On the 100th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme we take a look at the contemporary sources available in the Information and Reference Library. We examine how The Times reported the end of the campaign and how it was covered in the pages of  The Illustrated London News and Punch.

The final battle of the Somme offensive was the  Battle of the Ancre  which ended on Saturday 18 November when the Fifth Army advanced north and south of Ancre and the 51st (Highland) Division secured Beaumont-Hamel.

The Times covered the war, on all its fronts, in great detail, using material from its own correspondents in the field. The paper also reported official dispatches from the General Headquarters in France, and elsewhere, and the official communiques from Berlin that were supplied by Reuters*.  The correspondents were restricted  in what they could write (see The Battle of the Somme: contemporary sources-Part 1). The dispatches and communiques from both sides were propaganda tools, giving a distorted view of the truth in an effort to keep up morale and hide operational information.

Material was received by electronic  telegraph** and newspapers printed overnight for sale the following morning, just as they are today. Different editions were published, with the  final or late edition (the last one printed) containing the most up-to-date news.

The Times, front page, Fri 17 Nov 1916
The Times, front page, Fri 17 Nov 1916

On Friday 17 November, The Times contained dispatches from the previous day about the progress in the battle for Ancre which it updated in the Saturday  edition.

The Times Sat 18th Nov 1916
The Times, Sat 18 Nov 1916

On Monday 20 November the paper reported the capture of Monastir and the advance on the Ancre, with another article reporting a visit to the battlefield. Under the headline Further British Advance dispatches from General Headquarters were reported. Below it was given a communique from Berlin, dated Sunday 19 November, which  spoke of a “sanguinary defeat for the British, and secured them a gain of terrain at only a few points”. This method of contrasting the British reports from HQ and communiques from Berlin was common practice.

The Times Mon 20th Nov 1916
The Times, Mon 20 Nov 1916

Illustrated London News

Illustrated London News, 8 July 1916
Illustrated London News, 8 July 1916

The Illustrated London News, much like Picture Post in the twentieth century, was a groundbreaking publication when it was first published in 1842 as it was the first illustrated weekly newspaper.

In the 1840s illustrations were printed from wood engravings so that producing them was very labour intensive. An artist would draw an illustration, which would then be transferred onto a wooden block by a  draughtsman (in reverse, using a mirror), and then an engraver produced the final block, from which the illustration was printed. This all had to be carried out swiftly to ensure that the newspaper was topical.  Technology stepped in and this process was later replaced  by offset lithography and photoengraving. Photography became the main pictorial source for the newspaper but illustrations could still be used to good effect to show the drama of a situation.

The publishing schedule of a weekly newspaper could accommodate the delay in receiving and developing the photographic film the front line which was less suitable for daily newspapers. It wasn’t until the 1920s, when developments in cameras and printing technology, and of telephotography – a process whereby photographs could be transmitted by telegraph – enabled the widespread use of photography in magazines and newspapers.

The Illustrated London News contained articles, as well as illustrations and photographs, but it was the pictorial content which powerfully conveyed the atmosphere, heroism and drama of the battlefield.

Illustrated London News 18th Nov 1916
Illustrated London News, 18 Nov 1916

 

Illustrated London News 25th Nov 1916
Illustrated London News, 25 Nov 1916

The two  illustrations above show how composition and tone (and possibly some artistic licence) could be used to highlight the chaos of the battle and give it the atmosphere of the battlefield. In contrast, the photograph used on the cover below has none of the drama or emotional depth of the illustrations.

Illustrated London News 14th Oct 1916
Illustrated London News, 14 Oct 1916

Punch

Punch, the humorous and satirical  magazine, which was first published in 1841, used its pages to bring cheer to its readers and to keep up morale through articles and cartoons. (The original use of the word cartoon meant a full-sized drawing for a design or painting but it was its use by Punch in 1843 that led to its modern meaning).  The Punch cartoonists poked fun at the enemy, as in this cartoon depicting a Prussian domestic scene.

Punch 29th Nov 1916
Punch, 29 Nov 1916

(The Prussian, Paul von Hindenburgh, was appointed field marshal and commander of all German land forces in 1914. He was very popular with the German people, became a war hero and, in 1925, was elected President of Germany.)

Other favourite Punch targets included the Government and the Civil Service …

Punch 15th Nov 1916
Punch, 15 Nov 1916

… And included the soldiers both in the trenches …

Punch 29th Nov 1916
Punch, 29th Nov 1916

… and in hospital.

Punch 1916
Punch, 1916 London Charivari

A hundred years on from the Battle of the Somme much has changed in the technology of news reporting; but the power of words and images is still as potent as ever.

Additional information
*Reuters

Reuters was founded by Paul Julius Reuter, who used the new telegraphic service to send information to newspapers. Reuters became one of the first news agencies and today they are still supplying information to the news media worldwide.

**Electric Telegraph

The electronic telegraph was first developed in the mid C19th. It used a system of overland wires and transatlantic and cross- Channel cables to transmit messages electronically between telegraph stations. This was invaluable for newspapers as it gave them access to up-to-date news and information and meant that they didn’t have to have the expense of numerous foreign correspondents.  The phrase “over the wire” originates from the days of the telegraph, and  the Daily Telegraph gets it name from it too.

Bibliography

The Illustrated London News
The Information and Reference Library holds the Illustrated London News from 1842 to  2003.
Some volumes are on microfilm and can be read on our microfilm reader.

Illustrated London News microfilm box and reel
Illustrated London News microfilm box and reel

Penrose Annual 1974  This edition has an article about the Illustrated London News
Punch
The Times  is available in hard copy and kept for 6 months. Library members may access earlier issues online via Newsbank and The Times Digital Archive.
The Western Front Companion
World War 1: A Student Encyclopedia

Related links and source material
Article on telegraphy from Encylopaedia Britannica
BBC timeline of the Somme
History of Punch
The Telegraph Museum

Library members can access the entries in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography by clicking on the hyperlinks in the text.

[Fiona Campbell, Library Assistant]