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Ep260: The Road to Passchendaele - The Final Reckoning (Part 5)

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Content provided by Mat McLachlan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mat McLachlan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

On October 12th, 1917, Captain Clarence Jeffries led one hundred Australian troops toward a German machine gun position on the Passchendaele road. He'd already captured one pillbox that morning—exactly the kind of action that had worked brilliantly in September. But the ground had turned to liquid mud. The barrage was invisible. Everything was different. Jeffries was killed instantly, posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for capturing ground that would be abandoned the next day.

The Battle of Passchendaele represents the tragic final chapter of Third Ypres. In this episode, Mat McLachlan examines how an offensive that had proven the Western Front stalemate could be broken descended into one of history's ultimate symbols of futility.


From the 66th Division's twelve-hour march through mud to reach their start line, to the 3rd Australian Division's 400-yard advance at the cost of 3,199 casualties, to General Currie's precise prediction of 16,000 Canadian losses—we witness the attacks that should never have happened. But we also confront the uncomfortable question: if September's battles taught the lessons that helped win the war in 1918, what does that mean for October's dead?


Why did Field Marshal Haig continue attacking when every commander knew the ground was impossible? How did the same tactics that succeeded at Broodseinde fail so catastrophically at Passchendaele? What makes this battle both a vindication of tactical innovation and a monument to strategic delusion?


"I thought the principle was to be 'hit, hit, hit, whenever the weather is suitable.' If so, that principle is thrown away at the first temptation." - General Hubert Gough, October 8th, 1917


Episode Length: 43 minutes


Features: Captain Jeffries' Victoria Cross action, the sunk cost fallacy at GHQ, why Currie's prediction was exactly right, and the bitter irony of September's success drowning in October's mud.


Series Conclusion: The final reckoning of Third Ypres—triumph and tragedy, lessons learned and lives lost.


Presenter: Mat McLachlan

Producer: Jess Stebnicki


Ready to walk the battlefields? Join Mat's exclusive European tours: https://battlefields.com.au/


Find everything Mat is doing at https://linktr.ee/matmclachlan

For more history: https://www.LivingHistoryTV.com


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

261 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 519819782 series 1942697
Content provided by Mat McLachlan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Mat McLachlan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

On October 12th, 1917, Captain Clarence Jeffries led one hundred Australian troops toward a German machine gun position on the Passchendaele road. He'd already captured one pillbox that morning—exactly the kind of action that had worked brilliantly in September. But the ground had turned to liquid mud. The barrage was invisible. Everything was different. Jeffries was killed instantly, posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross for capturing ground that would be abandoned the next day.

The Battle of Passchendaele represents the tragic final chapter of Third Ypres. In this episode, Mat McLachlan examines how an offensive that had proven the Western Front stalemate could be broken descended into one of history's ultimate symbols of futility.


From the 66th Division's twelve-hour march through mud to reach their start line, to the 3rd Australian Division's 400-yard advance at the cost of 3,199 casualties, to General Currie's precise prediction of 16,000 Canadian losses—we witness the attacks that should never have happened. But we also confront the uncomfortable question: if September's battles taught the lessons that helped win the war in 1918, what does that mean for October's dead?


Why did Field Marshal Haig continue attacking when every commander knew the ground was impossible? How did the same tactics that succeeded at Broodseinde fail so catastrophically at Passchendaele? What makes this battle both a vindication of tactical innovation and a monument to strategic delusion?


"I thought the principle was to be 'hit, hit, hit, whenever the weather is suitable.' If so, that principle is thrown away at the first temptation." - General Hubert Gough, October 8th, 1917


Episode Length: 43 minutes


Features: Captain Jeffries' Victoria Cross action, the sunk cost fallacy at GHQ, why Currie's prediction was exactly right, and the bitter irony of September's success drowning in October's mud.


Series Conclusion: The final reckoning of Third Ypres—triumph and tragedy, lessons learned and lives lost.


Presenter: Mat McLachlan

Producer: Jess Stebnicki


Ready to walk the battlefields? Join Mat's exclusive European tours: https://battlefields.com.au/


Find everything Mat is doing at https://linktr.ee/matmclachlan

For more history: https://www.LivingHistoryTV.com


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

261 episodes

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