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Erich Ludendorff launched the Second Battle of the Marne on July 15, 1918, throw
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July 15

Allies Halt Germans at Marne: WWI's Turning Point

Erich Ludendorff launched the Second Battle of the Marne on July 15, 1918, throwing 52 divisions across the river in Germany's last great offensive of the war. French intelligence had captured a prisoner who revealed the attack date, allowing Allied commanders to pull their front lines back and prepare a devastating counterbarrage. American divisions fought their first major engagements at Chateau-Thierry and Belleau Wood during the broader campaign. The German advance stalled within three days. On July 18, French General Ferdinand Foch launched a massive counterattack that drove the Germans back across the Marne. Ludendorff called August 8 the "black day of the German Army." The war ended three months later.

July 15, 1918

108 years ago

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