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Chris Roberts - Artillery at Anzac: Adaptation, Innovation and Education

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Artillery at Anzac: Adaptation, Innovation and Education: summary, description and annotation

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This meticulously researched book provides the first comprehensive study of the employment of artillery and naval gunfire support at Anzac. Faced with huge difficulties on inferior ground the Australian, New Zealand, Indian, and British gunners quickly adapted to a hostile environment, employing innovative techniques to counter superior numbers of Ottoman artillery and provide fire support to their infantry and light horse colleagues. How well they performed is a central theme of The Artillery at Anzac.Using a host of primary sources including official manuals, war diaries, operation orders, letters, and private papers the authors trace the story of this neglected feature of the Gallipoli campaign. Commencing with an evaluation of the nascent pre-war Australian and New Zealand artillery, they take the reader through the testing introduction to the realities of modern warfare, the trials and difficulties the gunners experienced throughout the campaign, to the phased evacuation in December, without alerting the Ottomans to the reduced number of guns. Along the way, they challenge a long held controversy concerning the light horse charge at the Nek, and evaluate the effectiveness of the fire support provided to the infantry attacks, including that at Lone Pine, the attacks on the Sari Bair Range, and at Hill 60. In doing so, the authors illuminate long-buried information to provide new and penetrating insights into the campaign at Anzac.The Artillery at Anzac reveals a largely unknown aspect of the campaign, deepening our understanding of it, and providing a new perspective that is of value not only to Gunners past and present, but to historians, and the wider public. Although occurring over a century ago the experience at Anzac offers lessons to todays Gunners.

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CONTENTS - photo 1

CONTENTS


































Copyright Chris Roberts & Paul Stevens

First published 2021

This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without written permission.


All inquiries should be made to the publishers.


Big Sky Publishing Pty Ltd

PO Box 303, Newport, NSW 2106, Australia

Phone: 1300 364 611

Fax: (61 2) 9918 2396

Email:

Web: www.bigskypublishing.com.au


Cover design and typesetting: Think Productions

Printed in China

Cover image caption Observers scan the enemy line for targets on 30 April 1915 - photo 2

Cover image caption: Observers scan the enemy line for targets on 30 April 1915 from a gun of the 7th AFA Battery, 3rd AFA Brigade, deployed close to the front line on Boltons Ridge (AWM J06134).

THE ARTILLERY AT ANZAC Adaptation Innovation and Education Chris Roberts - photo 3

THE ARTILLERY
AT ANZAC

Adaptation, Innovation and Education


Chris Roberts and Paul Stevens


THE ARTILLERY
AT ANZAC

Adaptation, Innovation and Education


Chris Roberts and Paul Stevens Table of Contents List of Maps 1 - photo 4

Chris Roberts and Paul Stevens

Table of Contents

List of Maps

1.General Hamiltons plan
2.The Sari Bair Range
3.Anzac: Hill 971 to Anzac Cove
4.The 1st Australian Division objectives, 25 April 1915
5.The Ottoman defensive dispositions in the Sari Bair-Gaba Tepe area, 24 April 1915
6.The situation at Anzac on the evening of 25 April 1915
7.Plan for the attack on Baby 700, 2 May 1915
8.Fire plan for the attack on Baby 700, 2 May 1915
9.Battery positions and defensive sections, 25 May 1915
10.Roads constructed within Anzac
11.Fire plan for the capture of Turkish Despair, 31 July 1915
12.Battery positions at the end of July 1915
13.Plan for the breakout and capture of the Sari Bair Range, night 6/7 August 1915
14.Corps fire plan for the August Offensive
15.Australian attacks at Lone Pine, German Officers Trench, Quinns Post, Popes Hill and the Nek, 6/7 August 1915
16.Fire plan for the attack at Lone Pine
17.Situation north of Anzac, early morning 7 August 1915
18.Plan for the Light Horse attacks at Quinns Post, Popes Hill, and the Nek, 7 August 1915
19.Preparatory fire plan for the Light Horse attacks, night 6/7 August 1915
20.Supporting fire plan for the Light Horse attacks, 7 August 1915
21.The terrain north of Anzac
22.Fire plan and New Zealand attack on Chunuk Bair, 7 August 1915
23.Fire plan and attacks on Sari Bair, 8 August 1915
24.Fire plan and attacks on Hill Q and Chunuk Bair, 9 August 1915
25.Enlarged Anzac area and defensive sections
26.Plan for the attack at Hill 60, 21 August 1915
27.Fire plan for the attack at Hill 60, 21 August 1915
28.Fire plan for the attack at Hill 60, 27 August 1915
29.Actual fire support provided for the attack at Hill 60, 27 August 1915
30.NZ&A Divisional Artillery battery positions, September 1915
31.Sketch map of Australian battery positions and arcs of fire, late August 1915
32.1st Australian Divisional Artillery battery positions, September 1915
33.Fire support for a putative attack at Hill 60 by the 54th (East Anglian) Division on 7 November

List of Organisation Charts

Organisation Chart 1. The 1st Australian Divisional Artillery, 1914
Organisation Chart 2. The New Zealand Field Artillery Brigade, March 1915
Organisation Chart 3. The 7th Indian Mountain Artillery Brigade
Organisation Chart 4: The 1st Australian Divisional Artillery, April to August 1915
Organisation Chart 5: NZ&A Divisional Artillery, prior to the August Offensive
Organisation Chart 6: British Divisional Artillery supporting ANZAC, 1 August 1915
Organisation Chart 7: British GHQ Artillery units supporting Anzac, October-November 1915
Organisation Chart 8: NZ&A Divisional Artillery, October-December 1915
Organisation Chart 9: The 1st Australian Divisional Artillery, October-December 1915

List of Diagrams

1.8th AFA Battery gun emplacements at the Pimple, May 1915
2.Sketch map showing the guns ashore by 8 May 1915 and their locations
3.9th AFA Battery gun positions and telephone system, June 1915
4.Artillery Communications Diagram, 26 April to 6 May 1915
5.Artillery Communications Diagram, 16 May to 3 June 1915
6.A gun pit with embrasure and the relative positions of the 4th AFA Batterys guns
7.Gun emplacement for No 2 Gun, 9th AFA Battery
8.Gun emplacement for No 4 Gun, 9th AFA Battery
9.Field of view, 9th AFA Battery observation station
10.Panoramic sketch from the war diary of the 4th AFA Battery observation post
11.Example registration card, 4th AFA Battery
12.Example ranging board, 9th AFA Battery
13.Hostile batteries, June, 1st Divisional Artillery War Diary
14.Artillery communications, 27 August 1915

INDEX

400 Plateau

field gun siting


A

Abdul Rahman Bair

Achi Baba Ridge

adaptation

Aghyl Dere

air observation

aircraft

Alexandria

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