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Bataille de La Marne, 1914
[b]From the collection of John Birks[/b]

The Second Battle of the Marne was a major World War I battle fought from July 15 to August 5, 1918, near the Marne River. It was the last major German offensive in the Western Front, and failed when an Allied counter-attack led by French forces overwhelmed the Germans, inflicting severe casualties. Following the failures of the Spring Offensives to end the war, German commander Erich Ludendorff, effectively the Chief-of-Staff, believed that an attack through Flanders would give Germany a decisive victory. To shield his intentions and draw Allied troops away from Belgium, Hindenburg planned for a large diversionary attack along the Marne.The battle began on July 15 when 23 German divisions of the First and Third armies, led by Mudra and Einem, assaulted the French Fourth Army under General Gouraud east of Reims. Meanwhile, 17 divisions of the German Seventh Army, under Boehm, aided by the Ninth Army under Eben, attacked the French Sixth Army led by Degoutte to the west of Reims. Ludendorff hoped to split the French in two. 85,000 American troops and large numbers of BEF soldiers joined the French for the battle. The German attack to the east of Reims was stopped on the first day, but the attack to the west broke through the French Sixth Army and advanced nine miles before the French Ninth Army, helped by American, British, and Italian troops, stalled the advance on July 17. The German failure to break through prompted Ferdinand Foch, the Allied Supreme Commander, to authorize a major counter-offensive on July 18; 24 French divisions, joined by other Allied troops, and 350 tanks attacked the recently formed German salient. The French were entirely successful, with Mangin's Tenth Army and Degoutte's Sixth Army advancing five miles on the first day alone. Berthelot's Fifth Army and Eben's Ninth Army launched additional attacks in the west. The Germans ordered a retreat on July 20 and were forced all the way back to the positions where they had started their Spring Offensives earlier in the year. The Allied counter-attack petered out on August 6 when well-entrenched German troops ground it to a halt. The disastrous German defeat led to the cancellation of Ludendorff's planned invasion of Flanders and was the first step in a series of Allied victories that ended the war.

Bataille de La Marne, 1914

From the collection of John Birks

The Second Battle of the Marne was a major World War I battle fought from July 15 to August 5, 1918, near the Marne River. It was the last major German offensive in the Western Front, and failed when an Allied counter-attack led by French forces overwhelmed the Germans, inflicting severe casualties. Following the failures of the Spring Offensives to end the war, German commander Erich Ludendorff, effectively the Chief-of-Staff, believed that an attack through Flanders would give Germany a decisive victory. To shield his intentions and draw Allied troops away from Belgium, Hindenburg planned for a large diversionary attack along the Marne.The battle began on July 15 when 23 German divisions of the First and Third armies, led by Mudra and Einem, assaulted the French Fourth Army under General Gouraud east of Reims. Meanwhile, 17 divisions of the German Seventh Army, under Boehm, aided by the Ninth Army under Eben, attacked the French Sixth Army led by Degoutte to the west of Reims. Ludendorff hoped to split the French in two. 85,000 American troops and large numbers of BEF soldiers joined the French for the battle. The German attack to the east of Reims was stopped on the first day, but the attack to the west broke through the French Sixth Army and advanced nine miles before the French Ninth Army, helped by American, British, and Italian troops, stalled the advance on July 17. The German failure to break through prompted Ferdinand Foch, the Allied Supreme Commander, to authorize a major counter-offensive on July 18; 24 French divisions, joined by other Allied troops, and 350 tanks attacked the recently formed German salient. The French were entirely successful, with Mangin's Tenth Army and Degoutte's Sixth Army advancing five miles on the first day alone. Berthelot's Fifth Army and Eben's Ninth Army launched additional attacks in the west. The Germans ordered a retreat on July 20 and were forced all the way back to the positions where they had started their Spring Offensives earlier in the year. The Allied counter-attack petered out on August 6 when well-entrenched German troops ground it to a halt. The disastrous German defeat led to the cancellation of Ludendorff's planned invasion of Flanders and was the first step in a series of Allied victories that ended the war.

Legastelois, Argentine Independence Centennia, 1910.jpg Legastelois_Marne2_combo.jpg Legastelois,_Bataille_de_la_Marne,_1914-combo~0.jpg Legastelois, Capitaine Georges Guynemer, 1917-obv.jpg Legastelois, Capitaine Georges Guynemer, 1917-rev.jpg Legastelois, French Military Preparation, 1916-combo.jpg Legastelois, General Pershing-combo.jpg Legastelois, Glory of the Armies Plaquie, Chanticleer-combo.jpg Legastelois_JournalistesRepublicainsFrancais2_combo.jpg