FRIDAY marked the centenary of the final day of the Battle of the Somme.

This important anniversary comes at a time when the papers of an Army Major who was one of the first to command tanks at the Battle of the Somme have just been published by the National Army Museum.

Major Allen Holford-Walker was a tank commander on the Somme and fought in both the Battle of Flers-Courcelette (15-22 September 1916) and the Battle of Ancre (13-18 November 1916).

His papers, which include photos, diaries and letters, give a first-hand account of the earliest days of tank warfare, as the British struggled to make the most of their new weapon.

Major Holford-Walker's great-grandson is still serving with the Royal Armoured Corps in Bovington, Dorset.

The development of the tank had been a close guarded secret as the British Army tried to find a mechanical solution to trench warfare. Both Allen and his brother Archie commanded tanks on their arrival on the Somme at the Battle of Flers and found them to be very unreliable.

Of the three tanks under Archie’s command, one broke down, one suffered damage and one ran out of petrol and needed re-fuelling by the brothers.

When the attack started, only 15 of the 49 tanks available were able to move into no-man’s-land.

In Allen’s post-war assessment of the attack, he wrote that the element of surprise had been wasted, and that the tank crews had been thrown into battle without adequate training.

In September, artillery and infantry were working together, with troops advancing behind the creeping barrage. But at Flers large gaps were left in the bombardment and in other battles infantry overtook the slow moving tanks and found themselves trapped in heavy machine gun fire, suffering heavy losses.

At Ancre it was decided that tanks would follow the infantry. As Allen’s papers show, it was emphasised in instructions to troops that ‘the Infantry would not wait for the tanks.’

This meant that the tanks would instead be used to mop up the infantry but the machines themselves were slow, cumbersome and prone to technical problems.

In the glutinous November Somme mud, they were vulnerable to getting stuck, which Allen records as fateful: “I attribute the fact of the Tanks failing to gain their objective to the extraordinary bad ground they had to cross which was worse than I imagined possible.”

The new tanks and their inexperienced crews were ultimately ineffective at Ancre. A breakthrough was very nearly achieved with the ground-breaking vehicles at the Battle of Cambrai in November 1917, where tanks were first used on a mass scale.

However, by 1918 the tank ensured final Allied victory as it became part of a complex all arms battle-plan, which when combined with aircraft, artillery and infantry tactics.

Dr Peter Johnson, Collections Development and Review Manager at the National Army Museum said: “Major Allen Holford-Walker’s papers demonstrate how the British were forced to develop a whole new set of battle tactics for the newly-invented tank. The British Army were under great pressure to adapt and innovate a way to break the bloody stalemate of trench warfare on the Western Front. It was the lessons learned on the battlefield by soldiers like Allen Holford-Walker, often at great cost, that paved the way for later Allied victories in 1918.”

The National Army Museum is publishing the papers of Major Allen Holford-Walker, who was one of the first to command tanks at the Battle of the Somme.

One hundred years after the first tanks appeared on the battlefield his great-grandson is still serving with the Royal Armoured Corps in Bovington, Dorset.

As a tank commander on the Somme Holford-Walker fought in both the Battle of Flers-Courcelette (15-22 September 1916) and the Battle of Ancre (13-18 November 1916).

His papers, which include photos, diaries and letters, give a first-hand account of the earliest days of tank warfare, as the British struggled to make the most of their new weapon.

The development of the tank had been a close guarded secret as the British Army tried to find a mechanical solution to trench warfare. Both Allen and his brother Archie commanded tanks on their arrival on the Somme at the Battle of Flers and found them to be very unreliable.

Of the three tanks under Archie’s command, one broke down, one suffered damage and one ran out of petrol and needed re-fuelling by the brothers. When the attack started, only 15 of the 49 tanks available were able to move into no-man’s-land. In Allen’s post-war assessment of the attack, he wrote that the element of surprise had been wasted, and that the tank crews had been thrown into battle without adequate training.

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