Don Martin diary entry for Thursday, March
21, 1918:
Didn’t get out of Neufchateau today. Decided to get a bit of rest. Went
around with Wood; visited a veterinary hospital with him and [Henri] Bazin of the
Philadelphia [Evening] Ledger; had luncheon at the club and wrote a long letter to
Dorothy. Spent a short time at the club and went to bed at 11 p.m. Klauber and Orr went to Paris. Had quite a
visit with Henry P. Davison of N.Y., head of the Red Cross.
Weather cool.
On March 21, at 4:40 a.m., Germany initiated a major attack to the northwest of Neufchateau at Cambria, that Don Martin would record in his diary on March 22. More than 6,600 artillery guns were employed, the largest bombardment of the war to date, and 71 German divisions attacked French and British forces. [Andrew Carroll, My Fellow Soldiers, p170, Penguin Press, 2017]
On March 21, at 4:40 a.m., Germany initiated a major attack to the northwest of Neufchateau at Cambria, that Don Martin would record in his diary on March 22. More than 6,600 artillery guns were employed, the largest bombardment of the war to date, and 71 German divisions attacked French and British forces. [Andrew Carroll, My Fellow Soldiers, p170, Penguin Press, 2017]
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