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World War I was a railway war.
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I'm going to find out how the railways
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helped to precipitate a mechanised war...
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..defined how it was fought...
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..conveyed millions to the trenches...
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..and bore witness to it's end.
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I've taken to historic tracks to rediscover the locomotives
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and wagons of the war that was supposed to end all war.
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And to hear the stories of the gallant men and women who used them
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in life and in death.
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By 1914, almost a century had passed
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since the world's first locomotives ran in Britain.
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Railways had unfurled across Europe
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and the continent had enjoyed four decades of peace and prosperity.
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But the industrial and technological advances that marked
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the railway age had also brought deadly new weapons.
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In August 1914 a mechanised war was unleashed.
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I'm going to be travelling through Britain and Northern Europe,
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uncovering railway stories from the Great War.
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In wartime, British railways carried munitions,
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supplies and millions of men.
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Goodbye.
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Evacuated the wounded.
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I'm quite impressed by this.
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And kept the home front moving.
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Whilst on the Western Front, rail technology shaped the war's
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weapons, railway spies informed its strategy,
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and British railwaymen gave their all to the war effort.
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Today I'll see how Britain's railways coped with
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the challenge of sending thousands of men into the unknown.
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It is said that in that first 24 hours, only one train was late
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and only by 15 minutes.
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Visit a small station that played a big role in world history.
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This is the place where the German Army came
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and started World War I on the wrong day.
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And discover how desperate times
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called for desperate measures in Belgium.
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- You have the sabotage of the viaduct in Namur.
- Colossal damage.
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I'm starting my quest on European tracks, built with battle in mind,
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to chart the birth of the railway war,
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before tracing the route of the first British troops to join
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the conflict.
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Finally, I'll return to France to learn how the early war of movement
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gave way to the stalemate of the trenches.
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In the early 1900s, Europe's balance of power was looking fragile.
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From London,
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Britain's leaders were nervously watching a recently unified Germany,
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which had become a military power of formidable strength.
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This is the War Office.
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Here at the heart of the British Empire,
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at the start of the 20th century, ministers, admirals and generals
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were obliged to plan, to anticipate that, in a mechanised age,
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war would bring slaughter on an unprecedented scale.
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One indicator that they foresaw its nature
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is this handbook issued in 1911, the Railway Manual (War).
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Written for the military,
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this volume sets out how railways should be used in wartime.
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"The efficient operation of a railway system can be ensured only
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"when the cordial cooperation of the railwaymen is combined with
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"the strictest obedience of regulations by the troops."
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In war, the trains were to be run on lines of iron discipline.
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Across the Channel,
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two rival power blocs were making their own railway plans.
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The German Empire had teamed up with its neighbour,
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Austria-Hungary,
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whilst the giant Russia had allied itself with France.
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Faced with potential enemies to the east and west,
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Germany feared a war on two fronts.
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At the beginning of the 20th century,
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Germany asked itself how can it
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possibly win a war with hostile Russia to the east
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and its old enemy France to the west?
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In 1905, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff,
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Alfred von Schlieffen,
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comes up with his plan, to use the railways
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in neutral Luxembourg and Belgium
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to sweep into France, surrounding Paris
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and outflanking the French Army, which is behind its fortifications
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on the German border, knocking France out within a few weeks so
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that Germany can turn all its attention to Russia.
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Even before Schlieffen, his predecessor, Von Moltke, said,
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"To win a war, don't build fortifications, build railways."
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In preparation for the Schlieffen Plan, new lines were constructed
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and elaborate mobilisation timetables were written.
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And here in Metz, on the Franco-German border, a new station
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was built, capable of accommodating thousands of troops on the move.
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The station is half church, half palace.
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The clock tower was designed by the Kaiser himself,
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Wilhelm II, and he had within the station an apartment
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but the fortified city of Metz was not a place for sleeping easily.
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It stands on the fault line of the bitter enmity of Germany and France.
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Metz is now in France but in 1914 it was part of Germany, annexed after
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the German state of Prussia won a war against France in 1871.
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This grand station, opened in 1908,
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was a monumental reminder of German strength.
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But it was also a design of deadly practicality.
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On avait le possibilite de faire entre 60 et 90 trains de
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militaire par jour.
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And with 11 platforms, you were therefore able to
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handle between 60 and 80 military trains a day.
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Et une particuliarite de la Gare de Messe
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qui est la seule en
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France a avoir ce dispositif, cest que la pour chaque voie, deux quais.
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And a very unusual feature of the station is that every single
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track has two platforms.
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Une plateforme haute pour decharger les voyageurs et
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une plateforme basse pour decharger le materiel.
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One is a high platform, that's to get the passengers off
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and the other is a lower platform, very suitable for military trains.
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It meant you could unload the soldiers
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and the material at the same time.
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Et donc c'etait cette guerre qui a imaginer l'empereur dans un
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premier temps.
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C'etait surtout dans un but strategique et militaire.
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And so, from the very outset, the emperor, the Kaiser,
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foresaw that this station had a strategic and military function.
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One of the key lines serving Metz runs north towards Luxembourg.
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And it was in this tiny, neutral state that the Germans
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launched their railway attack plan.
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On the 28th of June 1914,
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in faraway Sarajevo, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the
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Austro-Hungarian Empire, was assassinated by a Bosnian Serb.
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The diplomatic fallout brought Europe to the brink.
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I'm in Troisvierges, where the talk finally tipped into action
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in August 1914, to meet amateur historian and guide David Heal.
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So, it's a broadish station here at Troisvierges and then
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into a single track, through the tunnel.
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What was the strategic significance of this to the Germans?
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Well, the Germans were totally dependent on the railway
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and they were aiming to bring an entire army corps through Luxembourg
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and this was one of the main rails that they were going to use.
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The plans foresaw that there would be a troop train every ten
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minutes coming down this line.
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Luxembourg was a railway hub, connected to Germany, Belgium
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and France.
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The first objective of the Schlieffen Plan was to seize
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these vital lines.
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But, according to David,
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a small detachment of German soldiers invaded Troisvierges
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a day before their comrades took the rest of the country.
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The German Army came and started World War I on the wrong day.
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They arrived on the evening of the 1st of August,
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when they should've come on the morning of the 2nd of August.
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David's pieced together this extraordinary story using
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contemporary accounts.
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The first the locals knew of the invasion was
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when around 16 soldiers
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turned up at the station.
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They demanded that the station master hand over the telegraph,
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which of course is essential for running the railway.
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He refused.
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The officer in charge said, "If you don't give it to me you'll be shot."
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So he took it out of the drawer that it was kept in,
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dropped it over and it smashed on the floor, breaking it.
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David has uncovered more details in a report filed by the local
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police sergeant, who sent one of his gendarmes to the scene.
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The gendarme got here, followed the officer commanding around saying,
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"Why have you come here?
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"We're a neutral country", with Germany one of the guarantors,
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to which the officer replied,
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"If you don't go away we'll have you shot",
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which is the first example I think of what the Germans call
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"Schrecklichkeit" or "frightfulness",
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the war of terror, to just totally cow the civilian population.
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The gendarme then went back to the station
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and the sergeant then says that he formed the opinion that he
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ought to make a telephone report to the head of the gendarmerie
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which I think is wonderful.
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The country is being invaded,
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he forms the opinion he ought to tell someone.
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But then the people of Troisvierges were perplexed to see
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the invasion end - almost as rapidly as it had begun.
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Then about an hour later,
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a German officer turned up from the same detachment bearing a telegram.
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He showed this to the officer in charge here and then they went away.
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What an extraordinary incident.
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The explanation for the apparent bungle lies in the fast-moving
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and delicate diplomacy of the summer of 1914.
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Thanks to a complex web of alliances, the assassination
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of Franz Ferdinand had set off a diplomatic chain reaction.
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And by the 1st of August, Germany had declared war on Russia.
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Following the logic of their war plans,
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German troops began gearing up to invade Luxembourg and Belgium.
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Meanwhile, back in Britain, bound by loose ties of friendship
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to France and Russia, the authorities were trying to
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decide whether British troops should enter the fray.
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During the day on the 1st August the German Ambassador in London
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spoke to some Foreign Office official who gave
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the impression that Britain might well stand aside in the war.
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This was reported to the Kaiser who of course was interested
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and gave orders that everything was to be put back 12 hours
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while they explored what this might mean.
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But this poor little detachment that arrived here,
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they were so isolated that they didn't get the telegram
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saying delay for 12 hours until they'd been here for an hour.
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The Kaiser soon learned that Britain had no intention of staying
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aloof, and pressed on with his plan.
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The next day, the Germans returned to take Troisvierges
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and to seize the rest of Luxembourg's railway network.
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And meanwhile,
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German troop trains were beginning to roll towards Belgium.
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In 1914 Belgium was an uncomfortable wedge of neutral territory
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between France and Germany, two countries mobilising for war.
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Exploiting Belgian railways was fundamental to the German war plan.
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Belgium is a nation, not a road, its King told the invaders.
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Perhaps, at least, little Belgium could offer a road block.
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In fact, to derail the Schlieffen Plan,
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the Belgians were ready to go to extreme lengths.
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To sabotage their own railways.
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I've come to the city of Liege, an important railway
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junction near the German border, and vital to the German war plan.
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According to Historian Christophe Bechet, by 1914 the Belgians had
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prepared a scheme to put the brakes on a potential railway invasion.
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- The plan is to slow down the first aggressor.
- Yes.
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How do you slow down the aggressor?
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Two possibilities.
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First possibility, with army operations.
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And a second one, because the railways were very important
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in the strategy at that time, to
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destroy some railways to slow down the supplies of the aggressor.
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The Belgians to destroy their own railways?
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Yes, own railways.
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All along the Belgian border,
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military engineers built special cavities into tunnels,
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ready to be loaded with explosives and detonated at short notice.
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Then, on the 2nd of August 1914,
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Germany demanded free passage along Belgian roads and railways.
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King Albert refused, and gave the saboteurs the green light.
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First of all, the crucial sabotage of tunnels.
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Yeah.
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Here is the reparation of the tunnel.
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- Here you have the sabotage of the viaduct in Namur.
- Yes.
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A very huge sabotage.
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Yes. Colossal damage.
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Dozens of smaller acts of defiance further disrupted the invasion.
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Railway workers and troops derailed trains, hid equipment,
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and emptied locomotive water tanks.
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Here, it's a typical derailment made by Belgian troops.
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This devastation held up the Germans for weeks on some
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parts of the border, such as in the Belgian province of Luxembourg.
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But here in Liege, with its vitally important strategic railways,
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it was a different story.
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Of the four tunnels in the province of Liege, only one sabotage
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completely worked.
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It was in Trois-Ponts.
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Of the eight explosive charges, seven blew up,
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and it takes four months to repair the tunnel.
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But, catastrophically, most charges laid in the provinces
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key tunnels failed to detonate.
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For the other tunnels, the German special troops devoted to the
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reparation of the railways repaired the tunnels in a couple of days.
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This fiasco was blamed on explosives stored in damp conditions,
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00:16:35,440 --> 00:16:38,120
and on troops unused to laying them.
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So, it's a very mixed picture,
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some of the Belgian sabotage works well, some of it doesn't work well,
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00:16:45,960 --> 00:16:50,560
but the German war plan depended on knocking out France very quickly.
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Was the Belgian roadblock effective in delaying the Germans at all?
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00:16:55,600 --> 00:17:00,080
Yes, I think that they succeeded in the Belgian province of Luxembourg.
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But if the sabotage in the Liege province would have been as
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effective as in the province of Luxembourg,
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I think the Belgian Army would have stopped the Schifflien Plan
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00:17:14,760 --> 00:17:16,720
in its own territory.
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It's interesting to speculate how different the course of the war
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might have been had the Belgian railway saboteurs succeeded.
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As it was, the Belgian people could only hope that their allies
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would come to their aid.
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And soon, help was on its way from across the Channel.
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00:17:42,880 --> 00:17:45,240
On the fourth of August 1914,
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the British Government declared war on Germany.
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00:17:53,040 --> 00:17:57,160
At the start of 1914, few in Britain expected a war
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but the Army had a plan for mobilisation, defined here
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in its Field Service Regulations of 1909 as being the process by which
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an armed force passes from a peace to a war footing, that is to say
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its completion to war establishment in personnel, transport and animals.
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The British Army was small but professional.
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If it could be moved quickly enough across Britain
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and across the Channel it could make a difference.
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But first,
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the British railways would need to deliver some 80,000 men
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to the designated embarkation port, here in Southampton.
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Historian Ian Beckett has researched how the port was
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prepared for that daunting task.
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So give me the lie of the land here in Southampton.
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Well, over there, that's the old terminus building of the
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London South Western Railway Company.
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The lines came in from there to what was the old ocean quay.
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They had got double railway track
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that ran into the port entrance and they had laid that before the war.
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00:19:05,240 --> 00:19:09,320
And then in four days, in August of 1914, they decided they needed
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00:19:09,320 --> 00:19:12,880
a third railway line running from the terminus into the port,
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00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:15,680
and so that's an extraordinary engineering effort
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00:19:15,680 --> 00:19:17,200
to get that done so quickly.
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00:19:20,280 --> 00:19:23,520
Prior to the conflict, the War Office had consulted with
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Britain's powerful railway companies to draw up secret timetables
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in order to move the vast quantities of men and material
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required for a 20th century war.
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On the 18th of August we know that something over 20,000 men went out,
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just over 1,200 horses, I think there were 210 bicycles,
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20 motor cars and about 600 other vehicles, and that's just one day.
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Amazingly, despite the scale of the challenge,
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mobilisation exceeded all expectations.
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They had originally planned to have 70 trains a day coming in,
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they were actually getting 90 trains running in. It's said that in that
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first 24 hours only one train was late and only by 15 minutes.
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- We'd settle for that now, wouldn't we?
- Certainly would. Absolutely.
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00:20:12,200 --> 00:20:16,120
By the 26th of August 1914, just three weeks after
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the outbreak of war,
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the railways had helped to send nearly 66,000 men to France.
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Kitchener, who became Secretary of State for War in August 1914,
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immediately praised the railways
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00:20:28,160 --> 00:20:32,640
and, in effect, the British Expeditionary Force gets to France
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00:20:32,640 --> 00:20:36,840
just in time to play a major role in the first battles of the war.
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Had it not got there in time,
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the course of that first campaign may well have been very different.
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00:20:48,280 --> 00:20:52,200
From Southampton, the British Expeditionary Force crossed
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00:20:52,200 --> 00:20:57,720
to Le Havre, before boarding French trains bound for Belgium.
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00:21:00,600 --> 00:21:04,080
During August 1914 the German advance was slower
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00:21:04,080 --> 00:21:06,600
than envisaged in the Schlieffen Plan.
319
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Meanwhile, trains had swept up the British Expeditionary Force
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00:21:10,200 --> 00:21:12,480
from the corners of the United Kingdom
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00:21:12,480 --> 00:21:16,280
and taken it to Channel ports and then across to the Continent.
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00:21:16,280 --> 00:21:20,240
The Germans were astonished, within a few days of the outbreak of the war,
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to encounter Tommies ready to fight them on Belgian soil.
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00:21:28,320 --> 00:21:32,400
This confrontation took place on August the 23rd at Mons,
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where an outnumbered British force bravely held off the German
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00:21:35,960 --> 00:21:38,800
advance before being forced to withdraw.
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00:21:40,520 --> 00:21:42,120
Meanwhile, further south,
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00:21:42,120 --> 00:21:45,080
French troops had suffered a series of punishing defeats.
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00:21:47,360 --> 00:21:51,520
Overwhelmed, the Allies commenced a long and exhausting retreat,
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00:21:51,520 --> 00:21:53,480
relentlessly pursued by the Germans.
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00:21:55,680 --> 00:21:58,920
By the end of the month both sides were approaching Paris,
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the nerve centre of the French railway network.
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00:22:02,800 --> 00:22:04,000
Like the Germans,
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the French had made extensive preparations for a railway war.
335
00:22:10,520 --> 00:22:12,200
This is Paris's Gare de l'Est,
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00:22:12,200 --> 00:22:15,600
for France the traditional enemy lay to the east.
337
00:22:15,600 --> 00:22:20,360
This painting exudes the sorrow of partings, perhaps for ever,
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as the troops board trains for the battle.
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00:22:23,640 --> 00:22:26,880
But these soldiers, dressed in the colours of their national flag,
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00:22:26,880 --> 00:22:30,360
would have felt patriotic determination to defend their
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motherland from another German invasion.
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00:22:40,640 --> 00:22:44,960
France's answer to the Schlieffen Plan was known as Plan 17.
343
00:22:46,120 --> 00:22:49,440
It was a flexible scheme to deploy troops rapidly to meet
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the German threat, and it made full use of the adaptable French
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railway system, centred on Paris.
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00:22:57,400 --> 00:23:00,640
Lines radiating out from the capital were linked within
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the city by a kind of railway ring road.
348
00:23:04,280 --> 00:23:07,400
Between 1870 and the eve of World War I,
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the French quadrupled the number of lines leading to the German border.
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Two beltways of tracks encircling Paris provided
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00:23:16,160 --> 00:23:20,280
a network of rims and spokes, like a bicycle wheel
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with two circumferences.
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Here was the means of concentrating troops rapidly.
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The British Railway Gazette commented that Paris was the best
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example in the world of a big city properly organised for harmonious
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cooperation in war time.
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At the end of August 1914, this web of tracks was poised to play
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a game-changing role in the conflict.
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00:23:48,240 --> 00:23:50,560
I've come to the banks of the River Marne,
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which gave its name to a pivotal battle.
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00:23:54,000 --> 00:23:57,240
According to Ian Senior, who has been researching the first
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00:23:57,240 --> 00:23:59,480
phase of the war, it came at a moment
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00:23:59,480 --> 00:24:03,040
when the Germans were fast becoming victims of their own success.
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00:24:05,360 --> 00:24:08,440
The Germans by now advancing through Belgium and into France
365
00:24:08,440 --> 00:24:11,680
are a long way from home, are they suffering logistical difficulties?
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00:24:11,680 --> 00:24:14,560
Yes, the railheads, by the time of the Battle of the Marne,
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were about 60 miles back from the front line.
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Which is just at the crucial sort of limit for effective supply.
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00:24:21,640 --> 00:24:24,440
So you're unloading your trains and then how are you getting your
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00:24:24,440 --> 00:24:26,200
supplies and your men to the front line.
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They had a sort of shuttle service.
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00:24:29,240 --> 00:24:30,640
They had lorries.
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00:24:30,640 --> 00:24:32,280
The problem was that by now
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the lorries were breaking down in large numbers.
375
00:24:34,920 --> 00:24:38,400
I mean, one German Army at this period needed something
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00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:44,840
like 1,500 tonnes of supplies each day, that's five train loads a day.
377
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They just about managed it, but only just.
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00:24:49,280 --> 00:24:53,680
Meanwhile, unbeknownst to the Germans, the Allies were rallying.
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00:24:53,680 --> 00:24:56,920
The French Commander in Chief, Joseph Joffre, had come up
380
00:24:56,920 --> 00:25:01,320
with a bold plan to regroup, creating a new army near Paris.
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00:25:03,480 --> 00:25:06,280
How did Marshal Joffre assemble that army?
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00:25:06,280 --> 00:25:08,560
It couldn't have been done without using railways.
383
00:25:08,560 --> 00:25:13,320
We're talking about 120,000 men in all, and most of them
384
00:25:13,320 --> 00:25:17,640
came from Alsace and Lorraine where they weren't needed any more.
385
00:25:17,640 --> 00:25:20,360
And then two other divisions were from north Africa,
386
00:25:20,360 --> 00:25:24,360
there was a Moroccan division, there was an Algerian division,
387
00:25:24,360 --> 00:25:26,120
and so they're also brought up by
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00:25:26,120 --> 00:25:28,200
the railways all the way from Bordeaux.
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00:25:30,200 --> 00:25:35,120
Amazingly, this new force was gathered within a matter of days.
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00:25:35,120 --> 00:25:38,240
And, meanwhile, the leader of the German First Army,
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00:25:38,240 --> 00:25:41,760
General von Kluck, was making a fateful decision.
392
00:25:41,760 --> 00:25:45,520
His troops had been on course to pass to the west of Paris,
393
00:25:45,520 --> 00:25:48,200
but he sent them to the east of the city instead.
394
00:25:49,600 --> 00:25:52,480
It was the chance Joffre had been waiting for.
395
00:25:52,480 --> 00:25:57,400
His newly-formed 6th Army was nearby and ready to pounce
396
00:25:57,400 --> 00:26:00,200
I think they would all have gone from Gare de l'Est,
397
00:26:00,200 --> 00:26:03,480
and they got to a place called Noisy-le-Sec, and Guyenne
398
00:26:03,480 --> 00:26:04,680
and then had to march
399
00:26:04,680 --> 00:26:07,720
the rest of the way which took them the best part of a day, really.
400
00:26:09,600 --> 00:26:12,680
The 6th Army caught the Germans by surprise.
401
00:26:12,680 --> 00:26:16,320
Joined by the British, between the 5th and the 9th of September,
402
00:26:16,320 --> 00:26:20,160
Joffre's troops fought a series of battles along the Marne valley.
403
00:26:22,080 --> 00:26:25,920
And, for the first time, the Allies forced the Germans to retreat.
404
00:26:27,240 --> 00:26:30,360
It marked the end of the German advance.
405
00:26:30,360 --> 00:26:32,080
The Schlieffen Plan was dead.
406
00:26:33,400 --> 00:26:37,120
Looking back on the Battle of the Marne, how important a role do
407
00:26:37,120 --> 00:26:38,600
the railways play?
408
00:26:38,600 --> 00:26:42,600
Absolutely crucial, Joffre could not have assembled that new 6th Army
409
00:26:42,600 --> 00:26:46,320
without them, without that the French wouldn't have won the battle.
410
00:26:46,320 --> 00:26:47,840
I mean, you must remember,
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00:26:47,840 --> 00:26:50,680
Joffre is credited with saying that, above all,
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00:26:50,680 --> 00:26:52,120
it was a war of railways
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00:26:54,400 --> 00:26:58,000
Their superior rail resources had helped the Allies
414
00:26:58,000 --> 00:27:01,240
to triumph at the Marne, but the war was far from won.
415
00:27:02,880 --> 00:27:04,920
The Germans retreated 30 miles,
416
00:27:04,920 --> 00:27:06,440
as far as the Aisne river,
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00:27:06,440 --> 00:27:09,720
digging defensive trenches to hold off further Allied attacks.
418
00:27:10,920 --> 00:27:13,600
Using the railways, the two sides then began what's
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00:27:13,600 --> 00:27:17,280
since become known as the Race to the Sea.
420
00:27:17,280 --> 00:27:21,360
The German attempt to race men and munitions by train
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00:27:21,360 --> 00:27:25,920
towards the Channel coast, to sweep to the north of the allied forces,
422
00:27:25,920 --> 00:27:29,240
was halted here at Nieuwpoort, in Belgium.
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00:27:29,240 --> 00:27:32,640
The railway battles of northern France had stalled.
424
00:27:32,640 --> 00:27:36,680
Both sides now dug in from here to the Alps.
425
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It was no longer a war of movement,
426
00:27:39,480 --> 00:27:43,040
but its outcome could hinge on which side could better deploy
427
00:27:43,040 --> 00:27:48,320
its railways to stock the Western Front with shells and soldiers.
428
00:27:49,880 --> 00:27:53,840
Next time, I'll find out about the brave railwaymen who made
429
00:27:53,840 --> 00:27:56,040
the ultimate sacrifice...
430
00:27:56,040 --> 00:27:58,880
One of them in particular is a Private F Bays who had
431
00:27:58,880 --> 00:28:01,360
joined the 17th Battalion, Northumberland Fusiliers,
432
00:28:01,360 --> 00:28:03,360
and was killed in action on July 1st.
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00:28:03,360 --> 00:28:05,080
The first day of the Battle of the Somme.
434
00:28:05,080 --> 00:28:08,280
..how railways helped turn a munitions crisis into victory...
435
00:28:08,280 --> 00:28:12,120
In 1918, on the 29th of September,
436
00:28:12,120 --> 00:28:17,400
we fire just shy of one million shells in 24 hours in the assault
437
00:28:17,400 --> 00:28:19,960
on the Hindenburg line.
438
00:28:19,960 --> 00:28:21,200
Terrifying.
439
00:28:21,200 --> 00:28:26,000
..and discover the railway guns that helped to turn the tide of war.
440
00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:29,480
My goodness, one shell, 400 casualties.
39155
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