Bapaume town hall explosion

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50°06′14.1″N 2°50′58.7″E / 50.103917°N 2.849639°E / 50.103917; 2.849639

The town hall depicted pre-war

On 25 March 1917 an explosion at the town hall in Bapaume, Pas-de-Calais, France, killed 24 people including Australian soldiers, civilians of the Australian Comforts Fund and two members of the French parliament. An explosive device had been left behind on a time-delayed fuse by German troops, hoping to kill members of an Allied headquarters unit. After the war the town hall was rebuilt and includes memorials to those that died.

Australian troops outside the town hall 19 March 1917

In early spring 1917 the German forces on the Western Front of the First World War withdrew to prepared defensive positions on the Hindenburg Line as part of Operation Alberich. The Hindenburg Line was a series of fortifications intended to be held with fewer troops than the previous forward positions, releasing troops for offensives elsewhere.[1] During their retreat the Germans adopted a scorched earth policy, destroying things that might be of value to the Allied forces. They also left behind land mines and booby traps intended to kill or injure Allied troops.[2] During their withdrawal the Germans abandoned the town of Bapaume, which they had held since the first months of the war in 1914.[3]

Explosion

Aftermath and legacy

References

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