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Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium
First Name: George Robert Last Name: RAMSAY
Date of Death: 16/08/1917 Lived/Born In: Earlsfield
Rank: Private Unit: Machine Gun Corps 144Company
Memorial Site: Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium

Current Information:

Born-Twickenham

 

Third Battle of Ypres

This was a campaign fought between July and November 1917 and is often referred to as the Battle of Passchendaele, a village to the north-east of Ypres which was finally captured in November. It was an attempt by the British to break out of the Ypres salient and capture the higher ground to the south and the east from which the enemy had been able to dominate the salient. It began well but two important factors weighed against them. First was the weather. The summer of 1917 turned out to be one of the the wettest on record and soon the battlefield was reduced to a morass of mud which made progress very difficult, if not impossible in places. The second was the defensive arrangements of concrete blockhouses and machine gun posts providing inter-locking fire that the Germans had constructed and which were extremely difficult and costly to counter. For 4 months this epic struggle continued by the end of which the salient had been greatly expanded in size but the vital break out had not been achieved.

The Battle of Langemarck

This took place between 16th-18th August, 1917 and was the second general attack of 3rd Ypres. Although it did not rain during the two days of the battle itself there had been plenty of it in the preceding days and in many places the battlefield was a quagmire. On the left of the attack in the north-west of the Ypres salient there was considerable success,  especially for the French Army which attacked on the left of the British, but the attack on the Gheluvelt Plateau, due east of Ypres, met determined German resistance and the early gains were soon reversed.

At the outbreak of war in 1914 there were two machine guns to each battalion which was far from adequate and substantially fewer than the German Army. The need for more of these weapons and the specialised training they required led to the establishment of Machine Gun Corps in the autumn of 1915 with each infantry brigade being furnished with their own machine gun company, taking the same number as the brigade. At 4.45am on 16th August, 1917, 145 Brigade of 48th Division attacked in the northern part of the Ypres salient from a position in front of St Julien. 144 Brigade, which included the 144th Machine Gun Company were in reserve and when the battalions of 145 Brigade ran into trouble, which they soon did, 144 Brigade was sent forward. But the attack by 48th Division came to grief when confronted by a chain of well sited concrete pill-boxes and the attack failed. Somewhere and at some time during the chaos of the fighting George Ramsay was killed.

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