The 'Australian Corps' was a
World War I army
corps that contained all five
Australian infantry
divisions serving on the
Western Front. It was the largest corps fielded by the
British army in
France. Formed on
November 1,
1917, the corps replaced
I Anzac Corps while
II Anzac Corps, which contained the
New Zealand Division, became the
British XXII Corps.
Following the hard fighting of 1917, where the Australian divisions suffered heavily at
Bullecourt,
Messines and the
Third Battle of Ypres, the
Australian Imperial Force (AIF) was facing a manpower crisis. One
referendum for conscription had already failed and
another would be defeated on
December 1,
1917. Voluntary recruitment was declining. Plans to form a 6th Australian Division were scrapped and the incomplete formation was disbanded. To make up the numbers, it was proposed to disband the
Australian 4th Division, numerically the weakest, but this was strongly resisted by the members of the AIF.
General
William Birdwood, commander of the AIF, suggested that, in forming the Australian Corps, the weakest division could serve as a depot, providing reserves for the fighting divisions. Field Marshall
Douglas Haig, commander of the
British Expeditionary Force, accepted this proposal. He had originally resisted combining the five Australian divisions into a single corps as he considered it too unwieldy.
The Australian nature of the corps was enhanced by the attachment of
No. 3 Squadron AFC plus Australian
siege artillery batteries. It was also considered appropriate to appoint Australian officers to all senior command positions. However, Birdwood remained in command of the corps.
General
Hubert Gough was dismissed from command of the
British Fifth Army following its failure to withstand the German
Spring Offensive of
1918. When Haig decided to reform the Fifth Army, he offered its command to Birdwood who accepted. This paved the way for an Australian to assume command of the corps, the highest field command held by an Australian in the war. The two candidates were Major General
Cyril Brudenell White (Birdwood's chief-of-staff) and Major General
John Monash (commander of the
3rd Division). Monash, who was senior, had experience commanding troops in battle and was favoured by Haig and Birdwood, got the post in May
1918. The Australian Corps was used extensively throughout the
Hundred Days Offensive during which it achieved great success.
The 4th Division saw little rest in its role as the "depot". In December 1917 it was moved into reserve near
Péronne following the German counter-attack in the
Battle of Cambrai (1917). In January 1918, the division was returned to the front line south of
Ypres as Haig acquiesced to French demands to take over more of the front. From this time until the Australians were withdrawn from fighting in early October, all divisions of the corps saw nearly continuous action. Rather than disbanding entire divisions, any consolidation of strength was made under the British system of reducing
brigades from four
battalions to three.