Belgian Infantry Awaiting the Invaders |
By Tony Langley
The Belgian government and the king and queen officially relocated to Antwerp upon the occupation of Brussels early in August. There was no shortage of large buildings to house the ministries and parliament and senate. The Atheneum (or high school) and the grand and ornate municipal ballroom were pressed into service for government use. Hotels, of which there was a multitude in Antwerp for use by businessmen and emigrants awaiting departure to the New World, were soon full to capacity, housing diplomats, officers, journalists, and refugees from all over the occupied parts of the country. The rich and wealthy opened their homes for use as hospitals or nursing stations. The Antwerp Zoo, with many large festival and conference halls, was also turned into a casualty recovery ward, and a number of municipal trams were converted into useful and picturesque Red Cross streetcars, plying the routes from outer fortifications to the city center with wounded and injured soldiers.
Morale was high in the newly designated capital. There was some initial rioting against German inhabitants of Antwerp, their homes looted and furniture thrown into the streets and destroyed or burned. Rumors and lurid stories of German spies abounded as well, it being told that said perfidious persons were executed in secret at night on the glacis of the inner forts. None of this was true, of course, but it all added to the sense of excitement and adventure among the general public, which displayed patriotic sentiments hereto unseen in the average Belgian. According to eyewitness accounts, along with the black-gold-red tricolor of Belgium, the streets were abundantly adorned with flags of all the Entente nations: Great Britain, France, and Imperial Russia. Prices for foodstuffs and other goods remained at very reasonable levels; the city was not encircled by German forces, and, therefore, supply routes were guaranteed and confidence in the protection afforded by the triple ring of fortifications was high. Neither the Belgian government nor, apparently, the British nor French governments were concerned that any real threat existed. In good time Antwerp would be relieved, and in the meantime, the forts would of course hold.
The heroic stand at Loncin notwithstanding, this did little to stop the advance of German troops. After a short and small-scale victory won by the Belgians on the battlefield at Halen on the 12th, to the north of the fortified town of Diest (located about halfway between Liège and Antwerp), King Albert I and the military staff decided it was necessary to order the Belgian field army into the Antwerp fortified zone. By 20 August the main Belgian force was safely under the protection of the outer-perimeter forts.
Armored Cars Were Sent Out on Sorties Against the Germans |
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