Georges de Bazelaire (January 30, 1858 – March 29, 1954) was a Major General in the French Army.[1] During World War I, Bazelaire commanded the 135th Infantry Regiment, the 27th and 38th Infantry Divisions and the 7th Army Corps.

Bazelaire (in center) speaks with General Joseph Joffre (on left)

World War I

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In 1916, general de Bazelaire took part in the Battle of Verdun,[2] defending the left bank of the river Meuse:[3] « He was to command the half of the Région Fortifiée de Verdun west of the river Meuse, including the section of front between Avocourt and the Meuse ».[4] In the first days of March, intense fighting involved the troops under Bazelaire's command in the areas of Bois des Corbeaux, Mort-Homme and the Cote 304.[5]

 
French General de Bazelaire decorating Colonel Douglas MacArthur with the Croix de Guerre, March 18, 1918.

An order by Bazelaire dated March 7, 1916, quoted by the Germans and published in the New York Times,[6] reflects the extremely tough conditions of the fights when colonel Macker and his 92e Régiment d'infanterie were ordered to retake the Bois des Corbeaux where they demonstrated an admirable courage.[7]

In the British weekly The Graphic (July 1916) we can read the following comments: «After the Dead Man (Mort-Homme), none of the Verdun hills has been the scene of fiercer fighting than the now famous Hill 304 (Cote 304), where for many weeks general Bazelaire has held against the hellish fire of the Crown Prince's big guns and the massed attacks of his armed hosts [8] ».

During the offensive of the Chemin des Dames, in April 1917, the 7th Army Corps of general de Bazelaire, comprising three infantry divisions, was reinforced by the 1st and the 3rd Russian Brigades. These troops, commanded by general Nikolaï Lokhvitski, took part in the fighting near Courcy, where they behaved courageously and suffered severe losses.[9]

In February 1918, as Douglas MacArthur recalls in his memoirs, four regiments of the 42nd Infantry Division, the Rainbow Division of the American Expeditionary Forces, « were placed under the command of General Georges de Bazelaire of the French VII Army Corps to be battle-trained with four French divisions.» [10] Colonel MacArthur took part in what was his first raid against German trenches where several prisoners were seized, after which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre by Bazelaire.[11]

Captain Clarence Van Schaick Mitchell,[12] a Liaison Officer for the American Expeditionary Forces on the staff of General de Castelnau, relates a meeting he had with Bazelaire : « General de Bazelaire I met in Lunéville in April, 1918 when he was in command of a corps and our 42nd Division was under his orders. He was a tall shaggy looking man, with keen blue eyes and a very energetic, sharp manner of speaking. He questioned me about the arrival of our troops from America, said that if they were all as good as those in the 42nd Division, the Allies could ask for nothing better. He expressed his admiration for General Menoher, then commanding the Division, and was particularly enthusiastic about the then Chief of Staff, MacArthur (...) He is known for his forcefulness and unambiguous methods and our men and officers were enthusiastic about him.» [13]

Military Commendations

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Georges de Bazelaire received several military citations for his services in World War I[14]

  • Croix de Guerre 1914-1918 (France)
  • Allied Victory Medal (Médaille Interalliée de la Victoire) (France)
  • Grand-Croix of the Legion of Honor (Légion d'honneur) (France)
  • Croix de Guerre (Belgium)
  • Commander of the Order of Leopold (Commandeur de l'Ordre de Léopold) (Belgium)
  • Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown (Grand Officier de l'Ordre de la Couronne) (Belgium)
  • Army Distinguished Service Medal – 1919 (United States)[15]

Documents

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  • Map of the left bank of the river Meuse, between Cumières and Avocourt, near Verdun, showing Cote 304, Le Mort-Homme and Bois des Corbeaux
 
Mort-Homme and Cote 304, Verdun, 1917
  • Brenda Haugen - Douglas MacArthur, America's general - Compass Point Books - Minneapolis, 2006 - pages 39 and 40, with a photograph of MacArthur with general de Bazelaire at practice maneuvers [6]
  • Review of American troops by general de Bazelaire, 23 March 1918. Photograph on the site of the Bibliothèque de Documentation internationale contemporaine (BDIC) [7] Archived 2016-07-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • General de Bazelaire, with US general Menoher (42nd Infantry Division Rainbow) and French general Gaucher, decorates 165th Infantry troops, Lunéville sector, February 2016. Historical film from the Department of Defense, US National Archives [8]
  • Documentary film including narration of the defense of the left bank of the river Meuse by general de Bazelaire and the counter-attack by colonel Macker in the Bois des Corbeaux, in : Indiana Neidell, The Great War - Week by week 100 years later - Week 85

References

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  1. ^ Georges de Bazelaire de Saulcy. Individual
  2. ^ French forces at Verdun - 21 February - 4 March 1916
  3. ^ "Battle of Verdun - Situation on 21 February 1916" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  4. ^ William F. Buckingham - Verdun 1916 - The deadliest battle of the First World War - Amberley Publishing - 2016 - page 28
  5. ^ William F. Buckingham - Verdun 1916 - The deadliest battle of the First World War - Amberley Publishing - 2016 - pages 36-38
  6. ^ « Germans say Bazelaire threatened to turn artillery on his retreating troops » - New York Times, March 16, 1916 [1]
  7. ^ « The near suicidal courage of Colonel Macker and his men and their determination to close with the bayonet provides textbook example of attaque à outrance philosophy inculcated in all ranks of the French army in the run up to 1914. » See: William F. Buckingham - Verdun 1916 - The deadliest battle of the First World War - Amberley Publishing - 2016 - page 39. On 10 March 1916, the beau Colonel Macker « was struck dead by a German machine gunner » during a German counter-attack in Bois des Corbeaux. See: Alistair Horne - The price of glory - Verdun 1916 - Penguin Books - London, 1991 - page 159
  8. ^ The Vigil of Verdun - General Joffre congratulating the holder of Hill 304 - The Graphic - July 1, 1916 [2]
  9. ^ Jamie H. Cockfield - With snow on their boots: the tragic odyssey of the Russian expeditionary force in France in World War I - St Martin Press - New York, 1999 - pages 96 and fol.
  10. ^ Douglas MacArthur - Reminiscences, page 54 - Naval Institute Press - Bluejacket Book, 2001 [3]
  11. ^ J. L. Abrahamson and A.P. O'Meara - Leadership - Combat leaders and lessons - 2008 [4]
  12. ^ A graduate of Princeton (A.B., 1913) and Harvard Law School (LL.B., 1917), commissioned as a Captain of Cavalry in August, 1917, Clarence V.S. Mitchell (1890 - 1966) was ordered to France in January, 1918 where he was assigned as Liaison Officer on the staff of general de Castelnau. See : Princeton Alumni Weekly, Vol. 66, May 1966, page 18
  13. ^ Clarence Van Schaick Mitchell, Captain Cavalry, U.S.A., Letters from a Liaison Officer 1918-1919, Privately printed, 1920, page 103 [5]
  14. ^ fr:Georges de Bazelaire
  15. ^ Military Times : Hall of Valor - Georges de Bazelaire

Further reading

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  • Georges de Bazelaire - Un chef, Ferdinand Foch - Paris, 1930
  • Georges de Bazelaire - Souvenirs de guerre, du 135e RI au 7eCA, 1914-1918 - Paris, 1988
  • Alan Axelrod - The battle of Verdun - The story of the iconic WWI clash, the bloodiest battle in history - Lyons Press - Guilford, Connecticut, 2016
  • William F. Buckingham - Verdun 1916 - The deadliest battle of the First World War - Amberley Publishing - 2016
  • François Cochet et Rémy Porte (sous la direction de) - Dictionnaire de la Grande Guerre 1914 -1918 - Robert Laffont, collection Bouquins - Paris, 2008
  • Jamie H. Cockfield - With snow on their boots: the tragic Odyssey of the Russian expeditionary force in France in World War I - St Martin Press - New York, 1999
  • Alain Denizot - Verdun 1914 - 1918 - NEL - Paris, 1996
  • Elizabeth Greenhalgh - The French Army and the First World War - Cambridge University Press - 2014
  • Alistair Horne - The price of glory - Verdun 1916 - Penguin Books - London, 1991
  • Ministère de la Guerre (France) - Les armées françaises dans la Grande Guerre, tome IV, 1er volume - Imprimerie nationale - Paris, 1927 [9]
  • Ministère de la Guerre (France) - Les armées françaises dans la Grande Guerre, tome IV, 2e volume - Imprimerie nationale - Paris, 1933 [10]
  • Ministère de la Guerre (France) - Les armées françaises dans la Grande Guerre, tome IV, 3e volume - Imprimerie nationale - Paris, 1935 [11]
  • Ministère de la Guerre (France) - 135e régiment d'infanterie - Journal des marches et des opérations du 1er août 1914 au 21 septembre 1914 [12]
  • Pierre Miquel - Mourir à Verdun - Éditions Tallandier, collection Texto - Paris, 2011
  • Pierre Montagnon - Dictionnaire de la Grande Guerre - Pygmalion - Paris, 2013
  • Philippe Pétain - La Bataille de Verdun - Présentation de Bénédicte Vergez-Chaignon - Perrin, collection Tempus - Paris, 2015. This book was initially published in 1929 by Éditions Payot, on occasion of the election of Marshal Pétain at the Académie française
  • Henri Philippe Pétain - Verdun - Authorized translation by Margaret Mac Veagh - The Dial Press - New-York, 1930 [13]
  • Antoine Prost et Gerd Krumeich - Verdun 1916 - Tallandier - Paris, 2015
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