Explore the terrifying subterranean warfare of 1917, where Allied miners detonated a million pounds of explosives beneath the German trenches at Messines.
What happens when an army spends over a year silently digging beneath enemy lines, packing underground chambers with one million pounds of high explosives, and detonating them all at the exact same moment? The Battle of Messines in 1917 unleashed a man-made earthquake so violent it was physically felt by the Prime Minister in London, 130 miles away.
To break the brutal stalemate of the Western Front, British, Canadian, and Australian tunneling companies engaged in a terrifying, claustrophobic subterranean war against German counter-miners. Deep within the blue clay of the Messines Ridge, they placed 19 massive mines directly beneath the German fortifications. At 3:10 AM on June 7, the mines were detonated simultaneously. The blast instantly vaporized over 10,000 German soldiers and completely obliterated the ridge, allowing Allied infantry to easily seize their objectives within hours—a rare, flawless tactical victory in a war defined by attrition.
This gripping historical narrative explores the harrowing logistics of military mining. It documents the psychological terror of digging in absolute silence, the engineering marvel of the deep-shaft tunnels, and the unexploded mines that still sleep beneath the Belgian countryside today.
Listen to the echoes of the trenches. The Battle of Messines is a terrifying testament to the sheer, landscape-altering industrial violence of the First World War.
Tommy White
Author
battle of messines ww1 subterranean warfare largest non nuclear explosions tunneling companies western front tactics british military engineering trench warfare logistics