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The Western Front, 1916. Every Allied attack follows the same deadly pattern: artillery pounds the German trenches, then stops. Infantry goes over the top. And in the ten minutes it takes soldiers to cross No Man's Land, German machine gunners climb out of their bunkers and open fire. Thousands die in this "ten-minute gap." The Somme. Verdun. Passchendaele. The mathematics of slaughter seem unbreakable. Then a 29-year-old Canadian engineer named Andrew McNaughton asks a radical question: what if the artillery never stopped? What if the shells kept falling, moving forward in a curtain of fire, with infantry following just 50 yards behind? The idea was dangerous. Canadian soldiers would be killed by their own guns. But McNaughton calculated the odds — and the alternative was worse. This is the story of the creeping barrage: the Canadian tactical innovation that broke the trenches at Vimy Ridge, drove the Hundred Days offensive, and changed combined arms warfare forever. From the science of predicted fire to the brutal rehearsals behind the lines, from the 983 guns that opened up on Easter Monday 1917 to the "black day of the German Army" at Amiens — discover how Canadian gunners solved the deadliest problem of industrial warfare by deliberately aiming short. 📚 SOURCES & FURTHER READING: — Tim Cook, "Shock Troops: Canadians Fighting the Great War 1917-1918" — Shane Schreiber, "Shock Army of the British Empire: The Canadian Corps in the Last 100 Days of the Great War" — Canadian War Museum Archives — Library and Archives Canada 🍁 This channel explores Canadian military history through detailed research and original storytelling. ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 — The Problem of No Man's Land [Add remaining timestamps after final edit] #WWI #CanadianHistory #VimyRidge #MilitaryHistory #FirstWorldWar #CreepingBarrage #CanadianCorps #TrenchWarfare #ArtilleryTactics #WarHistory