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Graveyard at Passchendaele, 1917 (b/w photo)

IMAGE number
NAM5925238
Image title
Graveyard at Passchendaele, 1917 (b/w photo)
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Artist
Unknown photographer, (20th century)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
black and white photograph
Date
1914 AD (C20th AD)
Image description

Graveyard at Passchendaele, 1917. Photograph, World War One, Western Front (1914-1918), 1917. The Third Battle of Ypres (or Passchendaele) was launched on 31 July 1917. Foul weather and strong German resistance saw the offensive grind to a halt in a shell-churned and water-logged wasteland. Bombardier William Weyman of the Royal Field Artillery described the conditions in his diary: ‘We found it very difficult to reach the position we had. It was almost impossible to walk with any degree of safety. It was just a question of keeping to the lips of the shell holes. These, in most cases, had merged into wide extended holes already filling with water. Ahead, as far as I could see, conditions were the same, some of these water-filled depressions resembled small lakes, the result of clusters of shells falling in a limited area. The conditions finally brought us to a halt. There was no way vehicle or packhorse traffic could move. These conditions prevented sufficient supplies being brought forward quickly enough. Movement on any scale was too hazardous. Guns could not be brought to this location. The conditions provided the Germans with near perfect defensive cover. The land drainage system of the surrounding country had been destroyed’ (NAM. 2007-11-48). One of 193 British and Allied official photographs.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
cemetery / Ypres / Belgium / Europe / grave / memorial / funerary / duckboard / engineering / mud / Photograph / Photography / Mzphoto
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Largest available format 5019 × 3314 px 18 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 5019 × 3314 px 425 × 281 mm 17.5 MB
Medium 1024 × 676 px 87 × 57 mm 952 KB

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