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Title List — Realistic Set of 600, Volume IV
Number |
Title |
---|---|
301 | The ruins of Albert and its famous cathedral as seen from an aeroplane |
302 | Delville Wood, shattered in fierce struggles by the S. Africans, who heroically resisted fierce attacks |
303 | The shattered ruins of Albert, lost and retaken in critical days of the great German offensive |
304 | Recaptured by Australians in a night attack, April 24, 1918. Villers-Bretonneux--the ruined church |
305 | Bells of Villers-Bretonneux Church erected after the German repulse removed the menace to Amiens |
306 | Valley of Ancre, rushed by our men in a dense fog, Beaumont and thousands of prisoners being taken |
307 | Thiepval Ridge, where the Irish were held up by the Wonder Work and other subterranean redoubts |
308 | Bernafay Wood captured by the 9th Division in Battle of the Somme; the cemetery near Montauban |
309 | British Memorial, Trones Wood, scene of impetuous valour by the 18th Divison in Battle of the Somme |
310 | Over the Sausage Valley to Thistle Dump Cemetery and High Wood, costly obstacle in Battle of Somme |
311 | High Wood, where tanks first came into action and led the infantry to the consternation of the Huns |
312 | Commemorating their gallant assault during Battle of Somme, the South African Cross in Deville Wood |
313 | Where Irish troops fought in the struggle on the Ancre, the Connaught Cemetery on Thiepval Ridge |
314 | A favourite enemy stronghold, the sugar refinery at Lagnicourt, grimly held and resolutely stormed |
315 | Bapaume, levelled by terrific bombardments which preceded many fierce struggles for its possession |
316 | The fortified Distillery near Bapaume, scene of desperate fighting in the battles for the town |
317 | Grim relics of the sanguinary struggle round Ypres, skulls on the battlefield of Hooge |
318 | Tanks wrecked in restoring the line, when the German surprise attack broke through at Gonnelieu |
319 | A favourite Hun stronghold, the Sugar Refinery at Lagnicourt, which held up our advance near Arras |
320 | Ruins of the Church at Queant, shattered in the fierce struggles for the "impregnable" Wotan Line |
321 | Ingenious revolving machine-gun nest at Bullecourt, wrested from the Boche by our resistless infantry |
322 | Block houses in the Hun's old front-line at Croiselle, reminiscent of our push in Battle of Arras |
323 | Block houses and trenches in the Hindenburg line at Croiselles twice captured by the British |
324 | Hun sacrilege, the desecrated Crucifix by the roadside near Wancourt, on the battlefield of Arras |
325 | All that remains of Monchy Chateau, where we repulsed violent counter-attacks in Battle of Arras |
326 | Monument at Monchy to heroes of the 37th Div. who stormed the nests of machine guns in the village |
327 | Hotel de Ville and Cathedral, Arras, shelled by Hun guns after our break through the Hindenburg line |
328 | The roofless, debris-blocked nave of the shell-stricken Cathedral at Arras |
329 | Testifying to the determined assault of the Hun lines near Arras: Nine Elms Cemetery, [Roclincourt] |
330 | The famous Labyrinth near Arras, taken in bitter subterranean fighting by the French. May, 1915 |
331 | La Targette Cemetery, thickly sown with our brave Allies who stormed the "White Works" near Carency |
332 | Ablain Church and Carency Cemetery, resting place of gallant French who took Notre Dame de Lorette |
333 | Immortalised by a great Canadian feat of arms, April 9th, 1917, battlefield of Vimy from the Ridge |
334 | Sacred to the memory of Byng's Canadian Corps, who scaled the formidable heights of Vimy Ridge, Arras |
335 | The Crater Cemetery on baffling heights of Vimy Ridge, stormed by the Canadians in Battle of Arras |
336 | The ruined Cloth Hall at Ypres as it looked in 1916 (NOTE: Prob. postwar; scaffolding like 370) |
337 | The shell-pitted, chalky battlefield of Loos, scene of the British offensive in 1915 |
338 | Loos Cemetery, where lie thousands of brave Highlanders who fell in the struggle for Fosse 8, 1915 |
339 | The devastated village of [Hunsch] abandoned by the Bosche in favour of our Guards. Battle of Loos |
340 | German concrete observation post near La Bassee knocked out by a direct hit from our heavy guns |
341 | A devastated village. Le Bassee after the Germans had left it |
342 | Desolate La Bassee, where scarcely one stone is left standing upon the other |
343 | Where the Flower of our Army hurled back the Prussian Guards, Beury Chateau, Festubert |
344 | Where the Flower of the Army lie, the Guards Cemetery, Windy Corner, Festubert |
345 | The old front line near Festubert, where we held up all Hun attempts to break through to Bethune |
346 | Bethune, on which the Germans turned their 42 cm. howitzers--the belfry, still standing |
347 | Grande Place, Bethune, set on fire by Hun artillery after all attempts to break our lines were defeated |
348 | The Cemetery, Dud Corner, Bethune, so called form number of Bosche shells which failed to explode |
349 | Searching for souvenirs in the shell-pitted ground around Laventie Church |
350 | Shell-riddled church at Richbourg: a mute witness to the Huns' disregard for sacred places |
351 | The High Altar amid the ruins of the shell-wrecked Richbourge Cathedral |
352 | How the Germans devastated France. Lille, a once prosperous manufacturing town |
353 | All that was left of his old home. A corner of Lille which suffered severe bombardment |
354 | Evacuated after terrific bombardment by gas shell during Battle of Lys. Armentieres--St, Vaast Church |
355 | British blockhouses, constructed for the defence of Armentieres, overwhelmed in Battle of the Lys |
356 | The lake in the mine-crater where once stood the formidable Hun salient of Messines Ridge at Ypres |
357 | Kemmel Hill, for whose dominating heights British, French and Germans fell in mortal combat, Ypres |
358 | Testifying to the furious Hun assaults on Kemmel Hill, April 1918, the destroyed chapel on the summit |
359 | A comprehensive view of the whole of the cruel salient of Ypres as commanded from Kemmel Hill |
360 | Battered but still standing, the 17th Century Abbey towers. Mont St. Eloi, Ypres salient |
361 | The tunnel dug in laying the mine under Hill 60, fired April 15th, it began the second Battle of Ypres |
362 | Molen Dump, near Hill 60, where ammunition was ingeniously concealed from Hun airmen and gunners |
363 | Battlefield of Klein Zillebeke, where the Worcesters immortal charge saved civilization Oct. 31, 1914 |
364 | 9th London Memorial on Hill 60, levelled by our mine, taken and retaken in desperate fighting |
365 | A favourite Hun target, the riddled Crucifix at La [Ciyte], Ypres, every scar a reproach to Hun "Kultur" |
366 | In the region of three great British battles, the old Café Belge at the cross-roads near Ypres |
367 | Battle-scarred Ypres, from the ramparts where British troops held the Gateway to the Channel Ports |
368 | Menin Gate and Canal, Ypres, heroically held against the Kaiser's finest troops throughout the war |
369 | West door of the shell-torn Cathedral, Ypres, an insuperable obstacle in the Kaiser's path to Calais |
370 | Ruins of the Cloth Hall, Ypres, an imperishable monument to the dogged persistence of our race |
371 | Irish Farm Cemetery, Ypres, where lie lads who fell in the finest fight against odds in history |
372 | Ground hallowed by British blood, the Potijze Chateau Lawn Cemetery, near Ypres |
373 | Ploughing soil for which he fought midst tragic reminders of the desperate struggle at Frezenberg |
374 | Here rest the lads who fell at Hooge, in holding back the Huns who attacked with liquid fire, Ypres |
375 | Well-known lock gates at Hollebeke, smashed by our artillery barrage in the last Battle of Ypres |
376 | Church at Hollebeke taken in the memorable attack by the Second Army, July 31st, 1917, Ypres salient |
377 | Glencorse Wood, near Hooge, captured after a long and stubborn contest during third Battle of Ypres |
378 | The Australian obelisk built over an unknown German dug-out in Polygon Wood, Ypres salient |
379 | Tyncot Cemetery, Passchendaele Ridge, where 20,000 British fell in storming the Hun block-houses |
380 | Where the Germans first attacked with poison gas, the famous St. Julien advanced dressing-station |
381 | One of our tanks bogged in the all-conquering mud at Poelcappelle, in the final Battle of Ypres |
382 | Houthoulst Forest from where hidden enemy howitzers coincentrated their deadly fire on the Ypres salient |
383 | Hope dump, one of many at Ypres, which fed our guns in those obstinate battles against appalling odds |
384 | Dixmude and the Yser Canal, inundated by the Belgians to baulk the enemy thrust for Calais, Oct., 1914 |
385 | "India-rubber" house, which resisted all bombardments in the Hun attempt to force the Yser Canal |
386 | Dugouts along the Yser Canal, near Nieuport, scene of our disaster on the Dunes, July 10th, 1917 |
387 | Redan Cemetery, resting place of gallant lads who perished in the disaster on the Dunes at Nieuport |
388 | The battlefield of Nieuport, where we hurled back the enemy thrust towards Calais by the seashore |
389 | British front line at Nieuport, made famous by the heroic stand of the Northamptons and K.R. Rifles |
390 | Dugouts in trenches at Nieuport, where the isolated men of Rawlinson's Army stood fearlessly at bay |
391 | Mariakerke shelled by British Monitors in battles which loosened the enemy's hold on Flanders coast |
392 | Built to guard against our naval raids on Ostend, the famous Tirpitz battery, with Hun inscription |
393 | Smashed by bombs from our aeroplanes, a German fortified redoubt protecting Ostend from the sea |
394 | German guns on the Belgian coast protecting their flank against a naval landing by our Fleet |
395 | Caught in its lair at Ostend, Hun submarine sunk by a bomb from our plucky aeroplane raiders |
396 | Marchovlette Fort, Namur, levelled by Hun howitzers in their ruthless smash through Belgium, Aug., '14 |
397 | Hun "Big Bertha" which fired high-velocity shells from Moewe into Dunkirk, a distance of 38 miles |
398 | The breach in the Mole, Zeebrugge, made by the daring exploit of the submarine under Lt. Sandford |
399 | Hun defences on the Mole, Zeebrugge, stormed by our gallant Marines on the night of April 22nd, 1918 |
400 | Signal bell on the Mole, Zeebrugge, immortalised by the historic raid of St. George's Eve, 1918 |
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