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First Name: Alfred Gordon Andrews Last Name: CARTER
Date of Death: 13/11/1916 Lived/Born In: Highbury
Rank: Lance Corporal Unit: Honourable Artillery Company1
Memorial Site:

Current Information:

Age-21

113, Balfour Road, Highbury

SDGW-15/11/16

Martinsart British Cemetery, Somme

 

The Battle of the Somme (July-November, 1916)

By the beginning of November, 1916, the Battle of the Somme had been raging for four months. Thousands of men had already been killed or wounded or were simply missing, never to be seen again and just a few square miles of the French countryside, nearly all in the southern part of the battlefield, had been captured from the enemy. With November came the winter weather and this, combined with the sheer exhaustion of all involved, brought the battle to a close by the end of the month. Since the 1st July, 1916, British, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand and South African casualties numbered over 400,000, killed, wounded and missing. 

During November the focus of the fighting switched to the Ancre valley where the last major British offensive was launched on 13th of the month. By now German defence tactics had evolved. They defended in depth without a well defined front line but rather setting up machine-gun nests in shell holes and other strategically important sites where just a few men could hold up an entire battalion. Meanwhile their artillery bombarded the British front line and all the communication trenches added to which the weather was simply awful turning the battlefield into a morass of mud. A few gains were made such as the capture of the village of Beaumont-Hamel and some of the marshy land either side of the river, but very few of the British objectives were achieved. Once again the casualty rate soared.

At 5.45am, on 13th November, the day the Ancre offensive began, 63rd Division attacked along the northern bank of the River Ancre. 189 Brigade were next to the river with 188 Brigade to their left. 190 Brigade were in support and the division’s objective was the village of Beaucourt. One company of 1st Honourable Artillery Corps, 190 Brigade, were sent to seize the ‘Mound’, a knoll forming the southern extremity of the German front line north of the Ancre and to clear dug-outs along the railway embankment flanking the enemy front system. This they accomplished by 6.45am after some hard fighting. The rest of 190 Brigade, 7th Royal Fusiliers, 4th Bedfordshire and 10th Royal Dublin Fusiliers, were ordered up at this stage and although they were all held up by machine-gun and rifle fire some of them were able to make progress and join the struggle in the trenches on the Beaumont-Hamel spur. At 7.45am some men from 1st Honourable Artillery Corps, together with men from the Hood and Drake battalions were able to advance to the edge of Beaucourt but heavy artillery fire forced them to withdraw a little and dig in. By the evening, 63rd Division’s front had on the right, a mixed force of mainly Hood and Drake battalions from 189 Brigade as well as some men from 1st Honourable Artillery Corps, holding a line from the railway embankment to Railway Alley, just short of the second objective. Behind them the first objective was held by the the rest of the division. This successful attack did not come without a cost. Among the many casualties was Alfred Carter of 1st Honourable Artillery Corps.

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