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First Name: James Hiram Last Name: BENTHAM
Date of Death: 17/09/1914 Lived/Born In: Wood Green
Rank: Private Unit: Somerset Light Infantry1
Memorial Site:

Current Information:

Born-Wood Green

Vauxbuin French National Cemetery

 

The Battle of the Aisne 13th September -28 September, 1914

After the Germans were defeated on the Marne they fell back to the River Aisne, closely pursued by both the British and the French. The new German line was a very formidable defensive position. To attack it meant having to cross the Aisne and then climb up a 500 foot high ridge on top of which was the Chemin des Dames, a road that gave the Germans an easy way to move troops along the top of the hills. On 13th September the Aisne was crossed by both British and French troops but after that progress became slower, until there was no progress at all. Both sides dug in and the fighting settled down into trench warfare. The fighting on the Aisne continued for two weeks at the end of which both sides realised that frontal attacks on entrenched positions were both costly and non-productive, not that this deterred them from continuing with this tactic throughout the war.

By 17th September, 1917, four days after they had crossed the River Aisne, the 1st Somerset Light Infantry battalion of 11 Brigade, 4th Division, were in trenches around the village of Crouy, two miles to the north-east of Soissons, where their positions here were often under shell fire. James Bentham was killed here on 17th September.

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