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‘With the Canadians in the Great Battle’, 1918 (b/w photo)

IMAGE number
NAM5921952
Image title
‘With the Canadians in the Great Battle’, 1918 (b/w photo)
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Artist
Unknown photographer, (20th century)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
black and white photograph
Date
1918 AD (C20th AD)
Image description

‘With the Canadians in the Great Battle’, 1918. Photograph, World War One, Western Front (1914-1918), 1918. Canadian soldiers escort German prisoners through a communication trench. On 8 August 1918 General Rawlinson's Fourth Army, spearheaded by the Australian and the Canadian Corps, attacked at Amiens. Rawlinson used over 2,000 guns, 450 tanks and 1,900 aeroplanes to support the attack by 13 divisions. Through careful preparations, the Allies achieved complete surprise. Their tanks broke through the German lines and sowed panic in the rear. The battle illustrated that the British had perfected how to combine infantry, artillery, tanks and aircraft in a co-ordinated attack. The German front was broken. A 24 kilometres (15 miles) long gap had been punched in the German line south of the Somme by the end of the advance. The Fourth Army took 13,000 prisoners and over 300 guns. Total German losses were estimated to be 30,000 on 8 August while the Allies suffered about 6,500 killed, wounded and missing. From a collection of 164 British, French and Belgian official photographs.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
battle / prisoner of war / soldier / prisoner / communications / trench / Fortification / Photograph / Photography / Mzphoto
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Copyright status
No Additional Copyright
Largest available format 4881 × 3573 px 16 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 4881 × 3573 px 413 × 303 mm 16.0 MB
Medium 1024 × 750 px 87 × 64 mm 1.1 MB

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