Diary April 10, 1916
Diary for Monday, April 10, 1916: Air War Ypres: German anti-aircraft fire downs Royal Flying Corps Morane Parasol from 8,000 ft. Western Front Champagne: German Alpenkorps (from ex-Macedonian Front) receives […]
Diary for Monday, April 10, 1916: Air War Ypres: German anti-aircraft fire downs Royal Flying Corps Morane Parasol from 8,000 ft. Western Front Champagne: German Alpenkorps (from ex-Macedonian Front) receives […]
Diary for Sunday, April 9, 1916: Western Front Verdun – Germans launch major costly and mainly repulsed assault: Mort Homme forward trench line entered. Petain issues famous Order of the
Diary for Saturday, April 8, 1916: Home Fronts France: 400 St Chamond tanks ordered by War Ministry. During April Colonel Estienne in command of first assault artillery unit (Schneider tanks)
Diary for Friday, April 7, 1916: Eastern Front Reception at German GHQ (Kovno) to mark Hindenburg’s 50 years military service. Tsar inspects Ninth Army at Kamenets-Podolsk, meeting Brusilov there (until
Diary for Thursday, April 6, 1916: Middle East Mesopotamia – First Battle of Sannaiyat (until April 8): 7th Indian Division charges into a ‘torrent of death’ three times, gains only
Diary for Wednesday, April 5, 1916: Western Front Verdun: Germans take Haucourt, but are repulsed at Bethincourt. Meuse: German floating mines detonated in river at St Mihiel. Middle East Mesopotamia
Diary for Tuesday, April 4, 1916: Western Front Verdun: German attack on French centre fails; French advance in Caillette Wood. Somme: Micheler put in command of French Tenth Army. Argonne,
Diary for Monday, April 3, 1916: African Fronts East Africa: Deventer’s South African Mounted Brigade (1,200 men with 8 guns) begins 150-mile surprise advance from Arusha on Kondoa Irangi in
Diary for Sunday, April 2, 1916: Air War Britain: German air ships L14 and L22 bomb Leith and Edinburgh (aiming for Rosyth naval base and Forth Bridge); 37 casualties from
Diary for Saturday, April 1, 1916: Western Front German Army forms 200 independent MG units (16 guns each), 83 get 18 guns by October 1916. First 10,000 British gas shells