sent by Haig to the British Cabinet
about the aftermath of the Battle of the Somme.
T
It
can be argued that, although not defeated at the Battle of the Somme, the
Germans from that moment on knew they could not win the war.
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Links
Generals in general... John Terraine (summary) Lions led by Donkeys? - Learning Curve exercise
Comments on Haig: Shot at Dawn - a collection of anti-Haig statements.
Interpretations of Haig - a historiography Butcher of the Somme? - a school assignment full of ideas and information. Mud Blood and Poppycock - quotes from G Corrigan (2004) Dr Dan Todman - analyses tactics, arguing there was a 'learning curve' for the British Army.
Youtube Douglas Scott, Field Marshal's grandson, defends his grandfather's posthumous reputation.
Powerpoints Mr Harrison's guide to the Haig validity question - ppt. / swf. Mr Huggins' presentation on Haig for the OCR exam - ppt. / swf.
Source Documents
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Task
Study Source A. How valid is this interpretation of the importance of the Battle of the Somme? Use the
source and knowledge from your studies to explain your answer.
Click
here
for help to
answer this question.
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After the Disaster
In January 1917, it seemed as though Haig had learned from his mistakes – he wrote to the French General Nivelle to tell him that he would never again get trapped in a long battle as he had at the Somme. It was not to be – in the summer of 1917 the French troops mutinied: if the Germans attacked the French army the whole line would collapse. To protect the French, Haig launched an attack at Passchendaele. It lasted 5 months (July to November 1917); if anything, it was worse than the Somme. But Haig was getting wiser – he let Gough, the commander of the British Fourth Army, take the blame for the losses and, after the battle was ended, removed him from his command.
In March 1918, the
German army launched an all-out offensive, using a new strategy – which
they called
Blitzkrieg – in a last-ditch attempt to win the war before the
Americans came to Europe. At
first it was a success. The
British Army, which bore most of the attack, lost 160,000 casualties in 16
days, the French lost 77,000. On
24th March 1918 the French General Pétain warned Haig that he
was about to abandon the front and retreat.
Haig knew that this
would lose the war. He
telegraphed the British government in London to insist that ‘General
Foch be given supreme control [because] I knew that Foch was a man of
great courage’ – Haig gave away his command to save the war.
Then he sent his famous Order of the Day (11th
April 1918) commanding his army to ‘hold on where it stood’.
He made the correct
decision. Foch did not
retreat. The German
advance was halted. Then,
in August, Foch announced that ‘the moment has come to attack’.
On 8 August 1918,
the British attacked again across the fields of the Somme.
But this time, their attack was a surprise.
And it was successful. In
September Allied forces broke the Hindenburg Line, and on 11th
November 1918, the Germans asked for a ceasefire: the ‘Armistice’.
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Did You Know?At the
beginning of the war Haig said: ‘The machine gun is a much overrated
weapon. Haig
believed that cavalry would win the Battle of the Somme, and was angry
when Rawlinson did not send them into battle. Towards the end of 1916, Haig
issued orders that more officers should be executed for cowardice to
strengthen the 'fighting spirit' of his troops
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Verdicts on Haig
Haig had won, as he
had said he could, but did he deserve any credit?
Many writers -
including those writing just after the war - have criticised Haig for
his tactics, for the great loss of men and, above all, for his defeat at
the Battle of the Somme. Others, mainly
military men and recent historians, have defended him,
saying that he did as well as could be expected, and
that only a man of great determination and character could have seen the
matter through. After the war, Haig
was given £100,000 and made an Earl, but he was given no important job to
do. He spent the rest
of life raising money for the men wounded in the war.
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The play Oh! What a Lovely War, made into a film in 1969, satirises the playful way people went to war, and the horror it became. The show contains many of the songs people sang at the time. It portrays Haig as joyfully selling tickets to the slaughter. EKG Sixsmith comments: 'the play may be good entertainment, but it cannot be regarded as even a good caricature of Haig'.
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Source
C
Haig’s
own views on the Somme and trench warfare i)
The nation must be taught to bear losses.
No amount of skill on the part of the higher commanders, no
training, however good, on the part of the officers and men, no
superiority of arms and ammunition, however great, will enable victories
to be won without the sacrifice of men’s lives.
The nation must be prepared to see heavy casualty lists. Written
by Haig in June 1916, before the Battle of the Somme. Question:
would we stand for this sort of statement today from a commander who had
lost 56,000 men in a single day – compare it to our approach to modern
campaigns like the Gulf War and Afghanistan. Source
D
Field
Marshall Haig as a military commander Silent,
humourless and reserved, Haig was also shrewd and ambitious and had
great self-confidence. Perhaps
his greatest failing was his constant, often misplaced, optimism, which
seemed to stem from his belief that he had been chosen by God to serve
his country. It was
probably this inability to recognise defeat that led to his continuing
attacks on the Somme and Passchendaele. Written
by the modern historian, Anthony Livesey, Great Battles of World War
I (1989). Note:
this is a dreadful piece of writing – notice how the writer drives on
through a series of questionable 'seems' and ‘possiblys’ to his
utterly questionable conclusion.
Source
G
A
modern assessment of Haig – was he totally at fault? Blaming
Haig the individual for the failings of the British war effort is
putting too much of a burden of guilt on one man.
Haig was the product of his time, of his upbringing, education,
training and previous, military experience.
One argument goes that he was, ultimately, victorious and, even
if he had been replaced, would there have been anyone better for the
job? Even on the
Somme a German officer called the battlefield ‘the muddy grave of the
German army’. This
was the same battle in which Haig’s numerous mistakes contributed to
the half a million casualties suffered by the Allies. From an
article in the magazine Hindsight, by S Warburton (April 1998) Question:
Warburton argues that Haig’s actions were simply ‘a product of his
education and experience’, and that he won in the end – does that
make the millions of casualties alright, then?
Source HA
modern satire on the war
The
comedy series Blackadder Goes Forth continually portrayed Haig as
a fool and a murderer. In
this scene, Blackadder tried to persuade Haig to get him out of the Big
Push, while Haig (played by Geoffrey Palmer) plays war games with toy
soldiers: Blackadder:
(winds the telephone) Hello? Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, please. (Haig
picks up and is looking over a model of the battlefield.) Blackadder:
Hello, Sir Douglas. Haig:
Good lord! Blacky! (knocks down an entire line of model soldiers) Blackadder:
Yes, sir. Haig:
I haven't seen you since... (knocks down the second line of model
soldiers on the same side) Blackadder:
'92, sir -- Mboto Gorge. And do you remember...? Haig:
My god, yes. You saved my damn life that day, Blacky. Blackadder:
Well, exactly, sir. And do you remember then that you said that if I was
ever in real trouble and I really needed a favour that I was to call you
and you'd do everything you could to help me? Haig:
(sweeps the fallen soldier models into a dustpan) Yes, yes, I do, and I
stick by it. You know me -- not a man to change my mind. Blackadder:
No -- we've noticed that. Haig:
So what do you want? Spit it out, man. (hurls the dead platoon over his
shoulder) Blackadder:
Well, you see, sir, it's the Big Push today, and I'm not all that keen
to go over the top. Black-Adder-
Series 4, Episode 6 Question: this is utter fiction. Blackadder never existed, Mboto Gorge never happened. In real life Haig would have court-martialled Blackadder for even making the call. So can this scene be of ANY use to an historian? |
Task
Read Sources A to H. John Keegan, a modern military historian, suggests that Haig was an 'efficient and highly skilled soldier who did much to lead Britain to victory in the First World War'. Is there sufficient evidence in Sources A to H to support this interpretation?
Use the sources and your
knowledge to explain your answer.
Click
here
for help to
answer this question.
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