Jamaica Gleaner

100 years ago, the country fought its deadliest battle

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IT WAS America’s deadliest battle ever, with 26,000 United States soldiers killed, tens of thousands wounded, and more ammunition fired than in the whole of the Civil War. The Meuse-Argonne offensive of 1918 was also a great American victory that helped bring an end to World War 1.

Officials, descendant­s of soldiers and visitors have braved strong winds and rain to attend a remembranc­e ceremony on Sunday afternoon in the Meuse-Argonne cemetery, which is surrounded by green fields and forests in Romagne-sous-Montfaucon, a village in northeaste­rn France.

All day, volunteers have read the soldiers’ names aloud to honour those who sacrificed their lives for liberty, freedom and democracy. Covering 52 hectares (130 acres), Meuse-Argonne is the largest American cemetery in Europe.

PLANS CANCELLED

Organisers were forced to cancel the planned lighting of 14,000 candles because of the bad weather.

Gerald York, grandson of World War I hero Sgt. Alvin York, praised a “beautiful commemorat­ion”.

“The weather’s a little dreary, but that’s the way it was 100 years ago for the battle. So we’re kind of getting a view of what they did, what they fought in, and the conditions they had to endure,” he said.

His grandfathe­r earned the Medal of Honor for his efforts during the MeuseArgon­ne battle. Sgt. York led an attack on a German machine gun nest, killing at least 25 enemy soldiers, and capturing 132 Germans.

“It was the first real modern warfare that the US was in. Machine guns, airplanes, tanks, mustard gas that killed many,” York said. “In that area was the largest battle and the most casualties because you had men going up against machine guns. And machine guns were just mowing folks down.”

William M. Matz, secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission that maintains the site, told The Associated Press that this piece of history must be retold to younger generation­s.

“I think it’s important for their teachers, their parents to bring them to these beautiful sites, let them walk through the rows of crosses, let them look at the walls of remembranc­e, let them go into the cemetery chapels and let them learn the history of what these men did 100 years ago,” he said.

“It’s because of their brave deeds, their acts of valour and courage and commitment ... that these young folks are able to live and enjoy the life that they’re living,” he added.

During seven weeks of combat, 1.2 million American troops led by Gen. John J. Pershing fought to advance on the entrenched positions held by about 450,000 Germans in the Verdun region.

The offensive that started on September 26, 1918 ,was one of several simultaneo­us Allied attacks that brought the war, which started in 1914, to an end, leading the Germans to retreat and sign the armistice on November 11.

Pershing said, “The success stands out as one of the very great achievemen­ts in the history of American arms.”

At the cemetery, eight wide grave sections with long regular rows of crosses stretch between the trees on the gentle slopes of a hill. On top is a chapel where the names of 954 missing American soldiers, whose bodies were never found or identified, are engraved.

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