The 'Battle of Sari Bair', also known as the 'August Offensive', was the final attempt made by the
British to seize control of the
Gallipoli peninsula from the
Ottoman Empire during
First World War.
The
Battle of Gallipoli had raged on two fronts,
Anzac and
Helles, for three months since the invasion of
25 April 1915. With the Anzac landing a tense stalemate, the
Allies had attempted to carry the offensive on the Helles battlefield at enormous cost for little gain. In August, the British command proposed a new operation to reinvigorate the campaign by capturing the Sari Bair ridge, the high ground that dominated the middle of the peninsula above the Anzac landing.
The main operation started on
6 August with a fresh landing five miles north of Anzac at
Suvla Bay in conjunction with the
Australian and New Zealand Army Corps mounting an attack north into the rugged country alongside the Sari Bair range with the aim of capturing the high ground and linking with the Suvla landing. At Helles, the British and
French were now to remain largely on the defensive.
Origins of the name
To be accurate about the geography, the battle should properly be known as the "Battle of ''Kocaçimentepe''" which was the correct
Turkish name for the ridge and its highest peak (meaning "Great Grass Mountain"). The peak was known to the British as "Hill 971" and they mistakenly applied the name for a lesser ridge to the main range (''Sari Bayir'', meaning "Yellow Slope", which ended at the imposing bluff above
Anzac Cove known as "The Sphinx").
Prelude
For this offensive the commander of the
Mediterranean Expeditionary Force, General
Sir Ian Hamilton, was provided with three British
New Army divisions; the
10th (Irish) Division, the
11th (Northern) Division and the
13th (Western) Division — all previously untried in
battle. He was later reinforced with two
Territorial Army divisions; the
53rd (Welsh) Division and the
54th (East Anglian) Division and one division of dismounted
yeomanry; the
2nd Mounted Division.
The Suvla landing was to be made by the
British IX Corps, under the command of the aged
Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick Stopford who had retired in
1909 and had never commanded men in battle. His appointment was made based solely on seniority but his hesitancy during the preparations for the landing should have warned Hamilton that he was not a fit choice for the command.
The Turks were well aware that a renewal of the offensive was imminent. There had been some doubt about whether the British would abandon the campaign but this was dispelled when
Winston Churchill made a careless speech in
Dundee, stating that the battle would continue, whatever the sacrifices. Consequently the
Fifth Army underwent a reorganisation resulting in an expansion to 16
divisions. Ten of these defended the existing battlefields (six at Helles, which had seen the bulk of the early fighting, and four at Anzac). Three divisions defended the Asian shore of the Dardanelles and three divisions of the
Turkish XVI Corps defended the
Gulf of Saros north of
Bulair at the neck of the peninsula.
The Turks anticipated that the offensive would involve a breakout from Anzac but were unsure whether it would be north (towards Suvla) or south (towards
Gaba Tepe). A new British landing was also considered likely but Suvla was not rated highly as a candidate, consequently only a modest force of four battalions defended the area. The Turkish commanders also dismissed the possibility of an assault against the Sari Bair range due to the rugged terrain. Only
Mustafa Kemal, commander of the
19th Division at Anzac, expected the attack against the heights but he was unable to convince his superiors to significantly strengthen the defences — only one
regiment was moved to the sector north of ANZAC.
Anzac breakout
The attack from the Anzac perimeter was directed against two peaks of the Sari Bair range;
Chunuk Bair and Hill 971. Under the overall command of
Major-General Alexander Godley, the attacking force included the
New Zealand and Australian Division, the British
13th Division plus a couple of extra infantry
brigades.
The plan was for two assaulting columns to march out of Anzac on the night of
6 August. The right-hand column, comprising the
New Zealand Infantry Brigade under
Brigadier-General Francis Johnston, would head for Chunuk Bair. The left-hand column, commanded by Major-General
Vaughn Cox, heading for Hill 971 and neighbouring Hill Q, contained the
Australian 4th Infantry Brigade of Brigadier-General
John Monash and Cox's
29th Indian Brigade. Both objectives were expected to be captured by dawn.
To distract the Turks from the impending offensive, on
6 August, at 5.30 p.m., an attack was made at
Lone Pine by the infantry brigades of the
Australian 1st Division. While the attack was ultimately successful in capturing the Turkish trenches, it was counterproductive as a diversion as it attracted reinforcements to the north. Another costly diversion was carried out at Helles which resulted in a pointless struggle over a patch of ground known as
Krithia Vineyard. As was the case at Lone Pine, the British action at Helles did not restrain the Turks from sending reinforcements north to the Sari Bair range.
The right column heading for Chunuk Bair had a simpler navigation task as their route was to some degree visible from the old Anzac perimeter. In what became known as the
Battle of Chunuk Bair, the
New Zealanders failed to capture the peak by the morning of
7 August but managed the feat on the next morning.
On the morning following the breakout, a number of other attacks were planned within the old Anzac perimeter. The most notorious was the attack of the
Australian 3rd Light Horse Brigade at
The Nek whose slim chance of success had depended on the New Zealanders having captured Chunuk Bair on schedule.
The left column's journey through the tangled ravines was doomed to failure and, having become lost and confused, it never got close to the objective of Hill 971. By the morning of
8 August Cox's forces were sufficiently organised to attempt an attack on their original objectives of Hill 971 and Hill Q. However Monash's brigade was still mistaken about its position relative to Hill 971. In fact, by the end of the day's advance Monash's troops had actually reached the position they had believed they had been starting from. Meanwhile Hill 971 was more unreachable than ever. The three Australian
battalions that had made the assault suffered 765 casualties — the 15th Battalion was reduced to about 30% of its normal strength.
Of the force aiming for Hill Q, one battalion of
Gurkhas commanded by
Major Cecil Allanson and joined by disparate New Army men, moved to within 200 feet of Hill Q by 6 p.m. on 8 August where they sought shelter from the heavy Turkish fire. After a
naval artillery bombardment, the battalion attacked the summit shortly after 5 a.m. on
9 August. The plan of the attack, as concocted by General Godley, had involved numerous other battalions but all were lost or pinned down so the Gurkhas went on alone. They succeeded in driving the Turks off the hill but were then caught in further naval gunfire from friendly
monitors or from an
artillery battery at Anzac. Having suffered heavy casualties and with no reinforcements, Allanson's force was pushed back off the hill shortly afterwards.
By the end of 9 August the Allies retained only a foothold on Chunuk Bair. On
10 August the Turks, led from the front by Colonel Mustafa Kemal, counter-attacked and regained control of the entire Sari Bair ridge.
''See Also:''
Battle of Krithia Vineyard —
Battle of Lone Pine —
Battle of the Nek —
Battle of Chunuk Bair
Suvla landing
''Main article:''
Landing at Suvla Bay
Stopford's IX Corps comprised the British
10th(Irish) and
11th Divisions. At the time of the landing on August 6 the British were confronted by three Turkish battalions under the command of a
Bavarian
cavalry officer,
Major Wilhelm Willmer whose task was to delay the British until reinforcements could arrive from Bulair, 30 miles away.
The 11th Division landed on the night of 6 August and two brigades of the 10th Division landed the following morning. The original objectives were the capture of the ridge lines to the north (Kiretch Tepe) and east (Tekke Tepe) and the line of hills to the south on the Anafarta Spur. However, Stopford's timorous nature and Hamilton's failure to exert his will on his subordinate commanders meant the objectives were diluted to little more than securing the beach.
The landings, made in the dark without the aid of reliable
reconnaissance, suffered from the same confusion that reigned at
Anzac landing on
25 April. Lighters ran aground on sandbars so that the troops had to wade some distance to get ashore. Many units became intermingled and officers were unable to locate their objectives.
Lala Baba was captured by the 6th Battalion of
The Yorkshire Regiment in what was the first combat action by any unit of
Lord Kitchener's
New Army.
By evening on 7 August progress had been minimal. To the south east Chocolate Hill and Green Hill were taken in the evening with minimal resistance but constant harassment by
shrapnel and
sniper fire. The British suffered 1,700 casualties on the first day at Suvla.
Stopford's first serious attempt at the ridges of the Anafarta Hills to the east was made on the night of 8 August, following intervention from Hamilton, but on the morning of 9 August the Turkish reinforcements had begun to arrive and the British were driven back. he fighting concentrated around
Scimitar Hill which protruded northwards from the Anafarta Spur and dominated the southern approach to the Tekke Tepe ridge. Scimitar Hill had been captured then abandoned on
8 August; attempts to retake the hill on 9 and 10 August were thwarted by the Turks. The gunfire was so intense it set the undergrowth ablaze and many of the wounded were incinerated where they lay.
As the fighting developed, the landing was reinforced by the arrival of the British
53rd Division on 9 August followed by the
54th Division on
10 August. Stopford now had four divisions under his corps command but was faced by a similar strength of Turkish defenders. The 53rd Division was mauled in another attack on Scimitar Hill on
10 August.
On
15 August Hamilton finally sacked Stopford and a number of division and brigade commanders. The command of IX Corps was given to Major-General
Beauvoir de Lisle, commander of the
29th Division until Lieutenant-General
Julian Byng could travel from France to assume command.
Last battles
''Main articles:''
Battle of Scimitar Hill —
Battle of Hill 60
As the shape of the new front line firmed, General Hamilton planned one further attack to try to link the Suvla landing to Anzac. This required the capture of a group of hills; Scimitar Hill and the 'W' Hills from Suvla and Hill 60 from the new Anzac sector. The attacks were to commence on
21 August. At Suvla, de Lisle had his 29th Division and the
2nd Mounted Division which had been moved to Suvla as additional reinforcements.
The 29th Division was to attack
Scimitar Hill while the 11th Division was to take the W Hills on the south of the Anafarta Spur. The 2nd Mounted Division was in reserve near Lala Baba on the far side of the salt lake. This attack was the largest mounted by the Allies at Gallipoli. Scimitar Hill was captured briefly but the attackers were driven off or killed by the defensive fire from the Turks higher up the spur. Once again the undergrowth ignited, burning many of the wounded. The 2nd Mounted Division were called to join the attack and in a feat of the sort of glorious folly for which the British
gentleman soldier is renowned, they advanced, marching in extended formation, straight across the salt lake, under fire the whole way. For a second time the hill was captured, briefly, before being lost for the final time. The attack of the 11th Division towards the W Hills was held up by strong Turkish defences.
In the Anzac sector, Hill 60 had been unoccupied on the morning of 7 August when
Australian scouts passed across it however the Turks swiftly occupied and fortified it. The
Battle of Hill 60 lasted for eight days and while the summit of the hill was eventually reached, the Allies were unable to completely dislodge the sacrificially fighting Turkish defenders.
Aftermath
Once the battles of 21 August had finished, the front lines at Suvla and Anzac remained static for the remainder of the campaign. Localised fighting continued but no more major advances were attempted.
References