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Private Albert George Pegram and the Battle of Polygon Wood

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Posted on 31 October 2024

In 1917, in the midst of the Third Battle of Ypres, troops of the Australian Imperial Force were engaged a few dozen kilometres east of the town, near the town of Zonnebeke, in Polygon Wood. They found themselves fighting in an almost lunar landscape, an expanse of craters dotted with tree stumps as far as the eye could see.

 

 

The Battle of Polygon Wood is remembered as a military success, but it came at a high cost, with almost 4,000 casualties in the 5th Australian Division alone. The battle was the second of three major attacks planned by British General Viscount Herbert Plumer, along with the Battle of the Menin Road and the Battle of Broodseinde.

 

Among the soldiers of the 5th Division was Private Albert Pegram (service number 3204) who served from the age of 18 with the 55th Battalion. Motivated by the idea of reuniting with friends and cousins already serving in France, he embarked from Sydney on 11 November 1916.

 

The Third Battle of Ypres was already well under way by the time the 4th and 5th Divisions were ordered to attack Polygon Wood on 26 September 1917. Little did they know that the Battle of Polygon Wood was to become one of the most successful Australian engagements.

Studio portrait of 3204 Private Albert George Pegram, 55th Battalion. AWM P04810.001
Studio portrait of 3204 Private Albert George Pegram, 55th Battalion - AWM P04810.001.
A hand-coloured print of a photograph showing the attack on Polygon Wood by the Australian troops.
"Following the barrage, 20th September, 1917". A hand-coloured print of a photograph taken by an unknown Australian soldier showing the attack on Polygon Wood by the Australian troops that followed a great barrage on the morning of 20 September 1917. Coloured by Colarts Studio in 1921 - AWM P05380.006.

Previous attempts to seize sections of the German line had been overambitious resulting in the infantry advancing beyond the range at which their own artillery could protect them from German counterattacks. The result being that ground captured was often lost.

 

Plumer was an advocate of ‘bite and hold’ tactics. These involved a short advance by the infantry behind a heavy artillery barrage followed by the infantry digging in on the position gained, while a barrage placed in front of them prevented the Germans from counterattacking. There would be a several days’ break to prepare for the next step, crucially allowing artillery to be brough forward, then the process would be repeated.

This battle, in the midst of the 3rd Battle of Ypres, was the 5th Division’s first major engagement since the terrible losses suffered at Fromelles in July 1916.

That day the 5th Division, supported by British troops on its flanks, succeeded in taking German positions throughout the wood, including the Polygon Butte, an artificial mound used by the Belgian Army in the late 19th century for rifle practice.

This high ground occupied an important strategic position for the German Army, offering an extensive and commanding view of the surrounding area and blocking Allied advances towards the Passchendaele ridge.

Various views of the battlefield following the battle of Polygon Wood. The mound visible, which stood on the far side of Polygon Wood, was taken by the 5th Division on 26 September 1917 - AWM E01912 and E00987.
Various views of the battlefield following the battle of Polygon Wood.

After taking the wood, the 55th Battalion consolidated its new positions and extended them to prevent a German counter-attack.

 

Although the successful capture of Polygon Wood and the Butte was a proud moment for the 5th Division, it came at a high price with Imperial forces suffering some 15,000 casualties, more than a third of which were Australian. The 5th Division incurred almost 4,000 casualties and the 4th Division, which attacked alongside the 5th Division, lost around 1,700.

 

Private Pegram was one of these. Shot in the stomach by a German sniper, Private Pegram was seriously wounded, as he jumped across an exposed trench with his section.  One of his cousins who was with him at the time, wrote to his parents to explain the terrible ordeal he had been through. Private Pegram was evacuated to the 17th Casualty Clearing Station near Popperinge, where he died of his wounds two days later.

Before and after aerial views of Polygon Wood
Before and after aerial views of Polygonveld (Polygon Wood), the upper picture was taken on 25 June 1917, before the shelling of the area - AWM J00190.
Private Albert George Pegram’s grave in Lijssenthoeck Military Cemetery - ©AWM Aaron Pegram
Private Albert George Pegram’s grave in Lijssenthoeck Military Cemetery - ©AWM Aaron Pegram.

 

Private Pegram is buried in Lijssenthoeck Military Cemetery, west of Ypres. Private Pegram’s loss was devastating for his family, who were never able to visit his resting place. His nephew was born on the day of his death and bears his name. Private Pegram’s father never forgave himself for signing his son’s enlistment papers and his mother was buried with his war medals and commemorative plaque.

 

Since 1919, the 5th Australian Division Memorial has stood on the Butte, overlooking the Buttes New British Cemetery, nestled in Polygon Wood. The remains of 2,000 soldiers were interned here after the war, and almost 1,700 have never been identified.

‘‘In his lonely grave he lyes far from all he loved so dear.’’

Epitaph on the grave of Private Albert Pegram.
Buttes New British Cemetery, Polygon Wood, with the Australian 5th Division Memorial in the background ©CWGC
Buttes New British Cemetery, Polygon Wood, with the Australian 5th Division Memorial in the background - ©CWGC.

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