BY Jon Armstrong and Alan Cooper from Wilmslow Historical Society

WHILE General Douglas Haig planned a major breakthrough north and east out of the Ypres Salient starting on July 31, General Herbert Plumer’s second army achieved an exceptional, but geographically limited, success.

This was on the Messines Ridge, south east of Ypres.

The prudent ‘Daddy’ Plumer had learnt much from the Somme and advocated comprehensive planning, in addition to massive artillery bombardment.

His step-by-step ‘bite and hold’ tactics along fronts of about 1,000 yards worked as brilliantly here as at Vimy in April.

The British Expeditionary Force was now approaching maximum strength and was perfecting the art of modern warfare, albeit on a localised scale.

The Allies had finally, through superior explosives, equipment and listening devices gained superiority in tunnelling.

During 1917, 19 tunnels, often excavated by ex-coal miners, stretched for as much as 2,000 ft, 50 – 120 ft beneath the German lines on the 250 ft high WytschaeteMessines Ridges.

Following a two-week long barrage of 3.5 million shells, mines were simultaneously detonated at 7am on June 7.

The explosion was heard miles away in London and 7,000 Germans were killed. The whole ridge was taken and Plumer resisted all counter-attacks.

Sadly, it was not possible to press home the attack over such devastated ground and the struggle ended on June 15.

Our community lost six men at Messines. The first, Captain Frederick Arthur Jervis Eastwood, 22, was killed in action on the June 6, serving with D battery 103rd Brigade of the Royal Field Artillery.

He was the son of Thomas, a barrister based in Manchester, and Annie of ‘Highfield’ in Styal. He attended Sedbergh school in Cumbria and later read Engineering at the University of Manchester. He was an accomplished cricketer.

Buried in Ferme Olivier, he is remembered on the family grave at Dean Row Unitarian Chapel, the nearby memorial and at Styal.

The second to perish was also a product of the public school system – second lieutenant Frederick William Knott who died on June 7.

The public schools lost more than 20 per cent of those who enlisted.

Trained in the schools’ OTC they were often junior officers.

They led their men over the top with revolver in hand – clear targets for the enemy. Frederick was the second son of Herbert, a master cotton spinner, and Ada of ‘Sunny Bank’, Wilmslow.

Educated by a governess and then at Leighton Park near Reading, a Quaker school, he joined the OTC of the Inns of Court as a Solicitor’s Clerk in October 1915.

Serving with the ninth battalion Yorkshire Regiment, he was killed aged 25 attacking Battle Wood.

He has no known grave, but is commemorated at the Menin Gate, Wilmslow URC, St Bart’s and the town memorial.

Menin Gate also holds the name of Private Arthur Matthews, who died on June 9 with the eighth battalion Loyal North Lancs, formerly of the Cheshires. He was the son of Annie and the late John of ‘Rectory View’, Wilmslow, and the husband of Mary of Mill Brow.

He had a daughter Nancy and he had worked as a farm labourer before enlisting. Locally he is remembered in St Bart’s and the town memorial.

Also on ‘Rectory View’ was the family home of Private Sidney Williams of the eighth battalion South Lancs 31415 who was killed on June 13. Born in 1896 he was the son of Daniel and Anne who previously ran the centrally located Harefield Farm, Harefield Drive in the town. The Parish Church and town memorial, as well as the Menin Gate mark his passing.

Private James William Ashpital, 13th battalion Cheshires, died aged 19 on the 15th, and is remembered in Styal and in the Methodist Church there as well as the Menin Gate. His parents, John and Isabelle, lived in Marple.

On the same day, our final fatality of the battle was Private William Henry Priestner, aged 23, of the Manchester Regiment’s 16th battalion. A Handforth man, he is remembered in the village and the church as well as on the Menin Gate. He lived with his parents, Henry and Margaret, in ‘Greyhound Cottage’ near Safer Road.

Later on Flanders was to see the death of Private William Henry Mottram of the Royal Scots. Serving with the Machine Guns Corps, he was killed aged 25 on June 25.

He had lived in Morley Road, Wilmslow, and had worked with his father William in the local slating business before marrying Sarah of Beckenham in Kent.

The Parish Church, family grave and civic memorial mark his passing as they do Private Herbert Garner who fell in France near Arras on June 5. He served with the 12th Prince of Wales Own West Yorkshires.

He was one of six children born to Henry and Mary of Manchester Road. He was a letterpress printer and had been living in Altrincham Road.

To relieve the French, gain access to the rest of the ridge surrounding Ypres and perhaps reach Zeebrugge, Haig now began planning in earnest the controversial third battle of Ypres.