Name: |
Philip
Gluckman |
Death Date: |
8 Oct 1916 |
Rank: |
Lieutenant |
Regiment: |
London Regiment |
Battalion: |
25th (County of London) Battalion (Cyclist) |
Type of Casualty: |
Killed in action |
[Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914-19]
In Memory of
Lieutenant PHILIP GLUCKMAN
London Regiment (Cyclists) attd. 1st/3rd Bn., London Regiment (Royal Fusiliers)
who died age 28 on 08 October 1916
Son of Joseph Gluckman, of Vereeniging, Transvaal, South Africa.
Remembered with honour Thiepval Memorial,
Somme, France. Pier and Face 12 C.
Commemorated in perpetuity by
the Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Thiepval Memorial,
Somme
,
France
On 1 July 1916, supported by a French attack to the south, thirteen divisions
of Commonwealth forces launched an offensive on a line from north of
Gommecourt to Maricourt. Despite a preliminary bombardment lasting seven days,
the German defences were barely touched and the attack met unexpectedly fierce
resistance. Losses were catastrophic and with only minimal advances on the
southern flank, the initial attack was a failure. In the following weeks, huge
resources of manpower and equipment were deployed in an attempt to exploit the
modest successes of the first day. However, the German Army resisted
tenaciously and repeated attacks and counter attacks meant a major battle for
every village, copse and farmhouse gained. At the end of September, Thiepval
was finally captured. The village had been an original objective of 1 July.
Attacks north and east continued throughout October and into November in
increasingly difficult weather conditions. The
Battle
of the
Somme
finally ended on 18 November with the onset of winter. In the spring of 1917,
the German forces fell back to their newly prepared defences, the Hindenburg
Line, and there were no further significant engagements in the
Somme
sector until the Germans mounted their major offensive in March 1918. The
Thiepval Memorial, the Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, bears the names
of more than 72,000 officers and men of the
United Kingdom
and South African forces who died in the
Somme
sector before 20 March 1918 and have no known grave. Over 90% of those
commemorated died between July and November 1916. The memorial also serves as
an Anglo-French Battle Memorial in recognition of the joint nature of the 1916
offensive and a small cemetery containing equal numbers of Commonwealth and
French graves lies at the foot of the memorial. The memorial, designed by Sir
Edwin Lutyens, was built between 1928 and 1932 and unveiled by the Prince of
Wales, in the presence of the President of France, on 1 August 1932
(originally scheduled for 16 May but due to the death of French President
Doumer the ceremony was postponed until August). The dead of other
Commonwealth countries, who died on the
Somme
and have no known graves, are commemorated on national memorials elsewhere.
The Thiepval Memorial will be found on the D73,
next to the
village
of
Thiepval
, off the main Bapaume to Albert road (D929). Each year a major ceremony is
held at the memorial on 1 July.
[Courtesy of
Commonwealth War Graves Commission]
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