No 20-The 26th Division East of The Meuse Sep 1918
No 20-The 26th Division East of The Meuse Sep 1918
No 20-The 26th Division East of The Meuse Sep 1918
by
Rexmond c. Cochrane
study Number 20
1960
The 26th Division East of the Muae
Prepared by
with
U.S. Army Chemical Corps
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history.
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Octobe:r. 1918
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Yankee Division 2
I
f "The Seicheprey affair" 9
i
l "This is the first time". 16
I "This sad affair" 19
I
;
The 1st Gas Regiment Fires a Mission. 25
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"Evel'ything came through as planned" 31
Gas Exhaustion 46
Battle Casualties 65
Gas Casualties 67
Le-ssons Learned
Map No. l st. Mihiel Salient, Boucq Sector 8
Map No. 2 Gas for Raid on Camp du Moulin, 31 May 1918 23
Map No. 3 V Corps Sector, St Mihiel Salient 33
Map No. 4 Amlle-Al!~tU~ng .; , Situation l,up, 11 and 13
Sep 1918. 37
eutfit, sup..rior t the 42nd and even the vaunted 1st Division, it found
n5 favor with Pershing and his staff, possibly because it was a National
Guard diviiln and had an argumentative, independent-minded colIIJl8.nder
in General Edwardiv !he division was destined to spend mo~e time in
quiet settor1, and at gr*'iter cost, than any division in the AEF
sible mistake that could be made in the use of gas. The Fl'ench were
genel"GUS and gave the division cenaiderably gas armm.inition, most of it
odd lt.s of cyanic and lachrymatory $hells that when fired served larg~
Thd Pl'eaent stUQy spans the career of the 26th D1Y1s1on in France,
concentrating on the gas ephOd.es that did so much to nullify the ertginal
splelldid pz,efDise of the division.
- l -
fbe 26th (Yankee) D1v1a1on was activated on 22 Auguet 1917 under the
co11111and of Maj. Gen. Clarence R Edwards, who had seen service in the
Philippines and had late:r been in command of the Panama Canal zone. His
division was ha,tily organized from National Guard units throughout New
England, assembled in se'Ven cities in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and
Rhode Island. Two weeks after activation, under War Department pressure
to get token trP1 to France, the division wa~ on its way overseas
Brig. Gen. William L. Lassiter, and machine gun, engineer, signal, medical,
and supply components. Hardly a single officer that sailed with the division,
including its eo111nander, was to return with it. Some were lost in combat,
more to harassment by highe~ headquarters, but most were casualties of the
hurried build- up of the American Army in France. In ten months overseas
the 51st FA 13:t'igade, for example, had six commanders, and regimental and
battalion connanders in the infantry seem to have been replaced as often.
It happened in other divisions, of course, but in none with more serious ef-
fects on ~1Rri1 SI. corps than in the 26th.
By the end of October 1917 the units that had landed in England and
France were collected near Neufchateau in the Vosges and set to work con-
structing an AEF training center. They were in uniform, had rifles, and a
- 2 -
credit for six millien dollars to buy the rest of their eqUipment and sup...
plies, their trench artillry, 1nechine guns, animal and motair transporta-
r.hile O.neral Edwards toured the British front near Cambrai to learn
~hw they used gas, laJ"ge calibe~s and barrages niade raids fand every
night gave the Ge:rmane] a bit of chemical barrage,n his .Engineers built
ba~racka for tha 42nd Divi,in, then on t.he high saa!, hia quartermaster
gtaff screunged trucks from the French and toured Paris, Nancy, and !eul
buying up supplies a~d materi&l, and the rest of the division, when it
wasn't n WON. details:, bt9e,n training and attending the infantry apecial-
1
ty school.s f the A.EF recently established at Gondrecourt and l..1ngres
r
Gas training w~s not b~gQn until 10 December when a shipment of 25~000 ''
small .box re~pil"cd;.or~ (sm) ~nd 6,000 M- 2 masks was received and distribut-
eu .. w:..-c;h ii..s hancinJJ. r:.i qUB.ii::1ed gas otn.cers, tne d1.v1s1on trained the
Se:rv:icc found gas defone.e training fn;.idequat.e and neglected, end the next
month Capte 1'horuais J.., Ctit.ler came in at. Divhian GM Officer, replacing 2nd
Lt. ilowm,an. Still it w.as l.ate May 1918 before all units cempleted the test-
2
ing ~t th,eir rna.1,ks 111 ib~ gas chamber.
_,----.,~m~=,-,---
1
Har.ey J.. .. Be0w1tll, .tl!_i:t!-~L-~!. .,J}}!J=Yan.!s!!!..J2.!Y,!eion (Boston= Cornhill, 1919),
pp. 33 - 7,
2
Ltr, 2nd I.t !. :;. Bowraan DGO 26th D:i:.v t() C of Gas serv 1 13 Dec 1917, sub:
Rpt; Ltr, C f Gas Sero, te Ct1fS AEF} 17 Feb, sub: Condition of gas defense in
?6th Div (AF~F GHQ G - 3 R.ph 13(,,:,c 3lq2) fol 1567); Ltr, Capt Gutler DG0 26th
Ct.lv -t~ G - 1 XXXI1 F.t' Ctr.pi,, 31 ,1,tay, sub: Gas Chamber {both in 26th Div Bex
. "" >, ._,f: C J ")
')"r,
.1
- .. ...
,:;
In January 1918, on Petain's Ul"gent plea to Pershing, the preliminary,
training f the diYisien was cut short and it wa~ as,igned t~ de Maud'huy'S
XI French Corpe (Duchesne'e Sixth Army) on the Chemin des Dames front, north
tf the Aiene~ At frightful cst the French under Nivelle had taken th@ Chemin
du Damee from the Germans the previc.us October. Ctit of sheer exhaustion and
depletion on beth sides it had been a q0iet sector since that time but
,erieusly undermanned en the French side.
S thin were the French ranks that on arrival the twelve battalions of
the 26th Division were spread across a 30- kil'1eter front. As companies
the Chemin de:5 r:::ames platea1J, the balance of their battalions occupied the
great quarries er caves along the edge of the crown of the Chemin de~
Dames. 3
The division went intc the Aisne line on 6 February and remained until
':P March, making occasional raids with their French in5tructors, learning
trench warfare routine, but ffering no more provocation to the enemy ti'an
the French permitted. French headquarters spoke glowingly of the training
and readiru~s, of the 26th Divhion t:raops, saying they had made "'very much
better P.ra9l"e:5s" than the 42nd Divhion and were "almost better11 than the 1st
3
FO l, 26th Div, 3 Feb (26th Div Box 13, 32.1); Benwell, pp. 60 - 1.
- 4 -
Divltien.4 To de ~ud 'huy, their only fault that they were wtoo much
'MU
5
prepared fer attack,~ rather than for trench life.
gas pe1an1ng.6 His aubsequent m~mgry of another 250 gas cases still
fell far shgJ:'t of the !,'.'Obable true total~
that the dugeuts and caves in th& sectr ffered little pl"Otectien against
gas, b~-t th~ ~n were lal'gely at fault for nt wearing their masks at the
ale,rl ._pes1t1en. All had ~lled the gas before they could mask and were
theref~re crtain they were ca,ualtieg. The regimental medical officer
wh saw the men said they "were suturing from suggestin rather thai'1
frem the ttf'fect, of ene,;ny gai, shell.! .. "Ir, spite f large numbers who
r~ported, net. ene m~n sh~d any ~ign of gas intoxicatior, after his mental
7
a.mr:lety had been al::ayec!," All were returned to duty the next daY
Shortly bef~re the relief ~f th~ division the Gel'lnans put over a
gae ber:tbardment that was sairl to have lasted thirty ... six hours. In a
5.....-------
Ltr, CG Xl Fr Ccrpe t CG 26th Div, 11 Feb {26th Div Box 192, 320) ..
6
Benwell, p, ~4,.
7
Lt.r, OCO 26th Div to CG 26th [dv, 10 Ma!', sub: Rpt of Insp~tion1 1st
Ind, MO 104th Inf t CO 104th Inf, l? Mar; 5th Ind., CO 104th Inf to CG
26th Div, 19 Mar (26th Div Bh 249, fol 5),
- ti -
splendid centradictin, an hietorian f the event said that the gas dis-
8
cipline was so gd the diviain had nly 250 casualtie1." This may have
been the fifth gas attack reperted by Spencer -- the four in February and
early March accounted fr 7 gas casualties --when appreximately l~,000
phosgene, diphesgene, chlrine, mustard gas, and xylxl bromide (tear gas)
shells were said to have fallen during the night of 16 March along a frent
held by the French that included a battalion ef the 102nd Infantry. Failure
to- reugnizt the nature of the bmbardment and delay in masking :r-esulted,
said the Regimental Gas Officer, in at lea!t 155 casualties in the 102nd.
9
and wer 100 - - an entire cempany - - among the French.
cv~ 100 killed and wounded and almest 500 gas casualties in March, 446
f the gas cases 1n the 102nd Infantryv Ihat m~re is not kncwn of this
attack may be ewing tt the fact that the evacuation of wounded land gas-
sedj to the rear [in this sector] was not entirely sati~factory. some
wounded were l'!Vacuated witheut the knowledge af the medical officers
because they were sent directly through the French [aid] stations and all
10
the reP-xts went t the F~ench autOsrities, who did not inform u,.~
9
Ltr, RGO and Regtl SUrg, 102nd Inf t CO 102nd Inf, 19 Mar, sub: Gas
Casualties, with atchd deca (26th Div B9x 44, 33~6); Spencer, "History f
Gao Attack upon the AEF" (15 Fob 1928), II, 189 - 9!:>,
10
Analyois, P 65Ltr, Rogt SUrg 101st Inf to Div Surg 26th Div, 28
Mui sub: P.relim rpt 1n aecerd with Ci;rc Ltr !>6 (26th Div Box 40, 43.a).
- 6 -
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~A its relief in the Aisne sector, the division was on its way te
an AEF training area, carrying out maneuver, on the march, when it was de-
the nrth.u
erders were changed nine times before it !ettled in the Toul sector -- on
the morning ef l APril the 26U, D:tv:i.._sion completed the relief of the 1st
Divisien brigade and its adjat,;ent French unit along a 15- ki1111Deter fNnt
from APref'Dnt. to Flirey. Though 1st Divhhn records sajc} t.he relief was
least 6') gas caeualtiea ,u1cng the departing 1st Divisin trops, and at
1
leaet one Ill.in f the 26th ilfas se-en ga!sed He had no ma!lk. 2
Apr,einant, th" 10:3:.-d he1d the X!.vray frnt, the 101st. was deplyed above
Bam.bucaurt ~ and the 102nd CO"Ve,red Seic.hprey snJ the Beh de Remieres
(Map Ne. l). Facing the 26+.h D1viin in the trenches at the fHt f
rr- . .---""--
Fo 2, 2bth Div, 8 Mar; FO l3t 1900, 29 Mar; fO 15, 2200, 31 Mar.
12
See Study Ne. 9, "The lit Divhhn at An.sauville," pp .. 45 - 6.
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(
e
forces~ Ment Sec and the heights f the Meuse. This Ge:rman unit came int
A
the W.evre - C etes de Mtuee aeetr in September 1914 and was still there in
SepteMber 1918, when 1t was driven nerth during the st. Mihiel attack. 13
Except for d.tily HE fire averaging 500 shell~, with a few gas rounds
mixed in, and all fit 1eemingly echeduled at mealtime, the !ector was
raported as fairly quiet fer 1.veral week!. Nevertheless, the Germans
frni thei:r e:uperhr podtions created a diversin at lent ont;e a week,
either bembe.rding: one r mere of the towns in the 26th Division sectr
14
or MIiking a m.ino.r raid en t~e outpo1ts French rders kept large numbers
cf men in these sacrif'ici, po~ithns in f.rnt of the trenche~ and denied re-
enfercaments t thtOI in the event fan at~ack~ They made inviting target,.
In the third week, t~ough the divi$1on received warnings that a major
enemy raid MIi bre~ingt when it came it had all the frce and effectiveness
wa! relieving the ~~rd &ttalion n 'the night of 19 - 20 April when the pre-
lhe f!ol'lftlRY bemh.:i.rdment ~gan .:it 0300 on 7.0 April and shortly after
dawn, under C$V"1" of a l,eavy mi.st, a German force of ~bout 1,800, a special
13'
PP
14
C!'~ Memo (asked far fl:, Ch in-C), Col Fox Ccnnor G - 3 AEF fo1: CofS AEF,
16 Spr, sub~ 26th Div Affair C!f APr 12th (26th Div Box 25, 33.6), concerning
poer d.i.e.c in 104th Inf du:":"in.9 an enemy raid on S.is Brule. See msgs, 104th
!nf, 1J APr (26th Divs., 50, 32-16).
- 9 A
storm battalien of twe cmpanies leading the way~ fell upon Company C f
the 102nd Infantry eettling into the trenches befol'e Seicht2Prey and after
a short, vicie1.11 fight captured pract1c:ally the whole unit.
even the Germans themaelves, who had intended it only "to keep the enemy
26th Division 'Ml:S never to live down this episode, though explanations
General Edwards insisted that the capture of the ~ompany could not
have been avoided since they "had definite orders that their mis.don
was warning and sacrifice [and] resistance to the last was demanded.
he dld not eay 'they tlad Deen ta.ken by surprise~ rney were, even tnougn
the division had been warned just the week befOl"& by the French that the
Powerful raid, ... and thh fact was confi:rme<J be.fore the raid oi;curred. by
artillery 1ntelligenceol6
ran thE! forward Jlli.C:hine gun podUon, of the l02nd and swept through Seiche-
~----
Ora.er Ia 929~ 7 8 ~ , 18 A.pr, 5ub: Cherry Blossom (aPP~ to 40 -
Pa9 War Filu .Extracts, 78tb,,_,Jlg. giv, Geman Files Box 202)M
16
G = 3 Memo 1844/31, Staff of Passa3a for staff at E.oucq, 13 APr (26th
Div Box 12, 227); Opns Rpt 13, 51,t FA Brig, 17 Apr (26th Div Box 59,
33.6).
- 10 -
'
prey. In the 36-hour fire fight {or period of near panic) that followed
i
APert from gas officer reports, none of the many accounts of the
Se1cheprey affair mention that the hour and a half bombardment preceding
the raid consisted wholly of gas~ (Hence the gassed German artillerymano)
German rwcorda ehow that the reenforced artillery of the ~~
I
150 - rmi., and. 10- cl!I. blue and green cross shells (diphenylchloroa:rdne
I and phosgene) and 900 10-cmo yellow c.rcss !hells (mustard gas) on the
on 32 French and American batteriee that the Germans had located back of
maintain the gas screen, along with 42 1 000 HE shells and 6,000 trench
yr---
Benwell, PA 74; Ltr, CG 26th Div to CG I Corps 9 11 May, sub: Rpt on
atk, APr 20 - 21; Ltr, Col John H. Parker (CO 102nd Inf) to Editor,
].n{Jll)tr~ Journ,,,, '2P Feb 19'2!); Memo, G - 3 26th Div to GofS 26th Div,
17 Apr 1920, eubi Notes on Seichepxey Raid (all 1n 26th Div Box 25 1 33.6,
33, 7),
18
Rpt)l Fr Mil M:i!don atchd to 26th D.iv to CG 26th Div, 9 May, .:,ub:
SUm of Intel in regard to Enemy - Seicheprey affair (26th Div Box 25,
33,6); Wa:r Files Extract!!, l l i . ~ x , above.
- ll ,.,
mortar shells- 19
light ma.ch.ine guns, and destroyed ten more, in d fight that lasted little
more than an hour. Back in Sybille Trench the German force waited out the
20
Ltr, RGO 102nd Inf to COO 26th Div, 22 Apr, sub: Gas Casualties
atk of Apr 20 (26th Div Box 249, fol 7); Frank P. Sibley, .m.:!ih th@ '[;,nkH
~~~ (Boston: Little, Brollfl, 1919), p. 151; Spencer, II, 197 -
201. See also collection of 102nd Inf unit rpts in 26th Div Box 44, 33.6.
- 12 -
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sometime before noon Major Rau reached Seicheprey with the reserve
in Sybille Trench. A1 hia troops apPrOached the trench, the guns of the
69th French and 26th Diviaion5 that had been manned again after the gas
,'
attack opened fire en the trench and town, driving Major Rau 's forces
back to cover in SeichePJ"eY The shelling of the town continued for over
four hours before it could be stopped.. six men were wounded and two
machine guna were SIii.Shed by this fire. 22 something very like panic,
beginning with the gaa bombardment and maintained by the enemy's heavy
HE fire, seems to have prevailed throughout the sector all that daY
?.l APTll, with six ~onipanie!I of the '51st Brigade under Major John J.
Gallant and twe companies of the 69th French never got launched When
ona of tr,e companies failed t,J arrive ~t the hour for the .attack, Major
23
Gallant, on his own initiative, called it off.
21
A 26th Div 1na.p ot +he atk is in 26th Div Box 23, 32,l, and the Ge.i,nan
map of the atk, with rpt of the opn, in GFB 202
22
Msg, Rau to Parker CO 102nd, 1450, '20 APr, quoted in Ltr, CG 26th Div,
11 May, above; Ltr, Div Insp to CG 26th Div, 10 May, sub: Arty fire in
Seicheprey, '-Pr .20 (26th Div Box 25, 33.6). See also rpts in 26th Div
Box 45, 39.
23
FO :4a~ 26th Div, 1500, 2() Apr, ordered the atk; Hi,t of the 102nd
.:.nf, n.d. i P 14 (26th .Olv Box 41, 11.4); Sibley, pp 146 - 47.
- 13 -
As it happened, the enelly had withdrawn completely from the area the
previoue night, but Patrols had failed to find this cute About 1100 houre
on 21 APril the old position, were reoccupied and the killed and wounded
there evacuated The re,t of the day wae !Pent preparing court- martial
How low c1eualtle1 were eeams to have been more a matter of opinion
than of count. Fi9Uree for the gae and HE bombardment, the raid, and the
Edwarde in hie final report to I Corps said the killed, seriously wounded,
!leriously gassed~ arid missing did not exceed 210. G - 3 at the time t'e-
Sibley, in hie history of the divi8ion~ ~id 80 were killed and 554
were wounded, gassed, and C:ptured, or 634Q Pershing's note of the affair
Sibley, pu l48u Memo, Div Adj for CofS 26th Div, 2-0 May, n.5. (26th
Div Box 222, 704), indicates that a month 1.ter 37 members of the 102nd,
ir,cluding an office.?', were rptd for the first time as ml,ling in that
actione Cf. ht Ind~ Div Adj to CRO TAG, 14 Jun, ,ame file.
25
Ltr, CG 26th Div, 11 May, above; DOR, 26th Div~ 20 - 22 APl' (26th
Div Box 23, 32.l)o Gen Edward.a' first 20- page account, Rpt of Enemy
Raidu, 23 APr (26th Div Box 25, 33~8), said 58 were killed, 145 wounded,
and 226 c;ptlU:ed, or 429, with no ~ention of gas casualties"
- l4 -
'
in his memoi.i-3 said the raid cost 81 killed, 187 wounded, 214 gassed, and
5 officers and 182 men captured, a tot1l of 669. The largest total, 914,
waa attributed to Gener~l Edwards by another divieion historian who quoted
him ,a saying that 164 officers and men were killed in the fray, 600 gassed
and wounded, and l~O captured that day. 26
The Rag1mentl Ga! Officer count of 237 gas casu~lties in the infantry
and artillery during the raid h not supPorle<l J;,y Medic.-! Department sta-
tietics, which indicate that only 49 of the 184 gas cases that month
occurred on 20 - 21 APril, wit.h none in the artillery. 27 A hospital count
of casJalties is not possiDJe !inca hLiapital admiuion lists for that
period are missing in the records. It seems hirly certain howevel.' that
the raid coet well war 600 casualties, including over 200 gae cat:ualtie:s
~The taking c,f t.heee p.rieoner!I, .. a.id 1n AEF his.torian, ~put the
Americilr: Army in rathe.r unhvorabllif light at the time, and the German~
went long accounte with pictv:0! cf th:i., a.ff.air; tnd the wireless st.ition
29
neax Berlin t-.old all the world about it in bo.aetful tel"fll!."
27
An.alyd.,, p. 6~. The ec,u-i 15ource ~howe 65 kUJ.ed and 94 M)Unded in the
I l02rJl.i Inf on 20 - .21 AP?'
28
Wr .Filu Extr.icts, ~i,t.Jl.l'!, abovt;;; Mil Attache
.19:22, 111ub1 Atk on Seichep:reY (26th Div Box 12, 22~ 7).
29
_, Shipley Th.,-,Olae, Tht,J.:!:l.~2L.~~"1:.:. (New York; Dor~n, 1920), pp.
1
2 - 3. Thomae suggests that the 1st Oiv atk at Cantigny on 28 May wae made
to vlndicato the n.me of tht Ane,:-1.can Army.
- 15 -
After aevel'l.l hectic days, life in the sector returned to ite normal,,
nerve-wracking routine. G - 2 reported over 30,000 HE ~hells, 3 1 100 gas;'
and 1,050 .a!xed gas ard HE in April, &xclueive of the 20 April banbardments,
ov9r two-thil"dti of tbis fire in the first hlf of the montho Since G - 3
ment statistics for A.Pril showing 1-46 killea, 328 wounded, and 184 gassed.
With the 183 ,a?tured t Seicheprey, total caeumltiee came to 841. 30
Through moat of May fewer than 300 enemy shelle a day fell in the
diviaion secto~ and as in the latter part of April, G - 3 reported more
accident a 1 injuriee than shell casualtie.h Shell :fire resulted in a total
Own artillery were to coet the 26th Division an addition~! 409 gas casual-
the:~
31
IJOR, 26th Div, l - 30 May; SOI 30 - 60, l - 31 May, reported l0,105
HE, 339 gas, and 300 mixed ges and HE shells~
- 16 -
surprise. At 011, hours on 10 May, in heavy fog, 1,141 18-cm. projector
bombs containing over 2'.J tons of pho59ene exploded on the south slope of
Hill 322, woods of Aprerllont, and the trenches in the vicinity occupied by
Co~pany D of the 103rd. Infantry and its machine gun unit. Six men died
within five ainutee, 17 euccumbed later in the day, and 162 were evacuated
as &erious hospital cases- !he remains of the company were relieved that
night,
"This h, the first time," a staff report of the t\EF Gas Service was
to say, "'that an attack of this kind has been made upon a high position,
Ot1 the wholt:-, owing to the unusual character of the attack, the number
The SPeeo wt.tn which the C,erman pioneers set up this operation c'lnd
Gen,1:1n records shew. were .brought into the sector two days before, em-
placed norlhwes.t of APre"m0r;t the next night, and fired before the divisior:.
32
lt:t, Maj G. N. Lewis, A..-:tg C Dof Div, Gas Sen to Lt Col J. N. W
Sch:Jlz, Cias Se.rv F~oJ:)rel:i, 1..1 - 4 GHQ .:&.EF, 2C May, sub Recent Gas Atks
(26th Div Box 249, fnl 1).
- 17 ....
G - 3 reported at first that thP- attack had ')Ccurred ,3.t 052:> and was
to covel." u raid of tha 10th Goloda1, on th~ Jeft. The next day tha se-
follOW<i:~1 h.f ;:, h;,li hou:r of rtinen;,,e:de1 and artillery fire back of t.he gas-
sed area. The 26-t.'1 D.b,isicn fire had begun as .scheduled about 0500, and
in reta:::.1.ivt!on fi)r that~ ei,emy artillery opened up with gas and HE fire
at 0!:i:25,, 7his lat.t.er fire~ said G - 3, killed lO ,Ml"!. and wounded 12.
fr.e gas ~a:t.ualty c,:;.unt of 177 did not di$tin4uish between the projectfJ.r
~ ~4
attac.~ and the later i;,a~ fi:re~
th~n 300 prc,Jeo:;tiles had be,~n fired. Panicking in the sudden cloud of
J(,
{,'..J:i' :.:e.1; ri:!1,: :iut (' th;c!.r hoBt.k, anJ 1,vOuld .1,ot P:ii.. 'Jn masks 1 and knocked off ',.,
t.h.e m11c1b )f (',i!-i.e-r.t." Cffects of th~ cloud we:re f~1t downwind in the areas
in,; to ~~r1:-l the >c1tt;...d: t.hay e:xpeetfod. to follow be~ame C.:.".UalUes later in
l'he D.t'vis-Jo~) Ga.:.: Officer estimated 600 18- cmQ p:rojectiles in the at-
tack, and thc.tsht they had .been fired from the west edge of Bois Jura t about
---~-~----
34
20th f.d.v~ 9 - 1l May; Lt:.s, CG 52nd Brig to CG 26th Div, lO May,
i)(fl,
-.,.i.(v: $pedal situc,tior:, rpt No. ?.,H.:10. 4 (26th Div Box 37, 33 .. 6) .. Rpts
NoQ l ..'l:;J 3 il,;1Vc n.:it been found ..
- 18 ..
600 meters frJm the target area He confirmed the final total of 185
a kilometer back of Hill 322, Mo5t of the men, he said, had changed from
thei;r SBR to their M-2 mask sometime after the attack and almost all had
Early in May preparations began far the first large- scale r-aid made
by the division. M;:ij. James F. Hickey with 300 cf hi~ 101,t Inf~ntry bat-
talion began intensive training far in the rear, With detachments of the
10::>..nd and 103rd Machine Gun Battalions, special signal and engineer stc-
tions, and two sq1,1adrons of planes flying cover, he was to jump off just
Although no gas wr,~ called for in the infantry plan or order for the
36
raid, 151st Brigade headquarters ;,,pparently asked for 9.1s to the i:rma-
diate right and left of the box barrage that was to be put around Camp
35 -------
Lt.r, 000 to C of G..:s Sel"'J, 12 May, ::;ub: Rpt of Gas Atk (26th Div Box
,, '.?4S); Fl.pt on Ga~ Atk, RGO 103rd Inf, n.d.; Rpt on Gas Atk, CGO 26th Dlv,
n.J.; suppl Rpt on Gas Atk, RGO 103rd I~f n.d.; Ltr, RGO 101st Eng to I)G0,
3
11 May, sub: Gas Atk night of May 9 - 10, ;i.ptd an engineer gassed in a
working p.:1rty near the impact area (all r-pts in 26th Div Box 2.49, fol 7).
36
See pl<;1ns for raid d.:;.ted 7 and ?l ,.a:, (26th. Div Box 40, 33.e), and
FO :sA. 26th Div) l80(J, 22. M..1y.
- 19 -
;;
du Moulin. This Wl!S too near the point of attack, the <'rtillery commander,'
G4!ner11l Aultman aaid, but gas would be used to neutralize enemy machine
37
gun, and 111inm.,.rfer eut of the camp, from Lah.i.yville to Le Sac Sub-
Hquent ~idence stJgg .. ts either that Colonllll L9gan, coll'lll8.nder of the 101st
Infantry, and Maj1:1r Richy W'&re not informed of the gas plan Ol' that no one
du Moulin.
,ind engulfed the raiders. lbawere that it was gas or unwilling to admit
it, Major HicJr"'y was to say in his report that "U,e men -re bothel:'ed
considerably by the fumu from our ,hells, many men being rendered very
In the brief pas.age in the German trenches nnd catnp som& 40 GeJ:ff'<ans
m,iy havf! been killitd, moatly by the ngineers who bombed every enemy dug-
31 - -~. --
Ltr, CG 51st FA Brig to CG 5lat Brig, 23 May, sub; Plan of Raid! 51st
fA El.rig, Plar, of employ,nent for Coup de Main east of Richecourt, 28 May
(both in 26th Div Box 119, 33,8), Note1 Cpns Rpt 58, 51st FA Brig, 31
May (.!!,, 33,6) did not rpt any gas fired thnt day,
J8
Rpt of raid by 3N Bn, 101st Inf, n.d, (26th Div Box 40, 33.s).
- 20 -
'
,.,
',/.
out they came to. Few live Germans were seen since the enemy, warned of
the raid by the bombardment, had withdrawn most of his forces to the rear.
The raiders found little use for the stout clubs they had been issued,
and retut-ned with a single prisoner, a mere boy, and several machine
guns. Except for two men killed by their own grenades and fourteen
wounded by enemy shell fire, the raiders returned safely about an hour
after jumping off. 39
By noon that day nea:-ly every man in the party began to show signs
of having t,een mo~e or less seriously gassed. Early reports of the raid
glossed the gas incident. G - 3 said only that gas shells were inten-
sively uaM du:ring the whole of the operation," without saying who used
another 170 gas cases were accounted for by G - 3 and on 6 June a final
25, for a total of 234. 40
The Division Gai;, Officer's first report was eqtially vague, saying
that an unknown number of gas shells had resulted in 209 casualties in
the 101st Infantry, 103rd "'3 Battalion, and Engineer detachment. The
men had "run into the gas, smelling of new mown hay and a1m1onia, between
--------
39
Sibley, pp. 159 - 76.
40
Rpt of Ga& .Bombardmentt 31 May (26th Div Box 249, fol 4). Cf Ltrs,
Med Off, 101st Inf to Div Surg 26th Di'Y, 31 May and 2 Jun, sub: P.pts on
Raid (26th Div Box 40, 43,8),
- 21 -
Lahayville and Richecourt," the powder smoke of the artillery fire conceal-
ing the gae $Uffic1ently so that appa,rently none had masked. 41
Captain Cutler's report and map sent the next day to General Edwards
was more specific (Map No. 2). Without consulting him the artillery had
fired 1,660 7'-mm. and 155-mm. No. 5 phosgene shells into the Lahayville
area, the gassed area about 600 meters from the edge of the box barrage
area under attack. "This sad affair," he said, resulted from choosing a
target without watching wind direction and velocity. A seven mile per
hour wind from the northeast had swept the gas down on Richecourt, ex-
posing the men to the vapor fo~ the 30 to 45 minutes of the actiono cri
their return they had hiked almost four miles back to their trucks at
By evening all in the raiding party had been hospitalized and 209
of them showed sign~ of fairly severe phosgene poisoning. Five days
lat.er 231 men had been evacuated to base hosp:l.tals and the remainder of
the party was still sick in quarters. Over the next two weeks, five died
in the hospitalo The rest, said the Division Surgeon, seemed to be on the
road to recovery,, The leader of the raiders, Major Hickey, after more
than a month in the gas hospital, came out only to be 11tossed by a shell
41------
Rpt; of Gas Bombardment, 31 May (26th Div Box 249, fol 4) Cf Ltrs,
Med Off, 101st Inf to Div Surg 26th Div, 31 May and '2 .Jun, sub: Rpts on
8-id (26th Div Box 40, 43.8).
- 22 -
GAs ro~ R ... 10 ON CAMP o,u MouL1N
JI MA.)' 1,1~
-- -- i
/
,,/
'
/ ~-j'
I
I
i '\
I
MAP /VD, Z
23
shortly after his return," and had to be invalided out of the division. 42
asked for gas on the back areas, and even in Richecourt, whicf. was d.enied"
1t1 "that a 600 meter danger zone in the direction of the wind was all
that had to be seriously considered, and that gas would not penetrate
u
\..~-'-
-:, -
~....... , .. -~ ....... ,.,. .----
""I"-- _ ~ "
. _,..,l:t""
It ia a great lost.an~. ult is one of those .tnstances in this war where,
after everything is taken into consideration, I do not see that any person
or persons can ba held distinctive.ly culpable to such an e;(tent that purr-
itive measures in thi; great emergencr would be wise or necessa.1yo Briga-
dier Genera] Aultman l5lst f:'A Brigade convnander, y..Jlo had :replaced General
1.assiter three ~eeks before] comes to the ~ame c0~~lusion a~ I do, and it
has given him the greate.st regret and i::oncerno !hank the Lord the serious
casualties were few, and th~ others were slight.
'J. believe t;h~ l':'rro:r should be frankly confessed gr:d admitted among our-
""'f.!lves; that it sh::iuld 90 no farther, that advantage should be taken of
the &!lriously l~arned lesson, that it is water that has run under the
bddge 'that i:annot be 11tturned, and we ehould make the best of it in the
spl:,,:,it ot seH~ s8c:i-if1ce ar.d cl'.arity that prevails as one of the controlling
~~-----~--
Lt~, DG0 tj CG 26th Div, 1 Jun, subi Gas Casualties on Raid of 101st
Inf (26th Div Box 249, fol :i); .ttr, CO 101st Inf to CG 26th Div, 4 Jun,
sub: U"!ssing ~f 101st Inf (26th Div B0x 31, 61.l)i Ltr) Div Surg 26th
Div tc D:l.t.:1 Service de Sant~, XXXJI Gorps$ 14 ,.Am, sub; Rpt on Gas Atk,
M<1y 31 (Med ~pt Box 3586, fol 19); Sibley, p~ lQS; Spencer, II, 211, who
~:pts 236 cai::un.lties.
- 24 -
43
spirits of this division, and the incident should be closed ..
Aultman himself "confessed" that the gas order had been drafted in his
office. In putting gaa on La.hayville he had followed French doctrine as
republished for the AEF, and the XXXII French Corps artillery commander
had aipPrOved the plan as fired The doctrine, he said, was obviously
44
defective.
The error was alluded to, but no more, in the Gas Service Weekly
summary of Infol'fflation on 5 June, under the heading, 1Travel of Gas,"
But the incident, as might be expected, was soon well known throughout
the AEf, and was to strengthen the natural :reluctance of commanders to
45
use gas, ?S1"ticularly in an offensive op~ration.
44
Mo!mo, Lt Popp ~sst CGO l Corps for Capt Goss, 6 Jun, sub: Suppl Info
on Gaa Casualties in Raiding. Party (GAF - 26th Div); Ltr, CG 51st FA Brig
to CG 26th Div, 19 Jun, sub: Gas Poisoning (26th Div Box 59, 63).
45
CWS WSI S - 19, 5 Jun (l',!l Hist Box 298). Ltr, Mc.\ndrew Off of Cofs
GHQ A.EF to CofS I Corps, 12 Jun, sub: Dangerous Use of Gas (2nd Div Box
106, 470. 72), said mrne intdligent study of the use of gas and closer
liaison between g~s officers and their commanders was indicated.
- 25 -
51st Field Artillery Brigade co111Dander, General Aultman and General
was clo,ed~ A month later the French ord\ued a change in their artillery
manuala, increasing the margin of safety from 500 to 2,000 meters when
wind and terrain were unfavoJ'able and requiring the wearing of masks
unde.?' these condi t,ions~ 4 6
wounded, and 180 9a1s~, a total of 4860 Spencer reports nine gas at-
and ~31 gassed in June~ -:-'he latter figures incJ.ucie 2.45 gai;,i,,t,J !r.
Infar.try~ 92 in the 102ndi and. 120 in the 103rd, although nothing in the
47
division reeords 5UPPorlli so h\.gh a gas casualty total. Nothing, that
is, but G - 3 1 1 repeated 1epo:rts of "good rraany ga;:; shells used," conliide:r-
able percentage of gas shells," and "ga::. again used extensively, wi'th just
180 gas casualtit>o to support these remarks. The 26th D:\vision, with much
less access to gas than the enemy, replied as often as it coold, once in
con61darable quantities in areas wh~:r-e the long - .-ange gun [that ragula.rly
'4t>~-----...,,=
Spe:1:::ar, Il, 2141 G - 3 Meiao, A:rmia/S of the North and Northeast for
the Al:-mi.es, 3 July, trans.mitted to C of Gas S!:!rv AEF, 10 Jul (A.EF GHQ
G - 3 R~< Bvx 319J, fol 1583).
47
DC1t:, 26th Div~ 1 - 27 Jun; spencert II, 218 - 27; Analysis, p. 600
SCI (,1 - 86, l - 27 Jim, reveal a minimum of 24,000 HE and 3 1 500 gas
sha 11 ~ fh.ed ir,to the sectorq
e'
- .t:O ...
shelled division headquarters at BoucqJ was suspe~ted to be. The gun
wa& not ail.need until the 19th following an HE bombardment of Heudi-
48
States, haj reache<l F!"&nce in Ja11uarY 1918~ .After training with the
Special Brig,-,,de of British gas tr.oops up on the Ypres-Lens front dLll'-
der, livans projector, and Stokes mortar operations, the companies were
brought dorm a11a attached to F:t"en~h and American units in the line. In
late M<'t:, '.::ompany A was attad,ed to the 26th Division at Toul, company B
toe nearhy Frencn unit. rhe company waited on weather and opportunity.
4~-----
flC'.E, 2~th Div- 16 - 17 and l? - 2c Jun~
,.
Jury on two target, in the Bo! 1 de la Sonnard, where enemy troops were
believed holding in considerable force (see Map No. l). T~n minutes
after the discharge 26th Division artillery opened fire to hold down
retaliation fire, only to be outgunned by the Germans !flo for two hours
poured an estimated 9 1 000 gas and HE shells into the projector area, gun
The Division Ga$ Officer aaid that the reta'!liato.ry gassing began
L:rOs.s shells (phosgene), with a few blue and yellow cross, were put into
mi~d with ga~ continued to fall on these same areas intermittently through ~.',
the rest of the dayq
--~-
49
FO 43, 26th Div, 1622, 13 Jun, set up the projector opni History of
CWS AEF, FS.nt Gas R9gt, Q:>ns (H - 28, CMLHO); DOR, 26th Div, 18 - 20 Juna
!he gas t.roops may have planned to fire l,~00 drums, as many accts rpt,
but less than half that number were actually fired
50
Benwell, P~ SL
- 28 -
:i
The?'e is e sug91H,tior. in Capta1.n CutJ..ar~s :report that the 103rd
Infantry wa11 uwierved b7 this rrl;t.!lcb 3'Ji enemy gas preparation three
day: ~arlier 1!07:' anothe:t" '"Seieh,sp:l"ey,w and the fight that followed at
x1vray .... Ma.t-toi&in 1 had cost tla 103rd 28 killed, 167 wounded, and 47
g.used" After the gas shelling on t.h.e 19th, 172 man, most of them from
th~ lOOrd Infa.nt:ry, iA/iXO &r.b.itt!!-d to thia ffold hospital as gss suspect
b:reath.ed 1n. i~ g.:~ frcm th0 ur..bu:t'ia~ ~ leaking 100 - r.'Jn duds from
~l
Sunday~s bombet'clm.ftnt~~
flam~ reg1wmt, after mining with tha fhoitish, car:ded out minor gas
Ai, exploit~ As seems fairly cl8a.r, the shoot had been inadeqi.iately
51~-~"=--==~-
Rpt$ o! Xivray action; l6 Jun (26th .Civ Sox 47 33.6); lt.1., OGO to
CGO }COtI! Fr Co:ip.s, 22 Jun, sub: Rpt of Bomb,.1rdr~iit of Gas Shells (26th
Div &,< 249f fol 3), Ltr, cco tci C'G 26th Dit~ 22 Jun., aub! ~Pt of Gas
Atlc of ...,11.,;."1 19 {~~C;.tl. Div B:;;x 25, 3:;:,6)0 Not.tn The N'li!d Dept rvcord of
120 gae&ed i~i t,\,f::i .U:;::'d !nf on 16 - 19 Jun ii; probably corl:ect ..
- 29 -
le,en tho p:roJKto:r, and lllo:r'tar of the lst Gas Rogilll8nt later took
Mihiel, and ~ tbe. ' Meuiae-Argonne - - the f-.tar of higher con.ands of the
u,e of ga5 itself, ae well a& enemy reta:'11ation, restricted their fire
almost entirely to IJl'lloka and thermite, and precious little of that. Yhen
attached to attacking unit1, the heaVy, unwieldy mortars could not be
..nauver.d ovez m'Oken ten-a:!.n and nre soon left far behind the troops
they wer intend@d to ;,upporl. The iuortal'tll8n never trained with the
infeDtry they e.cvodf ad aa a 1"&i:oult got no helping hand, when better
front was to leu"Sl wvll 'the Uii116;!!. of t.htt mortar and in the end aPPrO-
f1-ont by the 82nd Division and the French unit it was to train with.
en~ July orders ca1n1t to reliwve the 2nd Divi~ion ~st of Chateau
Thier.ry and on 10 July the 26th took over the line above bloody Belleau
wood.s 2 Eight days later a6 the Fren~h Sixth Army began its counter-
offens:i.ve against the German .SEm~-~ in the Marne salient, the
52
FO 45, 26th Div, 2300, 23 Jun; FD 48, 0400, 5 Jul; FO ~o, 1330, 8 Jul.
- 30 -
~-,:,:"
''
.
' 1,900 of them to gas alone.
53
CK1 25 July the 42nd Divieion relieved the
26th in tht forest.
The division retraced its way back through the sector collecting it&
straggler& and missing in action. Several day& later it continued down
to the valley of the Meuse where it received repl~cements and rested and
ret~ained for ,c1l!nost a month. Here cont.:1.nued the reshuffling of the co~
mand that ble,gan when on 16 July General Trai1b of the 51st &igade ln
to take comnand of the 35th Division. Next, whc,lesaile drafts were made
t.:L.,(0:..-..;b w,.:;.:i high.'i.y voce:l and saem5 N have contested f!Very loss in his
'
' By lat~ Augus~, according to a division historian, the only people
l
in Fran<;~ who did not kr1ow of tht! coming ,":it. Mihiel offensive were the
55
div!5~.0ns involvedo tAl 27 Augu.st the 26th Division began moving .by
S~ptetnber 1 t ante red the l'ight side of the V Corps line ne.a1 Rupt -en-
,1
Study No. 4, "The 26th Divisi<'.in in the Alsne- Marne Campaign ...
54
FO 66. 26th Divi 1730, 29 Juli Sibley, pp. 243 - 50.
;: j:
''
... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ___________________________________________ --------------~~--'""""-~
'
r/C;jVlih batwean the 15th Colonial and 2nd Dismounted Cavalry Division,
,,_,.,
56
tha latt~=- in the !I Colonial Corps The 15th Colonial, with the 26th :;
and 4th Division, on either side, made up Cameron's V Corps for tho attack ,r,
57
~X,;;.;:; Ho~ 3). Opposite the 26th Division was the ).,2~~~- }
fo the 26th Division sector wooded heights ;rose from the Meuse in
~ 9:re1,1,',,: undulating ridge for some slx or s1.?ver1 kilometers before breaking
jc-wn. \.;"; ;.o thei t'loevre plain.. Through the woods ran the Grande TrancheQ
t::: wa~ pc.:.sibl5 to see eighty'- two towns in the plain, all in the hands
f.rc,m M;s f.Parges dow'1 through Vau:c les Palameix to Lacrois sur Meuse-
Th-;: :ro,co:-d:.; of the !llh,,kg1t in GFB 165 are meagre and useles;;.
- 32 - ,,
,,
,
,,'/
.::r
i !
'J:
.
'
'!,.t,. !
'
l.
I
The French held the hills to the north, the Germans the plains and roads
to the :south. It hat1 been this way for almo15t four years, and only the
had MOre than two brigades of artillery under its COJIIJland, including
batteries of 220'1, 270-mm.. howitzers, and 240-mm. trench mortars - -
with the 15th Colonial, the 26th Division assisting in that principal ef-
fol't Then the 15th Colonh l was to advance to th.e Longeau Farm- Hannon-
ville 1oad, the 26th Divi&ion to Hill 381 - Oommartin and an to a line
c.;onfo:rming with the 15th Colonial, marking the First Day's Objective
se-------
Rpt, A Study of the St .. Mihiel Salient, n.d., n. sig. (26th Div Box
12, 25.4)"
59
Conf held by Col Duncan K. Majer Jr~, Cofs 26th Div n.d. (26th Div
27~ 50.1); Sibley, PP 260 - 62.
60
fO 17, pt. 1, V '~orp1, n.d .. J FO 17, Pt. 2, 2400, 10 Sep (V Corps Box
J.4, 32.l); FO T;, 26th Div, 1330, 11 Sepv
- 34 -
In order 11 to blow '.\,he top off Les Eparges !.heights] and Combres"
The 26th Division, with the 104th, 103rd, and 101st Infantry in
line from north to south, mtide slow progress through the wired trench
system on it! front, and within an houx the two attack battalions of
- 35 "
Surprised because caught off balance by the attack that morning, the
enemy had fallen back more rapidly than Pershing had thought he would 0
By noon both cOTps on the $OUth face were on their First Day's Objective,
and by nightfall, despite the delay in moving the troops out again, they
were on their way to the Second Day's Objective as the enemy continued
to retreat {Map Noo 4).
63
FO 10, lat Army, 12 Sep (.!lA..l!Lw.Jl!i, lwashington, o.c., 1948]
V rII, 258 - 59).
- 36 -
~:,re~)i"""..-'.<~~a' '<,,,'-,o<. 'ff __ ,c ,.,,"., "'f\j "'7(;':it.0.!, ,. -~1 ' j '' -" C ~ - - - ~ C. . a..s '1\" ~"' ,-,.a..;.; r " ' '-' ,- ,;,rr#,- -~. /-' - - - ~ - ... - J 'JM- 'f'or';;;,W /ill~ fJ\rniff.Jt!7t<$p"( %
. . .
j,0
. . . . .. ..
"~
li()'"l!. , nr- 1:'\ ,Zi7"I" r-:,
_, s,
i---
---- -
'f:4ef, Iv, ~ k h , . rJ,. ~
(fp--o.,t,,-..,,~La.
~)
c..... /I .~\ ~cl'~-~'Jc
,/..,;, I 101. , SiTUATION MAP
Gr Orne s r/1" ~_:,,I m.Gl<do ml"' 11,o 13 SEP 13
.'-\_ l< rn ~
.,,.,.
l . ~J ..,.._
,,
325 ~./
I"''" 2%R. ~
.w. J
./'
,- ---.,
....._.
,.,; ~ , ./
13.l
. ..' _107,
I I~ (/ Mi;TZ
. .....
A:..
I ; '
l
. ',, .e,~
~"-
)j,.
; )\,."':,
1
Gr Comb':'"_e s, . . ,. .
, (VJ.
' '\'
3 L \_, 15".
:,;"" /x 192 Q;;;;:-; ',"-'of\ i
;.
Ku""
,,
~
~.~
/
./ _/
FC..
JL ,.,/
'.\l
I
,. : ~
1'2.3!;
/~
/17 f{.
I
l./7_) . '19t~, ~
. / "i\
'f,1':l':i.
/
u~s
~
!
...../.
Gr M e\z
daylight, Cameron replied that the 1e9iment hq.d long been on ite way
Cameron later said, "although tha 26th was .slc-w, as usual. Even so
our troops were in Vigneulles when the 1st Uivision came up and shelled
64
them, inflicting seve:ral casualties" In what w~y th!::! 26th was slow
was not explained, i'lnd no other :record of the shelling of the 26th
chat el about 0245 and VignetJlles, nine k! l ometexs from its starting
point, at 0315 on th.Q morning of the 13th.. ~ome five hours behind the
102nd came the lOlet Infa.nt.ry and twn hours fate1 the fixst accompany-
64-----
Di-aft Rpt, Cpns of the 26th Dlv at St .. Mihielt nod~ 1 n.1;,.; CG 26th
Div, Rpt of C,:,nsu st. Mihiel salinet, 7 Cct; Extract from Statement
of 1.'laj Gen Geo. H Cl"tmeron regarding march of 26th Div on night of
Sep 12, n~d. (all three in 26th Div BoY. 2~, 33.6)~
FG 78, 26th Div, Z300, 12 Sep, had the ~1st Brig marching down the
C'.>J.;.nd Tr.;,nch()e to Vigneulles, th~ 52nd Brig ever the .roads north of
the Tran<hee to st. Maurice and Ha.ttonchatel, the 51st FA-Brig following
the 51st lnf 13:tg, and the 101st M3 Bn alone in div reserve back on the
Vaux- St Remy road.
0
- '.38 -
--------------------------------------
Giiiil~~ fo-zct'i-. -.n.J (IJqU!~nt had q:,4,:apsd th:to-ugh the gap and was safe
in th~ Une O$lPQlliite the 26th foi:' the next ten d;sy1, when it woe l'e-
66
Plcod by the ,!QZ:l,!lJli.J/11'1<>J!
into thti lilichl Stll!lilung, lvaving ea,h town in the plain abl.az,e. as
tht,y &bia::1do11ad it, the 26tt, Division took ovei- from the 15th Colonial
the f:rorit f.ro11 Les EPArgas and Corab1u down to Thillot, putth,g Patrols
.:.n- W:06'\i~~eo st., Hi.lai~e was Orie-fly c,;<,uphd bvt P2,a.red too hot ar, out-
po&t to hc>ld 0
Thi& 2nd :Oiwrioui1cttd Cav~lry tock ovel' the adjacent iront,
1 Co~ps on the far l'ight, left for the Meuse -Argonne front and the 26th
_"H1:."!-~~~~~on tho_~"'~-act
,!~.;~'!~~~-_[~~~
Th! sector taken over ~t the end of the st. Mihiel operation, 9aid
a division historian~ w,e an ideal on, on the crown of a range of hills,
69
with the advanced posts in the towns out in the plain below. The 26th
JJivhion came to doubt it, aa did the divisions that succeeded the 26th
in the Troyon sector~ ~ile the division from the heights dominated the
terrain for mile3 around, the exposed towns in the plain below were ideal
targets for enemy gaa. Whether the Germans had also found them 10 under
French domination of the heights is not known
For ten days there was little activity, allied or enemy, as both
sides conaolidatd their po1iti0D1 The 26th Division made the first
move. As a diversion fox: the Meuse- Argonne attack ~ery division east
of the Mause wae ordered to feint with strong forces and pierce the
enemy lines, to m.k.e him think the main attack was to be launched on
Metz. The 26th D1vie1on was assigned the enemy towns of MarcheV"ille
and Riaville~ in the enemy's Michel Stellung. These were to be assaulted
gs------..-
Fo so, 26th Div, 0145, 16 Sep.
69
Benwell, P 164.
- 40 -
70
on the morning of 26 Septer~6':?' and helc1 for 24 hOUT5
p:rl!IP6:r$ti<;n fo:r th\il divm-aloo began at 2330 on th-, 25th, but for lack of
a.mrur:d.tion wat thin by ccmr,.:i.-hon with the thunder on the left. At 0530
hoJJl"~ a b1tttaHon nch of the l02nd ,r,nd 103rd Infantxy advanced with ita
rolling ~rrage, heading into A thick smoke screen put down in front of
the two townm~ Impeded by morning fog a.nd smoke screen, againist enemy
&e$ault t8ema of alm~t 1 1500 men each found the way acro11 the plain
71
cotly~ Conce~led machin~ gun; ripped th~m apart as they came th...---ough
th~ wire and trenche into the to'Nfla~ Marche'lille changed hands four
t111t11 that d&Y, Riaville at least twice.. At nightfall thf! teams re-
~ and a single captured raaehine gun. They had lost 50 killed, 268
72
wounded~ nd 59 mi1oing~
70-~~-,~--~--.. ,~---"--"
FO 82! 26th Divt 14DO, 25 s~p.
71
Rpt~ ~* O, 51st FA B::oig, n-d~, sub, Opn:: of Sop 26 (26th Div Box
59, 33~8), aaid th ~11 a=no allowanc~ had to b~ dietribut~d ClVer th~
whol111 f:ront 10 1u not to gi\'"q; 4WY the objective.
72
DOR, 26th Div, 26 - 27 SePi Lt!.-, CO 10111d !nf to CG 26th Div, 28 sep,
-iUb: Rpt of at.k 01:: i4a:rchtrvill~ ar.d Riav:Ul~H Ltr, CG 26th Div to CG II
Col Corp,, 29 S.P: ub,
Rpt on atk of Sep 26 (26th Div Box 2:5, 33.6)~
SOI 19 - 20t 2".:i - 27 Sep, rpt~ juet 9 pri:Jone::..:!!! taken.
- 41 -
~
,;
l'
"'' into the Ch.,mplon - Saul;( ector held by the 3rd Battalion, 103rd In-
fant:iy {Map. No. 5). With them were elements of the 102nd Infantry
and 103rd Ki Battalion that had bctcome separated from their organiza-
tions during the raids that morning. Disregarding the most elementary
rulea of gas discipline, $aid the Division Gas Officer, these troops
demontrated completely "how an organization should not act during a
gas attack. 'ft
The gae shells, with their high HE content, had been fired over a
six -hour period and the concentrction of mustard was therefore light.
In some cases the men weren't even ordered to mask, and in others
they were allowed to remove their masks within fifteen minutes of
the attacka Shortly afte~ the ga~ shells stOPPed falling, the Company
I kitchen, "in an atmosph~re of gas," served breakfast to its men and
several platoons of Company M. All the cooks and almost P!Very man they
served were later eVacuatedG
men in tht area had his maek on, even though the odor of mustard gas was
strong evl!rywhere~ Although the battalion had been issued lime and h.ad
- 42 -
-.,
-~
"
' GAS Al'"'fACKS
S f P1, 2.fr 17
A" 5 EPT. :Z~-lO
\"
''
'
chagrin, t.1*t it had b~en info%Vled the~e had been only 25 gas casualtis
ae a l'.!f1.ilt o::f the !ih11llin9, and had not !.earn.ad the true figure until
the Diviaion Gas O:ffier repo~t wo, fo.r.,,:arded to brigade for investiga-
73
C:i,,ipUnt!"
vf th0 102nd F'A , half mile north of St. Rl!'my~ Ev,e:n though tht men and
Ltr, DOO to CG ?frt.h Dlv~ 29 $~(', ;wb~ Rpt ot (";qi:; ~tk Night S,a,p 26 -
2"?, 29 Sep, a.00 at\~hcl in.:!z. (2.6t:i: ::iv 3.:..x 31v 6:,.~!); KGO :r-pta, nd (26th
Div Bo~ 248); Sp:.-n;::::ei'~ II, 240 - 41.
- 43 -
noticed and it was some hours later before the condition of the horses
was observed. Two had such bad mouth, eye, and body burns that they had
to be deet:royod while the remaining ten had to be evacua-ted during the
74
next week with aevere eye and body bUX'nt
The Divi~ion Ga.a Officer, Regimental Gas Officer, and all command-
r.i- --,--,'",,,,,.
spen~er, Il, 242 - 43.
- 44 -
75
known.
Once more the se,:tor aettled dc,wn, until 4 October when the division
A battery of 75 ' wa.1 b~ught down. from the heighte ths.t night and
followed by 180 HE 1helle, to catch any troops that might come into the
open. In the absence of ~er.man records it can only be said that German
ambulances were een later that day making ~oPeated trips into the woods
and town. 76
The 26th Division infantry had cleared the sector, making way for
th 79th Division, when on the night Df 9 - 10 C-i:.tober al! the town&
from Combres down to Ha.nnorr.1ille ar::d the hia-ights above them c.i.:ne under
a massive yellow crou bom.ba.::dti<ent~ Almost 200 men in the 79th Division
and another 2)0 in the 26th Division artills::y, still in the soctor,
~=,~-"'~"-=""'"''-'~""
Rpt quoted in Ltr, DGO to C CWS, 20 Nov~ $lib: Rpt on Recent Opna (26th
Div Box 25, 33,6); DOR, 26th Div, 29 - 30 SP Rpi;, DM:;O, l. Oct (Box 248),
said all ca.aes we:re body burna, none teen with conjunctiva.I o~ respiratory
le1iDn1; they'd kept thei~ masks on.
76
Ltr-, DGO 26th Div to C cws, 7 Oct, nub Use of Gas againist the Enemy
(26th Div Box 249, fol 3); DCl<, 26th Div, 5 - 6 Oct,
- 45 .
were evacuated the next morning. It was not, as was surmised, in retalia-
tion for the 9a1 on Pintheville but a planned interdiction along the whole
77
German army front, to diucourage any intentions of an attack towa~d Metz.
The 26th Division went into Army reserve near Verdun on 7 October to
rest and refit. Eight days later two battalion, of the 104th Infantry
were sent to the assi,tance of Andlauer'a 18th French Division in the Boi1
d 'Haumont. In a onct- clay battle in a sea of mud that cost 14 o.llt"llif 15 French
tank~ and a reported 250 offi~er1 and men (120 of them to gas), the 104th
, 78
Infantry made little gain and fib.atlly withdrew to its point of departure
,,,, .....
.k- -'~-.z-~,... .. ,...,..,,..
rna na:x"t; oay, .,,. o ................
~ _,.. __ _
up to re1erve position near Samogneux and HaumontQ Late in the day the
102nd Infantry advanced into the Bois de la Reine and Boi1 d 10rmont, to
complete the relief of the 16th French In the line on the left wea the
29th Division, on the right the 26th French. Back of the regiments of
the 26th was thei~ own artillery, heavily reenforced with French unit1,
n----..
RGO 102nd FA, Rpt on Gas Atk, 9 - 10 Oct (26th Div Box 249, fol 4);
Sibley, P 299; Study No. 19, "The 79th Dividon at M:mtfaucon.
78
FO 67 1 26th Div, 1230, 6 Oct; FO 90, 2100 1 13 Oct; SO 879/3, 18th
Fr Div, 1015, 14 Oct (26th Div Box 14, 32-1); DCR, 26th Div, 14 - 15,
17 - 18 Oct, showed 17 killed, 27 wounded in the infantry, 23 wounded
in the Engineers that day. See also RGO 104th Inf, Rpt on Gas Atk, 14 -
15 Oct (26th Div Box 249, fol 4); k ~ ( ! ! . . ~ ) WD, 15 Oct
(CiFB 141, fol III); 1st Bn 104th :rt,f Rpt on action in support of tanks.,
16 Oct (26th Div Box 52, 33.6); Sibley, :l> 306; Benwell, p. 180.
- 46
and acron the Meue1 aeve.ral 14 - inch naval gunt looked for long - range
targets But all this a%tillery we.1 net to be enough against the mased
gun and the gas defen$e tactic, of the ~ (replaci?d _by ~he ~Alli! on
25 October) and 1'.t.!,11ri.m!.t-ll!:tltl&nl, of J:liAL9~.Jall and ~
79
JlgJI.~ facing the 26th Divioion,
The Regimental Ges Officer of the 102nd Infantry was not haPPY about
the coming operation. Q-1 the way from Verdun one of hie battalions had
been ahell&d with yellow croa, resulting in 47 ca$Ualt1es before they
reached their poaition. The strong smell of mustard gas everywhere in
the Ormont sector indicated repeated gasiing. It was an unhealthy place
80
to be.
The whole of the secto.r waa under an almost perpetual gas atmosphe:r-e,
shells, on the morning of 21 October~ two days before it~ attack~ the
79~="~''"-=~~--=~-
FO 91, 26th D!v, 15 Oct. For dbpr.1~itiori of t.l!s 26th Div regto, eee
&ketch atchd to SOI 2, 19 - 20 Oc't (26th Div Bax 10, 20.1.); for .:.he fo.-
midable concentration of ~.6U!.L.Qiv, };...,-,:t_MY.J, and l5~i!LR!Y arty (55 btys)
between Ecurey and Chaumont, ,ee sktch i_n GFB 141, fol I, p~ 123 The
arrival of additional heavy arty h rptd in JAt.~!!t~t}Ji'!. Weeki~' F.pt, 22
Oct (GFB 141, fol IV, p. 73).
60
Ltl', RGO 102nd Inf to DGO 18 Cc+, n-*~ (26th Div Box 249, foJ .1)~
oon, 26th Div (26th Div Box 43, 33.1), rptd 60 gassed on 17 - 18 Oct,
101 on 16 - 19 Oct,
r
Ii
shell, on enemy strongpoint1 in the Bois de Crepion, Ravin de la Hazelle,
and Ravin du Chuchu, masking the ga1 fire with high exploaivea, A mortar
platoon of tha lat Gas Regi.tnent, with the 102nd Infantry in the Bois
ing the 45- mirnrte HE preparation for the attack on the morning of the
23rd, the artillery fired another 324 No. 5 1hells into the Boi, de
CrePion and Ravin du Chuehu
Pattern had averaged one gaa shell for every 37 square meter, of target,
much too little, and in each case had been put down over a period of an
hour, when it 1hould have been knawn that No. 5 hell had to be fired
within two minutea or not at all. The masking JiE fire that had accom,..
panied each miaaion had proba,bly diaaipated or destroyed the gas complete-
81
ly. An enem}' report waa to say the AJDerican artillery fire that week
82
waa 11
rnoderate with aome gas 1hella.1
Captain Cutler's reply ha, not been fcund, but it would appear that
the artillery, a once before, may have fired gas shell without consu)ting
Ltr, .DGO 26th Div to C CWS, 24 Oct, aub: Use of Arty Gas again1t the
Enemy; Ltr, CGO ht .A1'my to 000 26th Div, 25 Oct, 1ub: U1e of lethal Gas
by Arty (26th Div Box 249, fol 3); Atkiason, RPt of Opn1 by lit Ga, Ret,
27 Oct (ibig., fol 4); SIience~, II, 249 ff.
82
l!L!,!lJ!:.Q!,y, Weekly Rpt, 29 Oct (GFB 141, Fol II, P 95),
- 48 -
,
,,
.I
.
! him~ It h aho APParet~t th.at th~ CWS manuala, 11
Initruction.; on the Use
ing Uaa of G:3.3 Shelll!lt1 (.July J.918) 1 had not been con:aulted, although both
83
had be8n i.1,uttd to the divbion.
train naw divhiona. Two daya later Brig. Gen Frank E Bamfo:rd, from
in thie l3t Divitionj, hie had allegedly been sent by higher headquarters
84
to promote aggreuiveneu in the 26th Division
Ger.ere.l Bamford had not yet taken over when en the morning of 23
working 1,,Jholly upl-'-1.11 ~ had been orde:ted to clea.:c- the li.eighh'. between
Pylon d 1 Etr-aye,;,, Belleu Boht and Bob de Moil'E'Y, the easte:rnmost ridge
of the h,dghts of the ~IJM !1: the 1;Hidor (Mr.iP No. 6). 85
83 -c~.,,-~><=,u~-.c<"-'"'"""
I.t:r-, OC-0 26th Div t.o C CWSt J..4 Sep, sub: Ci.ec lt:u, memoe and so
forth (26th Div .Box 249, fol 3)? listad over 70 itemi recd from the
Offic.: of the Chief CWS since 3 Dec 1917: .i'.r:.cluding the1a mami,ah.
84
Sibl~y, PP~ 75, 308, 323.
85
FO 92,, 26th ui~,, arno. 21 Oct., S~t-1 S1;udy No. 17 'The 29th Division
i!"l the CS't.e~ de Maue1,..e, .. pp,, ,a:3 ff.
- t:/;I -
"'
+ ~;;,
.
..
' .
~L:~ ~
Crep'"
,'
Mc.1!1v,lle e '"
> ,'
"'
50
!\'t" -
-
; ,,,
by inten.taa a:rt!!lery and machine g1,1n fi:r-e A.dvancing south f:rom the
BoiA des Ch~nes, the 102nd Infantry,was itopped cold on ths ,lopes
86
of Hill 360 in the Boil d 'Ormor.rf;. The 52nd Brigade remained in place,
owing to the deadly ma.chine gun fire of the German defenders on eve-ry
height and in every wood. Ga attack reportl!I filed every day that week
showed almoet continual heavy gaa fixe but few or no casualties at the
\ time of the repo::rts. Nevertheless gas cases arrived in great numbers
at the triages and ga1 hoapital, and were seen to exceed by far the
87
machine gun easualtiea.
On the afternoon of the 24th, with a amolce .ecreen of 800 white phOB-
pho.ruw shellt laid to the ;right of tho 811.is d ;~u1~i01,t. a fre,h battalion.
of tho 101st lnfant;ry assaulted Bel10u Bois agair. ai\d two battalions of
the 102nd returned to the attaek on Hill 360. Gener11l Bamford l!iaw his
aei<<<<<<<<--<----
ro 93, 1915, 23 Octi i~~sLRlv. Order Ia 905 and Weekly Rpt 23 Oct
(GFB 214, fol .I, PP 25, 34); Bamford, Rp'l of 26th Di;, A- M Opr,, 23 -
27 Ott, 18 Nov {26th Div Box 25, 33.7), eaid the bn withdrew f~om
Belle~ without order~.
87
l)()i, 26th Div, 23 - 24 Oct; Gas Atk P.:pts.- 21 ... 28 Oct (26th Div Box
249, fol 4).
-
ca1ualtie1 grow without the gain of a yard Through the next two days,
de1pite ~epeated artillery preparationa and troop reenforcement,, the
enemy could not be budged. Not until the afternoon of 27 October, fol-
lowing a massive artillery preparation, did the last of 511t Brigade
resource, and a battalion of the 104th Infantry finally take and hold
88
a wedge in Belleu Boia. To the ,outh, a merciless enemy baabardment,
estimated at 10,000 shella, on the tr0pp1 at Hill 360 ~destroyed or
scattered the meager group, who had driven through" to the dope (Map
No. 7). 89
ob1eJ:'\l'ed in the ravine above the Bois de Crepion and in the Ravin de
Chuchu, the field guns fired a concentration of 520 No. 4 hydrocyanic
acid shells, 80 No. 7 chlorpicrin, and 32 No. 5 phoegene into each
~-----
The remaini of the 101st Inf was eatimated at 6 officers and 451
rifles Ltr, Med Off lOlat Inf to Div Surg 26th Div, 29 Oct, aub: Pre-
lim rept on atke on Belleu Boia (26th Div Box 39, 33.6).
89
Bamford Rpt, 18 Nov, aboveq See Maga, 102nd Inf, 27 Oct (26th Div
Box 43, 32-16).
90
SOI 10, 26th Div, 27 - 28 Oct (26th Div Box 9, 20.l); Ltr, l:x30
26th Div to C CWS, 28 Oct, sub; Use of Arty Gas against the Enemy (26th
Div Box 249, fol 3); Lt~, 1Xi0 to ccws, 20 Nov, sub Rpt on Recent Opns
(26th Div Box 25 1 33.6),
Evidence of th'e odd lot of 98 1 :recd by the 26th Div is an undated
lOlat FA memo, probably written about thi1 time, acknowledging receipt of
61 No. 6 cipalite ahell,, 450 No. 7 chlorpicrin, 65 No~ 8 papite, and 10
No. 12 fraisite ahell, all lachrymator (26th Div Box 249, fol 4).
- 52 -
- -DISPOSITION 1
OF GtPMMI 'FC)QC.:S i
f'il,C:tNG :I ... O t V \ \ . t O N I ,I
c~ ~9 OCTOe'l!ll
I
I
I
5,.\ . T/'l5.ooo
!J P"'ff" ~q,, .~, ir, ,r
:tt(JMI) 19 W 1!
['\Pl~ HO 7 I
I
I -- ----- " ~ .1
C
53
?>" .
~),t}->
hydrocyanic acid wa, practically worthle in the field, and the amounts
of chlorpic:in and pho1gene fied weie too small to be effective, it h
preuion of poor re,ulta from auch uae of gas, expreaaed later by the
Allowing for the natuxal 1)%eference of the artillery for HE, and doubt
about the auperior gaa proof quality of German dugout,, the conclusion,
The fighting died down on the afternoon of the 27th and the division
remiined in place over the naxt four days. Some seven months later a
milita:iy observer 'found the "U~ s.. line from [Boh d'Ormont] along Bah
d'Haumont [clearly marked by the litter of] equipment, including helmets,
belts, ;helter halves, all kindi of grenade,, rifle grenades, rifles,
92
Lt Col John A\lgruder, Fiald Note on 26th Div (pns East of Meuae,
May 1918 (26th Div Box 7, 18.8).
- 54 -
l
lI
j
!
On
.
31 Oc;;tober, e the 79th Division arrived to x-eliave the 104th
Infantry in Belleu and Chenbt wood1 and the lOlat and 102nd Infantry in
'
l the Bola de la Reine, the di\'i'aion C;Quntad its loeaea for thou eight
-+ 93
I
j day,. At least 163 we~e k""" to be dead, 1,790 wounded, and 515
gaeaed.. Eatimating alma.et 200 mhd.ng and Pl'eaumed captured, there
unaccountad fo~ had been located in 29th Divi1ion hoapital,. The other
94
850, trag9lnra fo:r- the moat p,-rt, we:re back in their or9~Jlization1
that week support the t::C?el"3.a~cll'! :recorded by the Yankee Division. The
losses of just l.40 PNtn Its field strength oo 29 October totaled 148
offic::ars and J.pi:fflj men, marming 11:i. heavy liiach::.r,1;;> g:..;".i> .i'i.:-,.;:! 2!6 light
95
machine guns. the 26th Division bad attacked a wall of machine guns.
Tht1 weather during the second half of (k.tober, said the ~k'l9!ffih,
had been very bad, mald.ng a a.oras.s of the heavy tl.17 ,aarth in the sector
and fi1J.1ng dugoute and tranche$ knae-cleep with !i':i.l.siG .. Th., $1.,c,,:.asaful
defenH against the 26th D1vido:1. had :raised the mo:tt:ili uf t.b.;;; d1:visicn
9;r-----.s--
Fo 97, 26th Div, 30 Oct! IJ(lt, 26th Div, 31 Oct - 5 Nov,
JU.Jt9l!L,Q!Y Wkl.y Rpts, 22 ano 29 Oct (GFB 141, fol !i, PP 73, 95),
- 55 -
to reports of the political situation at home, general exhaustion, pPor
short a of our own aitillery." The Germ.an division needed a long period
heavies and 191 lights, manned by 1,670 effectives in its three .regi-
98
ments~ Even thi~ was not enough_ when under heavy attack, and in the
12.rui~ as in the 32nd ea~lier, labor and supply train personnel had been
~ro,1-,l.'t"" o..p 99
"repeatedly to st.rengthen the units fighting in the line.
96-~--~-<>'-'~-"'~-
:L'l~, .Jil-~l: IID, 31 Oct, 5 Nw (GFB 141, fol II, pp. 55, 107 ).
97
10:J,..-~, ii.s!l!L/l1:t, IID, 23 - 26 Oct (GFB 184, fol IIl). Losses for the
month, 9 - 26 Oct, totaled 798 in the regt.
98
J.2~J1JL,Q.1Y.. W~elcly Rpts, 31 Oct, 6 Nov (GFB 214, fol I, pp. 76 - 7,
115 - 17).
99
lllli!.Ji.J.:! Weekly Rpt, 23 Oct; JJ. .2!l~.L.J2i'!. Order Ia 7127, l Nov {both in
GFB 214, foll, pp. 34, 98 - 9).
- 56 -
-
~-
Sometime just prio~ to itB relief, the Division Inspector, Col. lf'.)race
P. Hobbs, with supporting evidence of the Division Surgeon and Division
tion of the division was attributed by the Division Gas Officer to the
~marked detersaination of the en~y to neutraliz our activity by means
of extensive and almost continuous use of gas" G - 2 agreed, saying
that the enemy made ~use of all his available resources in order to
prevent our breaking through in this sector 11... - a circumlocution met
101
before in staff repo:t"t~ meaning the troops had been stopped by gas
ler, had been heavily shelled with blue cross and mustard ga~ night and
of the troops was not al:a,ays practical~ .. thou!,l.h i;?i.~ artille.:ry had made
activity necessary~ [wore] the 1~n out, rodu,;M. their endurance, and in-
I66""""""""""""""--
sibley, p .. 325.
10! I'
SOI 9, 20 - 26 Oct. I'
,1
- 57 -
I
I
I
''
!!
102
creased their chances for getting gassed'"
AIIIOng these latter were an officer and 95 men with bad cases of
"gas fright," who during 80 advance had "turned back after a brisk
bomba:rdment with ar$enical shell evidently. 11 Seventy- nine of the group
were returned to duty the next dayo
Almost all the 1,332 were evacuation cases, with mustard gas effects
or respiratory distress from diphenylchloroarsine predominating among
their symptoms. Half or more of the evacuees we~e riflemen who had been
!02......,,_ __
Ltr, IXiO 26th Div to C CWS, 5 Nov, sub; Rpt on Gas Casualties in
Verdun sector (26th Div Box 249, fol 6); Ltr !:GO to ccws, 20 Nov, sub:
Rpt on Recent Opns (26th Div Box 25, 33,6), itemized almost:daily gas atks
from 17 Sep to 7 Nov, resulting in 1,428 gas casualties and 3 gas deaths
- 58 -
r
ing gc,:s shells. !he, l'~mai.ncloa.r for th,e moi.rt part wer.e :runners, signal rnan,
3
mel'Jlbars of ration 3r.d t1Gt1t1r dataih:., and littel" bearGl'5 1
Whsi< the 79th t:.al'l:i,e in, the '51:crt nr."1.gadet 26th Division, withdrew
:slight.ty, spent ~~@ral de.ye r'Y>::-:;ar..izin.; the cornni;,1od, and then swung
arm.ind to th& ~ight of the 52nd Brigade, taking ove:r French positions from
104
ttaa Eo1$ d 'Ha.umQnt t!--.s<.i'tJt;h ths SOis de:;; Cau:i.~es down to Beaumont-
Except for .recon~.z:i:-.wance patrols and some f1.:rther light gas fire by
the 26th Div1;:!.on artillery, 2"undly :retu:rned, there was little activity
105
until 7 Noi.~$._m.bwr when word c~~ that the enemy wa& preParing to withdraw
front line and battery po5ition e~rly that mo~ning with an estimated
3,000 l'lilllt}w c:r,:i5s shell::; and at least twice as many HE Regimental gas
163"--''-""~""'""""'"'"""==,,,,
Lt:r, DUGO to Col CUchi.s:.: Jbd l)!:,; CWS, 23 Nov, sub: Rpt of DM30 26th
Div for Oct n.n<l N"' (26th :::Ji; Bo:c 246, fo1 6) ! t.tr~ 000 26th Div to C CWS,
5 N0",.1, above~ Not.,;;~ Gpi:ir'.<>t:::t 3 n, 247 - 51, rpts but th1"ee gas atks in the
period 2! - 31 Oct, :'ith .J tot,3l of 13 gas c~,u1}-H$:s~
104
FO 98 11 ::?.6th Div, 1930, 4 .No-,1,o
105
Ltr, IGO 26th Div to C Ci:fS, 7 Nev, sub: Use of A:rty Gas against the
Enemy {26th Div Box 249, fol 3), snid a total of 257 No~ 5 and 110 No. 7
tea.r gas ehells W<Brti fi:rtsd on 4 -- 5 Nov on three enemy ta.rgets, all in
one -minute concent:ra.tfons, fo.;,1.0-,;p:,,J by HE and shrapnel.
- 59 -
9 casualties, all in the 102nd Field .Artillery, was premature and mis-
106
leading (Map No. 8). Tho Ge:r,nan lai!JJlal'!!ll!1 reported firing 2,500
rounds of yellaw cross alone on new be.1,tery positions it had loc;ated
107
south of Mormont Farm.
Patrols on the night of the 7th and 'the next morning found that
the enemy had indeed left the irrrnediate front. In the forenoon his
troops in full marching equipment were seen moving east towards Flabas
A general advance was ordered.
With regiments in line and scouts out front, the division moved
out late on the morning of 9 November, with orde~s "to maintain general
106__,__.___ _
Rpts on Gas Atk, B Nov (26th Div Box 249, fol 4); Spencer, II, 252 -
57. SOI 20, 26th Div, 6 - 7 Nov, rptd 1,486 gas shells including 1,000
yellow crou oil the ,i1rtillery. SOI, 102nd Inf, 6 - 7 Nov (26th Div Box
41, 20~7), rptd 1,750 gas shells in its sector.
107
15!Jl.Jli'!! Q>ns Rpt, 6 - 7 Nov (GFB 167, fol I, P 113).
108
Ltr, to Mod Dir CliS, 23 .Nov (26th Div Box 249, fol 6); lt
Or.,()
~ Orders, 29 and 30 Oct (in l2alL!L~ records, GFB 214, fol I,
PP 81 - 83); Rpts, - ~ ~ . !I.ts~~. 1 - 7 Nov (,GFB 141, fol II).
- 60 -
7 NovEMeER
~,-- )
q~(Z92.
:-l+ ",
'' ., .
, ~.,.vCV:: . /
,' ~ '.
, --._ e='~ .. ~
~,
,>ecrv
,....
.
""' .,
i::"!;'
.fl!.....~ Jko~d .. D(aC
, At-I,,..., (,.... o,,,
-. -.f-i ct
$<-L tj10..,
(:)
61
I:'
i
'
'r pressure and vigorous pursuit of the retreating enemy. 11 But spirit& were
low, raults were meager, and that night was spent in reorganizing the
109
line. As a division historian said 1 the men were exhausted after
fighting for three weeks under continual rain, with scanty food, and
little or no shelter They had been gassed and shelled heavily. And
their "regimental and brigade coumanders had been sent away, ~nd strang-
110
ers had been put in their places" He referred to the relief of
109-"=-,--"'~"'"'
FO 100, 26th Div, '7 NOV"; FO 103, 1730, 9 Nov; Ltr, CO 101st Inf to
CO 51st Brig, 17 Nov, sub: Opns Rpt of 101st Inf, Nov 8 - 11, and atchd
docs (26th Div Box 39, 33.6).
110
Sibley, P 318.
111
For fraternization, see Rpt 102nd Inf, 19 Oct (26th Div Box 41,
22.9) and 103~d Inf docs in 26th Div Box 46, 24.9.
112
Sibley, P 318.
- 62 -
!
j
I Tho stubborn regiment was the 101st, which w~s reported ~shattered~
I' by enemy rearguard action and had to be withdrawn from the line on the
! night of 10 Novernb~r. Or as Colon~! Hobbs, the Division Inspector maded'J
reg:l..mental COTill'lander, said, NStraggling w-cs very bad and I was able to
I inuster only 240 men on the firing line from tOe entire regiment during
th~ opezations." The other regiments JJ!c\de better progress that day,
reaching the road dirttctly south of Chaumont, in line with the 79th
113
Division, before coming to a halt.
advance beyond Ornes were said to have been set forth with Mall the
114
earnestnre1;;s of the beginning of a new cami::a.ign~" But early the
ne~t moroin9 the attack was called off, then ordexed on again, and
casualties that morning were said to have been largely the result of
11~
the h.;,ph~::~rd fire.
!15
Sibley, p .. 340,
- 63 -
.(
.,..
'
L
ir, and wounded and close to ~00 gassed, according to Medical Department data
;
The Division Medic,l Gas Officer reported 455 gas casualties that month
The balance were doubtless in adjacent division hospitals. 116 soon after
the Al'mistice the division was relieved by French troops and marched to
the rear to begin the long wait- Before Christmas the men who had been
captured at SeichePrey and at Trugney th.at spring and &U111Der were back
with the division. In Ma~cb 1919 the division was homeward bound
I
'
~--
Analysis, P 65; Ltr, IX30 to Med Dir CWS, 23 Nov, sub, Rpt of DM30
26th Div, months of Oct & Nov (Med Dept Box 3586, fol 25).
- 64 -
ANALYSIS
ll..ll!L(ilt~~
The total casualties of the 26th Division during its 200 days in the
lino .... reported by Ayres in 1919 15,168 killed and wounded, the high-
est recorded for the divi&ior.~ The low~st tct,:i.l, 11,078, but obviously in-
Table No, 1
Jan
Feb
March
13
18
61
52
27
283
-ll
0
0
9
5
.:7
32
97 496
l
12
APr11 148 504 250 162 146 328 184
May 67 151 226 57 26 219 465
June 89 259 875 3 63 339 531
July 536 1,879 898 78 527 2,401 1,908
Aug 192 1,167 433 40 5 148 51
Sp 168 705 0 16 151 783 285
Oct 255 813 336 b9 :,c4 . ""'"
... , 71(.V ., ..... -
, '"IIOC!
Nov 292
1,778 -
8:25
6,416 - 0
3,328
213
-649 - 56
1,492
356
6,638
484
5,815
rrs---
Maj. c. A Stevens, Div Adj, Rpt of Casualties (based on daily casual-
ty telegrams), 24 Dec.1918 (26th Div Box 191, 319,l Misc)1 !:l!!!!;gal D1Ptl:!,-
!Jl..rul~:~-L!!L..~!L\l1U:, 'fc,/, .sJ;atj.:;.t;.., Part II, !!!!i1St.~
~ ~ L ( w a s h i n g t o n , D,C,, 1925J, pp. 1030 ff, Note Med
Dept data covers inf, mg bns, arty, and engineers only.
119
Ltr, DPA to TAG AEF, 8 Mar 1919, sub1 Hist of Stat Sec, 26th Div
(26th Div Box 5, 11,1),
- 66 -
{p,rticula%"ly !n gaa casual-tis~) 1,:11'id the event:s (lli':aruined in the present
st.udyJ it ia probable that the Mstiiclll napa.rtment figw:u are the most
120
accu~ate available.
If Gene:ral Bamford, who c:omma.ndad t11a 26th Division for three weeks,
wa, right a.bout. high c.!eualtie.'3 taing the measure of a divislons achleve-
mente , th.en the 26th won the ~u~ war in the AEF.
tie$ in the 1st Divi,ion as tha result of 35 gas attack6 in the ten months
b..;tween Februa::-y and ffwembe.l:" 1918, and just 1615 gas cases in the 26th
fot.md, and certainly took far more ga.$ -eat.ualt!es than his collection of
D1via!on.,
Iii_,_,,,,,_,,,,,,,,,
Cf. narrative, pp. l~ -
- 67 -
Department figu~,a wa& the method of reporting. Division gas officers
reported gas attacks on tha day they occurred and took no uccount of
delayed casualties, as division medical personnel did. Furthermore,
Captain Cutler, like moat division gas officers, made a serious effort
to minimize the number of gas cases. He saw more malingerers than there
really were, and ?ersi1ted in this attitude despite the testimony of the
Division Medical Gas Officer as to the real numbers of gas cases (narra-
tive, P ~8).
record& (though some are no longer available), and while he seems not to
have made full use of them in his summary reports, his Assistant DGO,
1st Lt. K. P.. Ribble did. In a post-war account Ribble reported 1,906
gas cases in .July, 188 in the last week of September, 1,435 in October
121-----
Ltr, 000 to CWS and COO 1st Army, 25 Nov, sub: Rpt. on Gas Opns,
Accompl.ishments, etc. (1st Army Box 340). Cf, Msg, RGO 102nd Inf to
DGO, 1800, 26 Sep (26th Div Box 248), reporting 20 mustard gas shells
back of Saulx, ended: "You dug out just in time.
- 68 -
.. "'.ii
.,.,.!"l
,"
(tht result of 11 9 272 gas shells), and 585 in N~1$mbe~ (the result of
l ...
'
3,742 v sholle), 122
:,. The gas experience of the 26th Division, as of the whole AEF, wae
almost entirely different in the last two months of the war from anY,-:
; -
thing it had exprienci,d earlier. lkltil October gas attacks were just
' that - - isolated evants in which a unit was hit with e gas concentration
the last two months gaa warfare began to app:ro.ximata 'the pattern of HE
fire -- continuous gea ehelling punctuated by bomb3~dments to roetablieh
a high level of effectiveness~ And it was thsn that gas proved its extra-
ordinary superiority c:,ver HE in producing mental as well as physical casual-
ties. By then ?,J"Cb;i.bly every dividon in the AEF had, through bitter ex-
perience~ learned as much gas discipline as it wau ever going to, but it
~s simply not enoi..gh~ .As Lieutenant Ribble said, echoing Captain Cutler
and Other division gas officers in the AEF, "The gTEat number of casual-
ties was causE!d more by fatiguis a.nd :reduced lllOrale from being in gas con-
123
tinuously nther th.;n f::rom 9-ny lack of gas dh-t:rplin-e~ "
24
which shows tho1 daily gassed and wounded admitt~d to the division hoepS.tals!
Ltr, Ribble, 1130 26th Div to c cws~ 20 Jan 1919, sub; Rpt on f3as
Activities (l,t Army Box 340).
123
Ltr, Ribble, l)G(J 26th Div to C CWS, 20 J~.n 1919: sub: Rpt on Gas
Activities (ht l=ly Box 3i0).
124
Admission lists of 26th Div l'H 101 (Mod O..pt Box 3609), FH 102 (Med
D~pt Box 3612), FH 104 (Med Dept Box 361/l; 29th Div- FH 1141146-dDept Boll:
2650); 33rd Div FH 13'.2 (Med Deet Box 3714 , 79th Div FH 314 M&c! De~t Bo.:t
3873), FK 315 (Mod Dept Box 3815), FH 316 (Med Doi't Box 3876 .
- 69 -
Table No. 3
l 1 61 0 35 0 0 0 19 0 116 l
28 Sep 5 3 4 145 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 148
29 Sep 8 2 3 15 II 0 0 0 3 3 18 20
Sep 0 0 l 0
~
l
30
1 Oct 0
2 0 4
0
12
18
5
0 0 0
IM
2 2 4 2 4 24
2 Oct 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 2 0 3 4
3 Oct 2 0 0 0 0 2 l 0 0 0 3 2
4 Oct 1 0 5 2 0 8 l 0 0 0 7 10
5 Oct 0 0 l l 0 6 0 0 0 0 l 7
6 Oct 0 0 0 0 0 l l 0 0 0 l 1
7 Oct 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 1
8 Oct 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
9 Oct 0 0 0 22 l 0 l l 0 0 2 23
10 Oct 0 0 0 28 0 l 0 0 0 73 0 102
ll Oct 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 138 2 141
12 Oct 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 47 0 49
13 Oct 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
14 Oct 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
15 Oct 1 0 0 0 0 0 26 134 19 5 46 139
16 Oct O 0 0 0 0 0 21 6 0 2 21 8
17 Oct 2 1 0 51 l 0 101 12 4 13 108 77
18 Oct 1 1 2 41 3 0 13 6 0 l 19 49
19 Oct l 0 5 1 4 0 2 5 3 0 15 6
20 Oct 0 0 1 9 0 12 4 2 0 4 5 27
21 Oct 9 0 7 6 2 0 ll 2 9 4 38 12
22 Oct 5 2 12 l 0 0 4 0 0 6 21 9
23 Oct 157 38 41 18 5 0 10 10 26 8 239 74
24 Oct 28 58 39 20 3 ll 4 1 15 20 89 110
25 Oct 49 58 93 24 4 2 3 12 6 5 155 101
26 Oct 8 25 33 18 ll 4 2 2 2 11 56 60
27 Oct 22 22 96 26 20 9 1 7 20 8 159 72
28 Oct 45 21 119 50 16 27 37 31 19 17 236 146
29 Oct 7 14 16 60 3 19 9 31 5 29 40 153
30 Oct 2 10 4 49 0 17 4 14 5 16 15 106
31 Oct l ll 7 46 9 38 6 7 11 17 34 ll,9
1,319 1,639
l Nov l 8 3 43 5 20 3 8 7 45 19 124
2 Nov l 0 0 7 0 8 2 8 l 25 4 48
:1 Nov 0 3 2 9 2 8 0 10 6 3 10 33
4 Nov 3 0 1 6 13 14 0 10 1 27 24 57
5 Nov 1 0 3 3 l ll 0 1 4 9 9 24
6 Nov 0 1 1 3 l 5 0 2 1 9 3 20
7 Nov 0 2 2 5 9 5 2 5 2 6 15 23
8 Nov 0 0 0 4 0 3 6 2 0 18 6 21
9 Nov 22 3 4 19 24 2 25 6 4 1 79 37
10 Nov 23 2 16 5 36 5 27 3 7 32 109 47
11 Nov 0 0 0 ll 0 9 0 6 0 8 -2 .M
278 474
- 70 -
Of these casualtit 13 wounded and 495 gassed were found in 29th
and in the ravine, of the sector, that they may be almost equally divided
These same hospital lists also show 141 exhaustion cases and 103
PN (psychoneurosis) cases between 17 and 31 October but do not diatin-
guiah. between those suffering from gas or gas masl< exhaustion and from
shell fire or battle exhaustion. The vile weather during the period
and the conditions of corabat are represented in the 71 trench foot cases
admitted in that sa,.. period,
October and November. The Division Adjutant found 336, the Medicdl
DePartment shows 1,ea2 (Table No, 2), Lieutenant Ribble reportad 2,020
(narrative, p, 68), and hospital roeords show 2,ll3 (Table No, 3).
G - 2 and DGO data found ii1 the narrat~.ve give r~n cluea t,~ th,~
probable nl.UIW1ir of gas eh.ells fired by th enemy 1.n Octobc.!' and N.:'o',am.
ber, and Ribble's count of 15,014 for those two months must suffice~
Cn the basis of his total of 2,020 gas cases, 7.4 gas shells w!lri)
- 7l -
The rivalry between the 1st and 26th Divisions, implicit when it
is not made explicit in the records, began with the original plan to have
these twc divisions f~m the first American Army corps in France. It was
perhaps inevitable that the National Guard division could not stand the
comparison. Baiting the division began when it relieved the 1st Division
in the Toul sector on l April. 1st Division complained to higher head-
qUarters that the 26th made a mess of the relief, and the suspicion of
incompetence planted then became rooted with the Seicheprey affair 0
l..hlike the 1st Division, the 26th obeyed French orders. And as
late as September, still under French orders, the 26th Division again
oc,upied in force an outpost zone, out in the woevre plain of the Troyan
sector, and suffered for it. other divisions learned to circumvent
French orders, bttt no-t the 26th
:;Ll.sclplim1 r~mained {I
'<., :l
'
'
',tti'-
.,, ~ ,''
..
- 1:3 ..
COMOINEO AIIMS IIESEARLH C IIIIIARY
FOAT lEAVENWOATl1, KS
"
The distinction that the 26th Division holds in CWS records, of hav-
ing the largest gas shoot by the 1st Gas Regiment fired on its front
last. Yet no one was to suggest that greater cooperation and coordina-
tion should have existed between the gas troops, the infantry, and the
artillery. The English and German.s learned to use theiir gas troops with
conspicuou.s success, and the AEF might have as well had the war cont.inued
into 1919u
I"he gas experience of the AEF during the last two months of the wdr,
tack, but officers and men alike were helplessly vulnerable undet pro-
longed or continuous ga$sing. A new and more comfortable mask was on
its way as the Armistice was signed, but it is doubtful whethe.r even
t.ni.::1 would have provided protection against heavy gassing over a period
,-,
cf two or more days and nights in a row,or.-,a week in a gas atmosphere.
It is likely that had the war continued, time would have been
found for further training in wearing .the mask for long periods of time
under combat conditions, and more frequent reliefs of companies and bat-
ta lions weuld have been the rule ratljier than the ex1,;eption.
1
- 74 -