Raid on Bir el Hassana

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Raid on Bir el Hassana
Part of the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I
Map 3 Sinai detail Keogh p.26.jpeg
Map of Sinai Peninsula
Date13–21 February 1917
(1 week and 1 day)
Location
Central Sinai Peninsula
Result Retreat of last Ottoman garrisons out of the Sinai
Belligerents

Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  British Empire

Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844-1922).svg Ottoman Empire
Sinai Bedouin
Commanders and leaders
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Major J.R. Bassett
Units involved
2nd Battalion (British), Imperial Camel Corps
Hong Kong and Singapore (Mountain) Battery

Strength
22 Ottoman troops plus armed Bedouins
Casualties and losses
1 wounded 22 prisoners

The Raid on Bir el Hassana (Hasna) occurred in the Sinai Peninsula in February 1917, during World War I. It was a minor action between an augmented battalion of the Imperial Camel Corps on the one side and a score of Turkish troops plus some armed Bedouin on the other. The raid occasioned the first aeromedical evacuation in the British Army.

Contents

The raid was the third of three actions fought by British forces seeking to recapture the Sinai Peninsula during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of World War I. Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) cavalry and camelry traveled into the centre of the Sinai Peninsula to attack and push the last Turkish garrisons back into Palestine.

Background

British ships on the Mediterranean coast and the Gulf of Aqaba guarded the coast road via El Arish, and the road from Ma'an via Nekhl to the Suez Canal. Ottoman forces continued to occupy the area on the central way across the Sinai south from el Kossaima towards the Suez Canal, including Bir el Hassana and Nekhl.[ citation needed ]

The raid

General Archibald Murray, commander of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, ordered attacks against both Nekhl and Bir el Hassana, which lay 40 miles (64 km) north of Nekhl, between the Gebel Helal and the Gebel Yelleg. [1] [2] Three columns of cavalry and camelry set out with the goal of all attacking on 18 February. One column set out from Serapeaum (possibly the vicinity of Ismailia), and another from Suez on 13 February 1917 to converge on Nekhl. [3] Major J.R. Bassett, commanding 2nd Battalion (British), Imperial Camel Corps, together with the Hong Kong and Singapore (Mountain) Battery, marched from El Arish, via Magdhaba. [4]

This column reached Lahfan on the 16th, [3] and on the 17th advanced from Magdhaba. At dawn the next morning they surrounded the Ottoman Army garrison at Bir el Hassana, which consisted of three officers and 19 other ranks, reinforced by armed Bedouin. The Ottoman troops surrendered, but the Bedouin fired on the British, shattering Lance Corporal McGregor's ankle. One of the Turks who surrendered was Nur Effendi, who had commanded the garrison at the unsuccessful British attack on Maghara on 15 October 1916. The troops searched Bir el Hassana and found 21 rifles, a few camels, and 2100 rounds of ammunition. [3]

After the surrender of Bir el Hassana, Bassett's force remained in position to capture any Ottoman force withdrawing back from Nekhl towards Bir el Hassana. [5]

Aeromedical evacuation

A B.E.2c at the Imperial War Museum in London. Royal aircraft factory BE2c at the Imperial War Museum.jpg
A B.E.2c at the Imperial War Museum in London.

On 19 February the Royal Flying Corps flew McGregor out with his leg in a box splint, while he sat in the observer's seat of a Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2c, a two-seater biplane. This was the first use of aeromedical evacuation by the British. [6] The flight to El Arish took 45 minutes. The alternative to aeromedical evacuation was a cacolet (a type of litter) on a camel, which one historian described as "a form of travel exquisite in its agony for wounded men because of the nature of the animal's movement". [7] Travel by cacolet would have taken days. [6]

See also

Citations

  1. Gullett (1941), p.246)
  2. Cutlack (1941), p.53.
  3. 1 2 3 Murray (1920), pp.112.
  4. Falls (1930), Vol. 1, p.277.
  5. Gullett (1941), pp.246–7.
  6. 1 2 Dolev (1986), Vol. 132, pp. 34–36.
  7. Dennis et al. (2008), p. 352.

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References

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