West Africa Campaign (World War I)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

West Africa Campaign (World War I)
Part of African theatre of World War I
Date August 3, 1914-February, 1915
Location Cameroon, Togo
Result Treaty of Versailles
Combatants
Great Britain, France, Belgium Germany

The West Africa Campaign of World War I consisted of two small and fairly short military operations to capture the German colonies in West Africa: Togo and Kamerun.

[edit] Overview

Great Britain, with near total command of the world's oceans, had the power and resources to conquer the German colonies when the Great War started.

The two German colonies in West Africa were recent, and not well defended. They were also surrounded on all sides by African colonies that belonged to enemy great powers: Great Britain and France.

[edit] Togo

This small colony was almost immediately conquered by a military force from British Gold Coast (modern-day Ghana) and a small force from French Dahomey (modern-day Benin). Fighting was over by August 27. John Keegan identifies the two military forces as the West African Rifles and the Tirailleurs senegalais (Keegan, "World War I", pg. 206).

[edit] Kamerun

Kamerun (modern-day Cameroon as well as a part of modern-day Nigeria) had a garrison of about 1,000 German soldiers supported by about 3,000 African soldiers. This tiny force was in charge of defending a territory the size of Texas. The British attacked out of Nigeria following three different routes east into Kamerun. However, all three columns were defeated by a combination of terrain, rough trails, and ambushes by the Germans. The French attacked south from Chad and captured Kusseri. Early in September, a Belgian-French force (mostly from the Belgian Congo) captured Limbe on the coast. With the aid of four British and French cruisers acting as mobile artillery, this force then captured the colonial capital of Douala on September 27, 1914.

The only major center of German resistance was now Yaounda (modern-day Yaounde). The Belgian-French troops followed the German-built railroad inland, beating off German counter-attacks along the way. By November, Yaounde was captured. Most of the surviving German soldiers retreated into Spanish Guinea (modern-day Equatorial Guinea which was neutral territory. The last German fort in Kamerun surrendered in February, 1916 (Keegan "World War I", pg. 207).


World War I
European Theatre
Balkans | Western Front | Eastern Front | Italian Front
Middle Eastern
Caucasus | Mesopotamia | Sinai and Palestine | Gallipoli | Aden | Persia
Africa
South-West Africa | West Africa | East Africa
Asian and Pacific Theatres
German Samoa and German New Guinea | Tsingtao
Other
Atlantic Ocean | Mediterranean Sea | Naval battles
Air battles
Contemporary conflicts
Maritz Rebellion | North-West Frontier, India | Easter Rising | Russian Revolution
World War I
Theatres Main events Specific articles Participants See also

Prelude:
Causes
Sarajevo assassination
The July Ultimatum

Main theatres:
Western Front
Eastern Front
Italian Front
Middle Eastern Theatre
Balkan Theatre
Atlantic Theatre

Other theatres:
African Theatre
Pacific Theatre

General timeline:
WWI timeline

1914:
Battle of Liège
Battle of Tannenberg
Invasion of Serbia
First Battle of the Marne
First Battle of Arras
Battle of Sarikamis
1915:
Mesopotamian Campaign
Battle of Gallipoli
Italian Campaign
Conquest of Serbia
1916:
Battle of Verdun
Battle of the Somme
Battle of Jutland
Brusilov Offensive
Conquest of Romania
Great Arab Revolt
1917:
Second Battle of Arras (Vimy Ridge)
Battle of Passchendaele
Capture of Baghdad
Conquest of Palestine
1918:
Spring Offensive
Hundred Days Offensive
Meuse-Argonne Offensive
Armistice with Germany
Armistice with Ottoman Empire

Military engagements
Naval warfare
Air warfare
Cryptography
People
Poison gas
Railways
Technology
Trench warfare

Civilian impact and atrocities:
Armenian Genocide
Assyrian Genocide

Aftermath:
Aftermath
Casualties
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
Paris Peace Conference
Treaty of Versailles
Treaty of St. Germain
Treaty of Neuilly
Treaty of Trianon
Treaty of Sèvres
Treaty of Lausanne
League of Nations

Entente Powers
Russian Empire
France
British Empire
  » United Kingdom
  » Australia
  » Canada
  » India
  » New Zealand
  » Newfoundland
  » South Africa
Italy
Romania
United States
Serbia
Portugal
China
Japan
Belgium
Montenegro
Greece
Armenia
more…

Central Powers
German Empire
Austria-Hungary
Ottoman Empire
Bulgaria

Category: World War I
A war to end all wars
Female roles
Literature
Total war
Spanish flu
Veterans

Contemporaneous conflicts:
First Balkan War
Second Balkan War
Maritz Rebellion
Easter Rising
Russian Revolution
Russian Civil War
Finnish Civil War
North Russia Campaign
Wielkopolska Uprising
Polish–Soviet War
Turkish War of Independence also known as the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922)

More information on World War I:

 World War I from Wiktionary
 WWI Textbooks from Wikibooks
 WWI Quotations from Wikiquote
 WWI Source texts from Wikisource
 WWI Images and media from Commons
 WWI News stories from Wikinews