Over the top, amid bursting gas and tear shells, in a determined assault on the fortified Somme villages' Stereoscopic photograph

Item

Title
Over the top, amid bursting gas and tear shells, in a determined assault on the fortified Somme villages'
Stereoscopic photograph
Description
While photographers were active at the Front, many scenes were staged for film and still photography.
At 7.30 am on 1 July 1916, 14 British divisions attacked on the Somme. In most cases they were unable to keep up with the artillery barrage that was supposed to take them through to the German trenches. This gave the Germans time to scramble out of their dugouts once the ineffective barrage had lifted, man their trenches and open fire. General Sir Douglas Haig's infantry were welcomed by a storm of machine-gun, rifle and artillery fire and suffered nearly 60,000 casualties during the day. Although the French had made good progress in the south and there had been some local successes, in most places the attack was a bloody failure.
Stereographs consist of two identical photographs paired in such a way that when seen through a special viewing instrument, a stereoscope, they appear as a three-dimensional images. By 1899 the photographs were mounted on thick card that was given a slight curvature to increase the illusion of depth.
Date
January 1916
Century
20th century
Decade material covers
1910s
Type
Photograph
Subject
Western Front
Figures
Weapons
Contemporary Country
France
Repository
National Army Museum
Repository Item Record
Full record with image
War
First World War
Army
Great Britain
Battle
Battle of the Somme