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Anzac Day.

2K views 11 replies 7 participants last post by  Owen49 
#1 ·
Well gents Anzac Day is just around the corner (Wednesday) My Daughter and I will be up early for the Dawn Service and giving our respect.


 
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#5 ·
100 years on, lest we forget

Villers Bretonneux The End of the German Advance, 1918



The Battle in Brief

On 21 March 1918, reinforced with divisions from the Eastern Front, the Germans launched a great offensive against the British forces which withdrew across the 1916 Somme battlefield towards the major city of Amiens. The Australian units were hurried south to help hold back the German advance north of the Somme at Dernancourt and Morlancourt. However German engineers had extended rail communications south of the Somme towards Villers-Bretonneux, close to the key city of Amiens. If the Germans could capture Villers-Bretonneux and reach the edge of a plateau, Amiens would be within range of their artillery.
On 4 April 1918, Australian units helped the British defend Villers-Bretonneux. The Germans attacked from the north east forcing the British out of the village of Le Hamel. An Australian battalion had to swing back to avoid being enveloped but the German advance was stopped by British cavalry working with Australian infantry. In the afternoon, the Australians withdrew to the outskirts of Villers-Bretonneux but at the crucial moment, the Australian 36th Battalion (New South Wales) dashed forward in a spectacular charge. Supported by other British and Australian infantry, and later by British cavalry, the 36th threw the Germans back to old trenches nearly two kilometres from the town, stabilising the line.
On 24 April, British troops were defending Villers-Bretonneux. The Germans attacked at dawn, and with the aid of 13 tanks, which they were using for the first time, they captured the town. A British counter-attack commenced at 10 pm the same day led by Australians to the north and south. The Australian brigades enveloped Villers-Bretonneux and attempted to join forces to the east of the town. They were unable to join up in the dark and many Germans managed to escape. After dawn, the gap was gradually closed and Australians entered the town from the east and British from the north and west. Villers-Bretonneux was cleared of enemy troops on 25 April 1918, the third anniversary of the Anzac landing at Gallipoli. This action marked the effective end of the German offensive that had commenced so successfully more than a month earlier.
Communities in Australia helped Villers-Bretonneux to rebuild after the war, and the Australian National Memorial to those who fell in the conflict stands on the Villers-Bretonneux plateau. To this day, the people of the town annually observe Anzac Day, and the school in the village bears the simple message on the playground wall “Never forget Australia”.


Slideshow
The ruined buldings as seen from the window of the South Chateau, in the area that was recaptured by the 13th and 15th Brigades (AWM E02154).





 
#8 ·




My wife bought me one of these Remembrance- Resting On Reverse Arms Statue.
It is a 1 of 5000. It will be proudly displayed with my War Service Medals, my Daughters War Service Medals and my Fathers War Service Medals.i
 
#10 ·
Yes Mal Functions overseas at the moment doing 'trade deals' with the Brits, and Germans.
I wonder what he is offering up as bait for them to buy our prized goods.
Oh and he just happens to be attending the Anzac ceremony at Gallipoli
Meanwhile he's apologising for not holding the Banking enquiry two years ago,
an enquiry that Pauline Hanson has been pushing for for all that time.
As I have said before "Whose side are they on",
how can they stand in front of the cameras and talk so much crap.
Too bad we dont have a better alternative for the rulers of our country.

GUS
 
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