
Dug-outs  and barbed wire in La Boisselle. Usna-Tara Hill, with English Support  Lines in Background. At Extreme Left is the Albert-Bapaume Road.
“The defences  of the enemy front line varied a little in degree, but hardly at all in  kind, throughout the battlefield. The enemy wire was always deep, thick,  and securely staked with iron supports, which were either crossed like  the letter X, or upright, with loops to take the wire and shaped at one  end like corkscrews so as to screw into the ground. The wire stood on  these supports on a thick web, about four feet high and from thirty to  forty feet across. The wire used was generally as thick as sailor’s  marline stuff, or two twisted rope-yarns. It contained, as a rule, some  sixteen barbs to the foot. The wire used in front of our lines was  generally galvanized, and remained grey after months of exposure. The  enemy wire, not being galvanized, rusted to a black colour, and shows up  black at a great distance. In places this web or barrier was  supplemented with trip-wire, or wire placed just above the ground, so  that the artillery observing officers might not see it and so not cause  it to be destroyed. This trip-wire was as difficult to cross as the wire  of the entanglements. In one place (near the Y Ravine at Beaumont  Hamel) this trip-wire was used with thin iron spikes a yard long of the  kind known as calthrops. The spikes were so placed in the ground that  about one foot of spike projected. The scheme was that our men should  catch their feet in the trip-wire, fall on the spikes, and be  transfixed.
In places, in  front of the front line in the midst of his wire, sometimes even in  front of the wire, the enemy had carefully hidden snipers and  machine-gun posts. Sometimes these outside posts were connected with his  front-line trench by tunnels, sometimes they were simply shell-holes,  slightly altered with a spade to take the snipers and the gunners. These  outside snipers had some success in the early parts of the battle. They  caused losses among our men by firing in the midst of them and by  shooting them in the backs after they had passed. Usually the posts were  small oblong pans in the mud, in which the men lay. Sometimes they were  deep narrow graves in which the men stood to fire through a funnel in  the earth. Here and there, where the ground was favourable, especially  when there was some little knop, hillock, or bulge of ground just  outside their line, as near Gommecourt Park and close to the Sunken Road  at Beaumont Hamel, he placed several such posts together. Outside  Gommecourt, a slight lynchet near the enemy line was prepared for at  least a dozen such posts invisible from any part of our line and not  easily to be picked out by photograph, and so placed as to sweep at  least a mile of No Man’s Land.
When these  places had been passed, and the enemy wire, more or less cut by our  shrapnel, had been crossed, our men had to attack the enemy fire  trenches of the first line. These, like the other defences, varied in  degree, but not in kind. They were, in the main, deep, solid trenches,  dug with short bays or zigzags in the pattern of the Greek Key or  badger’s earth. They were seldom less than eight feet and sometimes as  much as twelve feet deep. Their sides were revetted, or held from  collapsing, by strong wickerwork. They had good, comfortable standing  slabs or banquettes on which the men could stand to fire. As a rule, the  parapets were not built up with sandbags as ours were.
In some parts  of the line, the front trenches were strengthened at intervals of about  fifty yards by tiny forts or fortlets made of concrete and so built into  the parapet that they could not be seen from without, even five yards  away. These fortlets were pierced with a foot-long slip for the muzzle  of a machine gun, and were just big enough to hold the gun and one  gunner.
In the forward  wall of the trenches were the openings of the shafts which led to the  front-line dugouts. The shafts are all of the same pattern. They have  open mouths about four feet high, and slant down into the earth for  about twenty feet at an angle of forty-five degrees. At the bottom of  the stairs which led down are the living rooms and barracks which  communicate with each other so that if a shaft collapse the men below  may still escape by another. The shafts and living rooms are strongly  propped and panelled with wood, and this has led to the destruction of  most of the few which survived our bombardment. While they were needed  as billets our men lived in them. Then the wood was removed, and the  dugout and shaft collapsed. “
 
                    