Final Offensive

Headline Wednesday: Meuse-Argonne Offensive, First World War follows American doughboys as they push into the ravines and ridges between the Meuse River and the Argonne Forest in the fall of 1918. From trench lines north of Verdun to the tangled woods that had already swallowed earlier armies, this episode traces how fresh American divisions were thrown into the largest operation the United States had ever attempted. You will hear how terrain, logistics, and command decisions shaped the fight for hills, rail lines, and supply routes that fed the German front. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, and the series is developed by Trackpads dot com.
Across this episode, we walk the long road from the opening barrage to the guns falling silent on November 11, 1918. You will hear the lead-up through Cantigny, Château-Thierry, and Saint-Mihiel, the first stumbling days in the forest, the grinding phase where American units learned under fire, and the slow turn as German reserves ran out and the rail hub at Sedan came into reach. We highlight small-unit fights in the woods, command shifts at First Army, and what later generations took from this costly education in modern war. Use it as a clear, narrative refresher for your own reading, study, or staff ride planning.

Final Offensive
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