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Our Greatest Battle (The Meuse-Argonne)

Chapter 38: Transcriber's Notes
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About This Book

An informed account by an officer with press-relations access who observed Allied and American operations firsthand, presenting a comprehensive reconstruction of the Meuse-Argonne offensive. The narrative follows the battle division by division, explaining planning, execution, terrain and tactical challenges, and the cumulative strain on units, while corroborating observations with official reports and veterans' testimony. The author emphasizes collective effort over individual distinction, declines to create a gallery of celebrated names, and examines command decisions, coordination problems, and the human cost of repeated assaults under heavy fire. Maps and comparative reporting are used to clarify movements and settle disputes between units.


Transcriber's Notes

Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritics repaired.

Inconsistent hyphenation fixed.

Click on the maps to view high-resolution images.

P. 42: Divisonal pride -> Divisional pride.

P. 126: thirring rattle -> whirring rattle.

P. 143: There was a certain fifulness -> There was a certain fitfulness.

P. 236: the field of the action of the 29th -> the field of the action of the 27th.

P. 367: will he applied the principle -> will be applied the principle.

P. 530: his machine-gunes regrouped -> his machine-guns regrouped.

P. 619: Australian 5th Divison -> Australian 5th Division.

P. 627: Passchendaele (sse Battle, 1917) -> Passchendaele (see Battle, 1917).