Originally posted by Shuckins
...of the Battle of the Somme; July 1 through November 18, 1916.
I ran across that bit of information, and thought it bore repeating.
It holds the distinction of being one of the bloodiest battles in history, and holds the record for number of casualties suffered in a single day.
On the first day of this offensive, the British suffered 58,000 casualties, about half of which were deaths.
By the time the Somme Offensive ended in November, the BEF had suffered 420,000 casualties, the French 200,000, and the Germans 500,000.
Casualties so horrendous they stagger the imagination.
THAT was a war.
Back about 1980 when I was in college, I worked in a Nursing home. One of the old gents was English, having moved to the states when his daughter did. He'd gone over the top on the first day of the Somme and had the scars from his wounds to prove it. I ended up spending a semester in England going to school and was able to check his story at the IWM.
Anyway, I was with him on the anniversary of the opening day of the Somme. It was a powerful moment to see him break down into tears as he thought about what he'd witnessed and been a part of.
Seems like I recall the British were lead over the top by an officer kicking a soccer ball and that the ball is in a museum somewhere.