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Menin Gate, Ypres Menin Gate, Ypres
First Name: Herbert Daniel Last Name: WRIGHT
Date of Death: 08/05/1915 Lived/Born In: Barking
Rank: Private Unit: Suffolk1
Memorial Site: 1. Barking Memorial 2. Menin Gate, Ypres

Current Information:

Age-25

45, Greatfields Road, Barking

Battle of Frezenberg Ridge (8 May-13 May)

In April 1915 the Germans, using gas for the first time, launched an all out attack on the salient around the Belgian town of Ypres. It became a gargantuan struggle that lasted well into the next month and at the end of it, the salient, though drastically reduced, still stood.

The name is deceptive because the Frezenberg ridge, which lay to the north-east of the town rose to only 50 metres above sea level and was one of a series of low ridges that ran in a generally westerly direction and branched off the main ridge that ran north-easterly from Kemmel to Passchendaele. Nevertheless, it gave a commanding view down on to the town of Ypres and for that reason it was strategically important.

On 8th  May, 1915 at dawn there was a violent bombardment on the front held by 28th Division on the Frezenberg Ridge. The full fury of the bombardment lasted for four hours. Parapets were flattened and trenches destroyed.  At 8.30am the German guns lifted onto the support trenches and approach roads and their infantry assaulted the front of the Frezenberg ridge with the brunt of the attack falling on 3rd Monmouth and 2nd Royal Lancaster of 83 Brigade and 1st Suffolk and 2nd Cheshire from 84 Brigade. The front of 84 Brigade ran from near Frezenberg village to Mouse Trap Farm. It lay on the exposed forward slopes of the ridge but was not subjected to any enfilade fire.  This first attack was driven off as was the second which came after another ½ hour bombardment but it left nearly all the men in the front line either killed, wounded or buried.  It was impossible to get reinforcements to them so when the third attack came at 10am,  again either side of Frezenberg village, it succeeded, especially as it coincided with Brigade orders for the front line to be evacuated. The survivors of 3rd Monmouth and 2nd Royal Lancaster fell back to their support trench as did the extreme right of 1st Suffolk. This retirement of 83 Brigade left 84 Brigade dangerously exposed on their flank but 1st Suffolk, 2nd Cheshire as well as 1st Monmouth and 2nd Northumberland Fusiliers in support, remained in their trenches despite despite heavy losses, chiefly from shell fire.  However they could not hang on for ever and by late afternoon 1st Suffolk were surrounded. They had suffered 450 casualties. These losses plus previous ones meant that 1st Suffolk had only 29 men and 1 officer in the firing line the next day.

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