100 Years Ago Today: The Lahore Division takes the field at Battle of Ypres


Sepoy Khudadad Khan,VC, Hollebeke Sector, First Battle of Ypres, 30 October
1914.
Author Edgar Alfred Holloway (Public Domain)

*100 Years Ago Today: The Lahore Division takes the field at Battle of
Ypres *

 Posted on centenarynews.com on *24 October 2014*

 *Soldiers of the Lahore Division of Britain's colonial Indian Army went
into action in Belgium for the first time on October 24th 1914. CN writer
Christopher J. Harvie discusses a critical moment in the First Battle of
Ypres.*
Eventually contributing over one million troops, the British Indian Army
would become the largest source of volunteers from the Empire. The first
units to the Western Front in 1914, parts of the Indian Corps of Indian
Expeditionary Force A, arrived at a most desperate moment.


 In two months of open warfare costly battles had been fought back and
forth in the hinterlands of France and Belgium. Constant contact had worn
the armies down, shrunk their reserves of manpower and turned the war into
not much more than a grappling match.

 “*Ypres became a grinding battle of willpower more than anything else.
Through heavy rains along ground already wet and miserable and days growing
colder, villages, woods and shallow trenches were taken and retaken.  For
almost four weeks of assaults and counter attacks, wearied men on both
sides continued to hammer away at each other in a dogged and brutal
fashion.*”

(“First Light of Dawn”, author’s post If Ye Break Faith)
Gone by this point were the sweeping, grand manoeuvres of large armies in
the field. The conflict had now devolved to isolated skirmishes, both sides
attempting to probe for the weak link that would open the ground wide again.
By mid-October, the low-lying, difficult terrain of Belgian Flanders was
the only place remaining where either the Germans or the Allies might break
through. The remainder of the front had settled into mutual defensive works
or would be deliberately flooded by order of the Belgian King. To date, the
BEF had incurred 57,000 casualties and in some places around the Ypres area
of operations were so depleted as to be at a 12:1 numerical disadvantage.

*India Arrives*

 On October 20th 1914, the Indian Cavalry Corps with the 3rd (Lahore) and
7th (Meerut) Divisions began to reach the front. With an immediate need to
shore up the thinly held salient, the 3rd Division, having arrived first,
was broken up. Individual brigades and battalions were sent where they were
most needed. The Division would be blooded almost simultaneously in three
separate engagements at La Bassée, Messines and Armentières.

Despite the home garrison being in the predominantly Punjab city of Lahore,
which is now within Pakistan, the 3rd Division (referred to by its
nominative “Lahore Division” on the Western Front to avoid confusion with
the BEF’s 3rd Division) was composed of battalions of wide backgrounds
including men of Baloch, Dogra, Ghurkha, Pathan, Punjabi and Sindhi
heritage.  It came into its pre-war organisation during Kitchener’s reforms
of the Indian Army in 1904, as part of Northern Command, with the
Jullundur, Sirhind and Ambala brigades

*“Where is my Division?”*

 The deconstruction of the Lahore Division wasn’t a discourtesy; at this
point larger formations were of little use and these troops as with some
British units became detached and used as “flying squads” to shore up the
line during a very fluid situation. Lieutenant General Wilcox, GOC Indian
Corps, noted in his diary in late October how the Division was taken apart:

*"Where is my Lahore Division? Sirhind Brigade detained in Egypt.
Ferozepore Brigade: somewhere in the north, split up into three or four
bits. Jullundur Brigade: Manchesters gone south to (British) 5 Division
(this disposes of only British unit) 47th Sikhs: Half fighting with some
British division; half somewhere else! 59th Rifles and 15th Sikhs:In
trenches 34th Pioneers (divisional troops) also in trenches 15th Lancers:
In trenches. Two companies of Sappers and Miners fighting as infantry with
British divisions. Divisional Headquarters: Somewhere?*”
(*With the Indians in France*, London: Constable, 1920)

With his brigades stretched so far apart and attached to other commands,
General Wilcox was a Corps commander without a corps to command.

*No Reserves*

 The soldiers of the Division had grown a domestic reputation as formidable
warriors. Now as they entered a European battlefield for the first time,
they proved themselves deserving. Desperately outnumbered and under
pressure of constant German attacks, the Lahore Division in the localities
it was set to defend held ground and went into counter attacks which helped
solidify the British line outside of Ypres, the critical rail and road
juncture of Flanders whose possession could dictate a heavy advantage.
Britain had no reserves ready to deploy. The Regulars were all but spent,
most of the Territorial’s were still assembling and the large volunteer
force to become known as “Kitchener’s Armies” had barely begun to train.
The addition in late October 1914 of two trained and motivated divisions
quite possibly staved the disaster of collapse at Ypres. By month’s end the
Indian Corps had suffered 1,565 casualties.

*For Valour*

 Not two weeks after his 26th birthday, Sepoy Khudadad Khan and his machine
gun team were facing a severe German attack, October  31st 1914. He
remained at his post despite wounds and the loss of the other men of his
detachment,  keeping his gun firing-the only remaining machine gun in
action- only leaving after the enemy had bypassed his position believing
him dead. For his actions, Sepoy Khudadad was awarded the Victoria Cross,
the Empire’s highest award, himself being the first South Asian recipient
of the decoration.

*“The Jewel of Punjab”*

 Today, Lahore is the capital city of Punjab Province in Pakistan, known
affectionately as “The Jewel of Punjab.” It lies close to the border with
India. The city was a place of contention and violence during partition in
1947  but exists now as a thriving commercial and cultural centre.

*© Centenary Digital Ltd & Author*
 <[email protected]>


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With best wishes

S Chander

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