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On 7
June 1915,
the Dardanelles
Committee met in London
and, under the guidance of Lord
Kitchener, decided to reinforce the Mediterranean
Expeditionary Force of General Sir
Ian Hamilton with three New
Army divisions.
Two more Territorial
Army divisions were allocated later in the month, giving Hamilton
the numbers required to reinvigorate the campaign. A long-standing plan
to break out of the Anzac bridgehead
was adopted; it had first been proposed on 30
May by the commander of the Australian
and New Zealand Army Corps, Lieutenant-General William
Birdwood.
However, just as the original landing site at Helles
in April had insufficient space to land all the troops available, and so
a secondary landing was to be made north of Gaba
Tepe, now in July there was insufficient room to accommodate all the
new troops within the congested Anzac perimeter, nor was there room to
manoeuvre them in battle, and so a new landing at Suvla was planned
which would link up with the forces at Anzac.
The Suvla landing was to be made by the newly formed
British
IX Corps, initially comprising two brigades
of the 10th
(Irish) Division and the entire 11th
(Northern) Division. Command of IX Corps was given to
Lieutenant-General Sir
Frederick Stopford. British military
historian J.F.C.
Fuller said of Stopford that he had "no conception of what
generalship meant" and indeed he was appointed not on his
experience (he had seen little combat and had never commanded men in
battle) or his energy and enthusiasm (he was aged 61 and had retired in 1909)
but because of his position on the list of seniority. Hamilton had
requested either Lieutenant-General Julian
Byng or Lieutenant-General Henry
Rawlinson, both experienced Western
Front corps commanders, but both were junior to Lieutenant-General Sir
Bryan Mahon, commander of the 10th Division and so, by a process of
elimination, Stopford was selected. 
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Map of the Suvla
and Anzac areas at Gallipoli,1915 |
The offensive was to open on 6
August 1915
with diversions at Helles (the Battle
of Krithia Vineyard) and Anzac (the Battle
of Lone Pine). The landing at Suvla was to commence at 10:00 pm, an
hour after the two assaulting columns had broken out of Anzac heading
for the Sari Bair heights. The original plan at Suvla was to put the
11th Division ashore south of Nibrunesi Point, the southern headland of
the bay, as it was not considered safe to land in the dark within the
bay itself where there were uncharted shoals.
The 30th and 31st Brigades of the 10th Division would landing the
following morning. The objective of IX Corps was to seize the ring of
hills that surrounded the Suvla plain; Kiretch
Tepe to the north along the Gulf
of Saros, Tekke
Tepe to the east and the Anafarta Spur to the south-east.
When Stopford was first shown the plan on
22
July he declared, "It is a good plan. I am sure it will succeed
and I congratulate whoever has been responsible for framing it."
Stopford's chief-of-staff, Brigadier
General Hamilton
Reed was not so supportive and his doubts and prejudices succeeded
in swaying Stopford. Reed was an artillery
officer who had won the Victoria
Cross during the Boer
War. Having served on the Western Front, he believed no assault on
entrenched positions could be made without artillery support. Reconnaissance
had revealed no prepared fortifications at Suvla and yet Stopford
proceeded to limit the objectives of the landing and Hamilton failed to
stop him. The final orders issued by Stopford and the 11th Division
commander, Major
General Frederick
Hammersley, were imprecise, requiring only that the high ground be
taken "if possible". 
Stopford and Reed also wanted the 34th Brigade of the
11th Division to be landed within Suvla Bay itself. Unlike the April
landings, IX Corps was supplied with purpose-built landing
craft known as "Beetles" which were armoured
and self-propelled. This fleet of landing craft was commanded by Commander
Edward
Unwin who had captained the SS River Clyde during the April landing on V
Beach at Cape Helles.
The commander of the Turkish
Fifth Army, General Otto
Liman von Sanders, was well aware a new landing was imminent through
reports of troop build-ups in the Greek
islands, however he was unsure of where the landing would be made.
British deceptions made a landing on the Asian
shore possible so three divisions were located there while three more
were stationed 30 miles north of Suvla at Bulair
on the neck of the peninsula. Suvla was defended by three battalions,
the "Anafarta Detachment", under the command of a Bavarian
cavalry officer, Major Wilhelm
Willmer, whose task was to delay any enemy advance until
reinforcements arrived. Willmer had no machine
guns and few field
artillery pieces. Willmer constructed three strong points; one on
Kiretch Tepe to the north, one on Hill 10 in the centre and one on
Chocolate Hill, near the southern end of the salt
lake that lay behind the beach. Small pickets were positioned
elsewhere, including on Lala Baba, a small hill between the beach and
the salt lake.
When the attack at Lone Pine commenced, Willmer was
ordered to send one battalion as reinforcements so that when 20,000
British began landing at Suvla, they were opposed by only 1,500 Turkish
soldiers. 
The 32nd and 33rd Brigades of the 11th Division began
to come ashore at "B Beach" south of Nibrunesi Point shortly
before 10 pm. In the first action fought by a New
Army unit, two companies from the 6th Battalion, The
Yorkshire Regiment, drove the Turkish defenders off the small
hillock of Lala Baba which overlooked the beach. It was an inauspicious
start; all but two of the Yorkshires' officers became casualties as did
one third of the men.
Shortly afterwards the 34th Brigade attempted to land
at "A Beach" within Suvla Bay but the landing went awry from
the start. The destroyers
conveying the brigade anchored 1,000 yards
too far south, facing shoal water and on the wrong side of the channel
that drained the salt
lake into the bay. Two lighters grounded on reefs and the men had to
wade ashore submerged up to their necks. The 11th Battalion, The
Manchester Regiment, having come ashore from the destroyer HMS Grampus, had the greatest success of the landing, managing to
find its way to the Kiretch Tepe ridge and fight its way some distance
along it to the east for the loss of 200 casualties.
Elsewhere the landing was in chaos,
having been made in pitch darkness which resulted in great confusion
with units becoming mixed and officers unable to locate their position
or their objectives. Later, when the moon rose, the British troops
became targets for Turkish snipers. Attempts to capture Hill 10 failed
because no one in the field knew where Hill 10 was. Shortly after dawn
it was found and taken, the Turkish rearguard having withdrawn during
the night.
Stopford had chosen to command the
landing from the sloop HMS Jonquil but as the landing was in
progress, he went to sleep. The first news he received was when
Commander Unwin came aboard at 4 am on 7 August to discourage further
landings in Suvla Bay. 
British war correspondent Ellis
Ashmead-Bartlett witnessed the landing shortly after dawn from the
transport Minneapolis. While he could hear the fighting
continuing at Anzac, Suvla was comparatively quiet and "no firm
hand appeared to control this mass of men suddenly dumped on an unknown
shore." The British official history, written by Captain Cecil
Aspinall-Oglander who was on Hamilton's staff, was blunt in its
assessment;
- "It was now broad daylight and the situation in Suvla
Bay was verging on chaos."
Progress on 7 August was minimal. The
two brigades of the 10th Division came ashore, adding to the confusion.
In the heat of the day, the soldiers became desperate for drinking
water. Towards evening two hills east of the salt lake were captured;
these represented the sole gains for the first day ashore at Suvla. IX
Corps had suffered 1,700 casualties in the first 24 hours, a figure
exceeding the total size of Willmer's detachment. At 7 pm, Willmer was
able to report to Von Sanders:
- "No energetic attacks on the enemy's part have
taken place. On the contrary, the enemy is advancing timidly."
Von Sanders now ordered two divisions
from Bulair, the Turkish 7th Division and Turkish 12th Division, under
the command of Feizi Bey, to move south to Suvla.
Stopford did not go ashore from the Jonquil
on 7 August. By the end of the day, the chain of command had completely
broken down. 
Stopford was satisfied with the
results of the first day. On the morning of 8 August, he signalled
Hamilton:
- "Major-General Hammersley and troops under him
deserve great credit for the result attained against strenuous
opposition and great difficulty. I must now consolidate the position
held."
He had no intention of advancing to
the high ground. The British staff had estimated that it would take the
Turkish divisions at Bulair 36 hours to reach Suvla — they could be
expected to arrive on the evening of 8 August. Hamilton was dismayed by
the lack of progress so far and the absence of any drive from Stopford
or his subordinates. He had already dispatched Captain Aspinall to
discover first-hand what was happening at Suvla. Aspinall was
accompanied by Lieutenant-Colonel Maurice Hankey, Secretary to the
Committee of Imperial Defence, who was to report on the progress of the
campaign to the British Cabinet. When he received Stopford's signal,
Hamilton decided to see Suvla for himself, travelling on the yacht HMS Triad.
Aspinall and Hankey initially found
the ease and inactivity at Suvla encouraging, assuming it meant the
fighting was now far away amongst the hills. Once on the beach, they
were warned to keep their heads down as the front line was only a few
hundred yards away — and that Stopford was still aboard the Jonquil.
Aspinall found Stopford "in excellent spirits", well satisfied
with progress. When Aspinall pointed out that the men had not reached
the high ground, Stopford replied, "No, but they are ashore."
Aspinall and Hamilton both converged
on the light cruiser HMS Chatham, the flagship of Rear-Admiral
John de Robeck who commanded the landing fleet. Finally, on the
afternoon of 8 August, nearly two days after the landing commenced,
Hamilton gained a clear picture of events. Accompanied by Aspinall and
Commodore Roger Keyes, he crossed to the Jonquil to confront
Stopford who had finally been ashore to consult with Hammersley.
Stopford and Hammersley planned to
order an advance the following morning, 9 August. Hamilton insisted that
an advance be made immediately and so, at 6.30 pm, the 32nd Brigade was
ordered to march two and a half miles to the Tekke Tepe ridge. The
march, in darkness over unfamiliar, rough terrain, was difficult and the
brigade did not approach the summit until 4 am on 9 August. The Turkish
reinforcements had reached the ridge shortly before them and met the
exhausted British infantry with a bayonet charge. The 32nd Brigade was
virtually annihilated in a matter of minutes and the remnants of the
battalions scattered back towards the beach.
Hamilton had watched the battle from
the Triad. He wrote in his diary:
- "My heart has grown tough amidst the struggles
of the peninsula but the misery of this scene well-nigh broke it...
Words are of no use."

Feizi Bey's troops began to arrive, as expected by the
British, on the evening of 8
August. Von Sanders wanted to attack immediately but Feizi Bey
objected, saying that the men were exhausted and without artillery
support, so Von Sanders dismissed him. In his place he put Mustafa
Kemal, the commander of the Turkish 19th Division, which had been
fighting at Chunuk Bair. Kemal assumed authority over the "Anafarta
section" which spanned from Suvla south to Chunuk Bair.
Kemal was easily a match for Stopford. Ruthless and
decisive, he held the high ground and was content to remain on the
defensive at Suvla while he dealt with the threat to the Sari Bair
ridge. The intensity of the fighting escalated at Suvla on 9
August but the opportunity for the British to make a swift advance
had now disappeared. Around midday the gunfire set scrub alight on Scimitar
Hill, and Ashmead-Bartlett, watching from Lala Baba, saw the British
wounded trying to escape the flames:
- "I watched the flames approaching and the
crawling figures disappear amidst dense clouds of black smoke. When
the fire passed on little mounds of scorched khaki
alone marked the spot where another mismanaged soldier of the
King had returned to mother earth."
Reinforcements were arriving, the 53rd
(Welsh) Division had started coming ashore on the night of 8 August,
and the 54th
(East Anglian) Division arrived on 10
August, but command remained paralysed. Some of the reasons that
Stopford gave for his inaction were surreal,
such as that the Turks were "inclined to be aggressive." 
Hamilton finally cabled Kitchener that the IX Corps
generals were "unfit" for command. Kitchener swiftly replied
on 14
August, saying:
- "If you should deem it necessary to replace
Stopford, Mahon and Hammersley, have you any competent generals to
take their place? From your report I think Stopford should come
home. This is a young man's war, and we must have commanding
officers that will take full advantage of opportunities which occur
but seldom. If, therefore, any generals fail, do not hesitate to act
promptly. Any generals I have available I will send you."
Before receiving a response, Kitchener made
Lieutenant-General Julian
Byng available to command IX Corps. On 15
August Hamilton dismissed Stopford and, while Byng was travelling
from France,
replaced him with Major-General Beauvoir
de Lisle, commander of the British
29th Division at Helles. Hammersley was also dismissed but Hamilton
intended to retain Mahon in command of the 10th Division. However, Mahon
was incensed that de Lisle, who he disliked, was appointed above him and
quit, saying "I respectfully decline to waive my seniority and to
serve under the officer you name." He abandoned his division while
it was in the thick of the fighting on Kiretch Tepe. The commander of
the 53rd Division, Major-General John Lindley, voluntarily resigned.

General Stopford is blamed for the failure of the
Suvla operation but responsibility ultimately lay with Lord Kitchener
who, as Secretary
of State for War, had appointed the elderly and inexperienced
general to an active corps command, and with Sir Ian Hamilton who
accepted Stopford's appointment and then failed to impose his will on
his subordinate. On 13
August Hamilton had written in his diary,
- "Ought I have
resigned sooner than allow generals old and inexperienced to be foisted
up on me."
By then it was too late and Stopford's departure
contributed to Hamilton's downfall which came on 15
October when he was sacked as the commander of the Mediterranean
Expeditionary Force.
Under General de Lisle's command, the Suvla front was
reorganised and reinforced with the arrival of the 29th Division from
Helles and the 2nd
Mounted Division from Egypt
(minus their horses). The fighting climaxed on 21
August with the Battle
of Scimitar Hill, the largest battle of the Gallipoli campaign. When
it too failed, activity at Suvla subsided into sporadic fighting until
it was evacuated by the British in late December. 
- Moorehead, Alan (1956). Gallipoli.
Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 1853266752.
- Taylor & Cupper (1989). Gallipoli: A
Battlefield Guide. Kangaroo Press. ISBN 0731809831.
- Carlyon, Les (2001). Gallipoli. Macmillan.
ISBN 0732911281.
Text from Wikipedia |