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Cabaret-Rouge British Cemetery, Souchez, France Cabaret-Rouge British Cemetery, Souchez, France
First Name: Harry Last Name: CHANNING
Date of Death: 26/10/1914 Lived/Born In: Holloway
Rank: Private Unit: Cornwall Light Infantry1
Memorial Site: Finsbury Park, St Mark

Current Information:

Born-Islington

Cabaret-Rouge British Cemetery, Souchez, France

 

 

The Race to the Sea - September-October 1914

By the middle of September 1914, the Aisne battlefield had stagnated into trench warfare and in order to break this impasse, both sides tried to outflank each other in a general movement northwards. Moving up through Picardy, Artois and Flanders, the race was over by 19th October when the North Sea was reached. The Western Front, a line of trenches stretching from Belgium to Switzerland, was now a reality. Initially it was the French army that conducted this movement whilst the British Expeditionary Force remained on the Aisne but by 6 October British reinforcements were needed to help beat off German attacks around Lille. They moved north and along with reinforcements from Britain, they took up new positions in Flanders, on the left of the Allied line and much closer to the Channel ports.

The battle of La Bassée

This was fought by II Corps (3rd and 5th Divisions) between 10th October and 2nd November 1914 and as the name suggests it focused on an area around the town of La Bassée in northern France. It was part of the Race to the Sea and it determined the line of the Western Front in that sector. There were some initial British successes but La Bassée remained firmly in German hands. German reinforcements arrived and  the village of Neuve Chapelle was captured by them. Towards the end of October, the fighting on this front died down as the attention of both armies switched to Ypres.

Between 23rd and 29th October 1st Cornwall Light Infantry battalion of 14 Brigade, 5th Division, were in reserve positions on the southern part of the line, near Rue de Bois and each night sending out troops to support the battalions on their right and left. On 26th October, the day on which Harry Channing was killed, two companies of 1st Cornwall were supporting the Yorkshire light Infantry on the left of the brigade line.

 

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