First Name: | Henry John | Last Name: | TROTMAN | |
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Date of Death: | 12/09/1917 | Lived/Born In: | Old Kent Road | |
Rank: | Driver | Unit: | Royal Field Artillery 236 Brigade D Battery | |
Memorial Site: | ||||
Current Information:Age-27 301, Old Kent Road Bailleul Communal Cemetery, France
Artillery men faced many dangers and during the course of the war nearly 50,000 of them were killed. Their gun batteries were targeted by the enemy’s guns which accounted for many of their casualties. Others were sent forward to act as ‘spotters’ which meant going forward to the front line and signalling back to the guns necessary changes in target and other vital information. Keeping the batteries supplied with ammunition was a dangerous task as the enemy guns would target the known supply routes, especially at night. Brigade Diaries rarely shine any light on casualties sustained, unless of course they were officers and even then information is sparse. 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 the British. First was the weather. The summer of 1917 turned out to be 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 four 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. In January 1917, 232 Brigade of the Royal Field Artillery became an Army Brigade, not attached to any particular division. On 11th September, 1917, the brigade left Ouderdom and moved via La Clytte and Locre To Poperinghe and on 12th September, the day on which on Henry Trotman was killed, they moved to their new positions near the Bluff, east of the canal. |
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