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The Liberation Trilogy Box Set

Page 348

by Rick Atkinson


  Douve River

  Drabik, Sgt. Alex

  DRAGOON, Operation

  advance on Lyon and Montélimar

  advance on Vosges and Swiss border

  Belfort Gap and

  Churchill and

  launch of

  Marseille and

  St.-Tropez and

  success of

  Toulon and

  Draguignan

  Draper, Sgt. Frank, Jr.

  Dresden

  bombing of

  U.S. POWs in

  Driant, Fort, debacle

  Drôme River

  Dufy, Raoul

  Duisburg

  Dumas, Alexandre

  Du Maurier, Daphne

  Dunckern, Gen. Anton

  Dunkirk

  Dupuy, R. Ernest

  Düren

  Düsseldorf

  Dutch resistance

  Eagle’s Nest (Hitler château)

  Eaker, Lt. Gen. Ira C.

  Eastern Europe

  Yalta and

  Eastern Front

  Eastern Siberia

  East Pomerania

  East Prussia

  Eberbach, Gen. Heinrich

  ECLIPSE (postwar plan for Germany)

  Economist

  Eddy, Maj. Gen. Manton S.

  Eden, Anthony

  Egypt

  Eichhorn, Rabbi David Max

  Eindhoven

  Eisenhower, Doud Dwight

  Eisenhower, Gen. Dwight D. “Ike”

  advance beyond Rhine and

  airborne troops and

  Allies managed by

  Antwerp and

  arrives in Normandy

  assassination threat vs.

  assumes ground command

  atomic bomb and

  awarded fifth star

  Berlin and

  birthday of

  bombing of German cities and

  Bradley and

  Brooke and

  brothels and

  Bulge and

  Bushy Park office of

  Cannae and

  capture of German territory and

  Cherbourg and

  Churchill and

  Churchill honors, in London

  COBRA and

  Colmar Pocket and

  combat exhaustion and

  COMZ and

  concentration camps and

  criticisms of

  cultural treasures and

  Czechoslovakia and

  D-Day and

  death of FDR and

  death of Ramsay and

  De Gaulle and

  desertions and

  Devers and

  Devers’ plan to jump Rhine and

  divisions fighting under

  DRAGOON and

  Falaise and

  FDR and

  final days of war and

  First Army returned to Bradley by

  French and

  German POWs and

  German surrender and

  GOODWOOD and

  Göring and

  health problems of

  Hodges and

  Hürtgen and

  leaflets and

  liberation of Paris and

  logistics and

  logistics for winter and

  Malta and

  manpower needs and

  MARKET GARDEN and

  Marshall and

  Mediterranean campaign and

  Merkers treasure and

  Metz and

  Montgomery and

  Montgomery vs., and Bradley

  Montgomery vs., and Bulge

  Montgomery vs., and Churchill

  Montgomery vs., and MARKET GARDEN

  Montgomery vs., and showdown in Maastricht

  Montgomery vs., and single- vs. multipronged strategy

  Montgomery vs., and war’s end date

  Munich and

  Normandy and

  OVERLORD and

  Patton and

  Patton’s Baum fiasco and

  personality of

  poison gas and

  postwar career of

  postwar German occupation and

  pozit shells

  provisions for

  Reims HQ of

  Rhine crossing and

  Ruhr and

  shifts main attack to Bradley

  Simpson and

  Soviets and

  St.-Dié demolitions and

  Strasbourg and

  Stuttgart and

  Summersby and

  Ted Roosevelt and

  three phases of battle envisioned by

  as Time “Man of the Year”

  transfers XV Corps to Seventh Army

  Truscott and

  V-1 attacks and

  valor awards and

  VERITABLE and GRENADE and

  Versailles HQ of

  Yalta and

  Eisenhower, Ida

  Eisenhower, John

  Eisenhower, Mamie

  El Alamein, Battle of

  Elbe River

  U.S. and Red Armies meet at

  El Guettar, Battle of

  Elsenborn Ridge, Battle of

  EMBARCO

  English Channel, fuel pipelines across

  EPHEDRINE (commando team)

  Epstein, Lt. Bernard

  Erpeler Ley

  Essen

  bombing of

  Estonia

  European Advisory Commission

  Fairbanks, Lt. Douglas, Jr.

  Falaise

  Falaise Pocket, Battle of the

  Farouk I, King of Egypt

  Faubus, Maj. Orval E.

  Faust (Goethe)

  Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor

  Figaro, Le

  Finland

  First Allied Airborne Army

  MARKET GARDEN and

  VARSITY PLUNDER and

  Flanner, Janet

  Foertsch, Lt. Gen. Hermann

  Follain, Jean

  “Foot March Group South”

  Force B

  Force U

  Ford, Homer D.

  Fort Du Roule, fall of

  FORTITUDE (Appendix Y) deception

  For Whom the Bell Tolls (film)

  France. See also Vichy France; and specific individuals, locations, and military units

  African soldiers and

  crimes by U.S. soldiers in

  German postwar zone and

  German surrender and

  logistics and

  Mediterranean invasion and

  OVERLORD and

  railroads

  Yalta and

  Franconia, R.M.S.

  Franco-Prussian War

  Frankfurt

  SHAEF moves to

  Freckleton air accident

  Frederick, Maj. Gen. Robert T.

  Frederick the Great, King of Prussia

  Free France

  Freeman, Douglas Southall

  Freeman, Edward Augustus

  Fréjus, Gulf of

  French 1st Armored Division

  French First Army

  French I Corps

  French 1st Infantry Division

  French 2nd Armored Division

  French II Corps

  French 3rd Algerian Division

  French Army

  Bulge and

  colonial troops and

  DRAGOON and

  looting by

  rebirth of

  Rhine Crossing and

  Stuttgart and

  French Army B

  French collaborators

  French communists

  French Forces of the Interior (FFI)

  French Foreign Ministry

  French Legionnaires

  French Resistance

  Lyon and

  Paris and

  French War Ministry

  Friedeburg, Adm. Hans-Georg von

  Friedrich, Jörg

  Frost, Lt. Col. John D.

 
Frost, Robert

  fuel supplies

  Fuller, Col. Hurley E.

  Fussell, Lt. Paul

  Gaffey, Maj. Gen. Hugh J.

  Gale, Lt. Gen. Sir Humfrey M.

  Gallic Wars (Caesar)

  Gallipoli, Battle of (1915)

  Gander, Marsland

  Gap

  GARBO (British double agent)

  Garrick, David

  gas chambers

  Gaskill, Gordon

  Gault, Lt. Col. James F.

  Gavin, Brig. Gen. James M.

  Bulge and

  concentration camps and

  German surrender and

  MARKET GARDEN and

  personality of

  Geisel, Theodore (Dr. Seuss)

  Gela, landing at

  Gellhorn, Martha

  Geneva Conventions

  George VI, King of England

  Gerhardt, Maj. Gen. Charles Hunter, Jr.

  German First Army

  surrender by

  German First Parachute Army

  German I SS Panzer Corps

  German 1st SS Panzer Division

  German II SS Panzer Corps

  German 2nd Panzer Division

  German 2nd Parachute Corps

  German 2nd SS Panzer Division (Das Reich)

  German 3rd Panzer Grenadier Division

  German Fifth Panzer Army

  Bulge and

  German Sixth Panzer Army

  Bulge and

  German 6th Parachute Regiment

  German 6th SS Mountain Division

  German Seventh Army

  Bulge and

  Falaise Pocket and

  Mortain and

  retreat from Belgium

  German 7th Panzer Division

  German 9th Panzer Division

  German 9th Parachute Regiment

  German 9th SS Panzer Division

  German 10th SS Panzer Division

  German Eleventh Army

  German 11th Panzer Division

  German Twelfth Army

  German 12th Infantry Division (Wild Buffaloes)

  German 12th SS Panzer Division (Hitler Youth, Murder Division)

  German Fifteenth Army

  German 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division

  German Nineteenth Army

  German 21st Panzer Division

  German 25th Army

  German 26th Volksgrenadier

  German XLVII Panzer Corps

  German 49th Infantry Division

  German LVII Panzer Corps

  German LVIII Corps

  German 58th Panzer Corps

  German LXVII Corps

  German LXXIV Corps

  German LXXXI Corps

  German 84th Corps

  German 85th Corps

  German 89th Infantry Division

  German 116th Panzer Division

  German 150th Armored Brigade

  German 198th Division

  German 275th Division

  German 352nd Infantry Division

  German 716th Infantry Division

  German Afrika Korps

  German Air Fleet Three

  German Air Ministry

  German Army Group B

  surrender of

  German Army Group C

  German Army Group Center

  German Army Group G

  surrender of

  German Army Group H

  German Army Group Oberrhein

  German demolitions

  German Luftwaffe

  Bulge and

  command problems

  fuel shortages and

  glide bombs and

  losses

  German OB West (HQ)

  German Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW, high command)

  German Panzer Group West

  renamed Fifth Panzer Army

  German Panzer Lehr Division

  German paratroopers

  German SS

  Baugnez massacre and

  Buchenwald and

  concentration camps and

  death of FDR and

  liberation of Paris and

  MARKET GARDEN and

  German Volksgrenadiers

  German Volkssturm Home Guard

  German Waffen-SS troops

  German Wehrmacht. See also specific individuals, locations, and military units

  decline of

  liberation of Paris and

  retreat of

  surrender of

  after V-E Day

  Germany. See also specific individuals, locations, and military units

  Allied propaganda and

  Allies first cross into

  bombing of

  “bridge psychosis” and

  casualties and

  civilians under occupation

  December 1944 position of

  early plan for drive on

  industry

  January 1945 position of

  looting of

  Normandy defeat and

  postwar occupation of

  scientists in

  search for missing soldiers in

  Soviet invasion of

  Stalin and reparations from

  surrender of

  Third Reich, after V-E Day

  transportation system

  war crimes and

  women in

  Gerow, Maj. Gen. Leonard T.

  Geyr von Schweppenburg, Gen. Leo Freiherr

  GI Bill

  Gide, André

  Gielgud, John

  Giessen

  First and Third Army meet at

  Gill, Brendan

  Gillem, Maj. Gen. Alvan C., Jr.

  glide bombs

  gliders

  Goebbels, Joseph

  Goethe, Johann W. von

  Going My Way (film)

  Gold Beach

  Golden, Capt. Jack

  Gone with the Wind (Mitchell)

  GOODWOOD, Operation

  Gooseberries

  Göring, Hermann

  Gorky, Maxim

  Gothic Line

  Goya, Francisco de

  Graham, Maj. Gen. Sir Miles

  Grand Hotel (Baum)

  Granville

  Graves Registration units

  Grave

  Gray, J. Glenn

  Greece

  GREIF, Operation

  GRENADE, Operation

  Grenoble

  Groesbeek

  Groesbeek Ridge

  Groves, Lt. Gen. Leslie R.

  Guadalcanal

  Guam

  Guderian, Heinz

  Gustav Line

  Gypsies

  Haardt Mountains

  Haile Selassi, Emperor of Ethiopia

  Haislip, Maj. Gen. Wade

  Hall, Rear Adm. John L.

  Hallock, Lt. Joseph R.

  Hamburg

  fall of

  firebombing of

  Hamburger, Philip

  Hamlet (Shakespeare)

  Hamm

  Hammelburg POW camp

  Hammett, Dashiell

  “Handbook for Military Government in Germany” (SHAEF)

  Hannibal

  Hanover

  Hansen, Maj. Chester “Chet”

  Hardy, Thomas

  Harmon, Maj. Gen. Ernie

  Harriman, W. Averell

  Harris, Air Chief Marshal Arthur T. “Bomber”

  Hart, B. H. Liddell

  Harz Mountains

  Hasbrouck, Brig. Gen. Robert W.

  Hastings, Max

  Hausser, Gen. Paul

  Heidelberg

  Heilbronn

  Heinz, W. C.

  Heisenberg, Werner

  Hemingway, Ernest

  Henri II, King of France

  Henry V (Shakespeare)

  HERBSTNEBEL, Operation (Autumn Mist). See also Bulge, Battle of the

  Hewitt, Vice Adm. H. Kent

  Heydte, Col. Friedrich von der

  Higgins, Trumbull<
br />
  Hill 262 (Maczuga)

  Hill 314 (Montjoie)

  Hill 400

  Hill 427

  Himmler, Heinrich

  Hindenburg, Field Marshal Paul von

  History of the Norman Conquest of England (Freeman)

  Hitchcock, Alfred

  Hitler, Adolf

  Aachen and

  admits war is lost

  Allied Rhine crossing and

  Alsace and

  Antwerp and

  Ardennes and

  assassination attempt vs.

  Atlantic Wall and

  Belgium and

  Berchtesgaden and

  Blaskowitz fired by

  Boulogne and Dunkirk ordered held by

  British invasion planned by

  Brittany ports and

  Cherbourg and

  COBRA and

  Colmar and

  coup attempt vs.

  D-Day and

  death of Rommel and

  DRAGOON and

  Eastern Front and

  Falaise and

  final days of war and

  forces required to defeat

  French and

  generals fired by

  German losses and

  health problems of

  HERBSTNEBEL (Bulge) and

  Italy and

  June 1945 positions and

  Kesselring and

  Kluge suicide and

  Lorraine and

  Metz and

  Mortain and

  Munich and

  NORDWIND and

  oil and

  OSS portrait of

  OVERLORD and

  Paris and

  retreat from France and

  Rhine bridge demolitions and

  Rommel and

  Ruhr and

  Rundstedt reinstated by

  scorched-earth decree of

  secret weapons and

  Siegfried Line and

  Soviet invasion and

  Soviet nonaggression pact and

  Strasbourg and

  suicide of

  V-2 rocket and

  Hitler Youth

  Hobbs, Maj. Gen. Leland S.

  Hodges, Lt. Gen. Courtney H.

  advance on Rhine and

  Bulge and

  Hürtgen and

  January 1945 position of

  personality of

  Rhine crossed by

  Ruhr and

  victory position of

  winter preparations and

  “hog calling” tactic

  Hoge, Brig. Gen. William M.

  Holland. See Netherlands

  Holocaust. See also concentration camps; Jews

  Holzinger, Sgt. Warner W.

  Honsfeld massacre

  Hopkins, Harry

  Horne, Lena

  Horrocks, Lt. Gen. Brian G.

  Horton, Lt. Hershel G.

  Houffalize

  Housman, A. E.

  Howard, Maj. John

  Howard, Michael

  Howarth, David

  Howie, Maj. Thomas D.

  Huebner, Maj. Gen. Clarence R.

  Hughes, Maj. Gen. Everett S.

  Huie, William Bradford

  Hull, Cordell

  Humain

  Hungary

  Hunger Winter

  Hürtgen Forest, Battle of

  HUSKY

  Huy

  Hynes, Samuel

  Ibn Saud, King of Saudi Arabia

  IG Farben

  Ill River

  India

  Indochina

  Infantry Attacks (Rommel)

  Ingersoll, Maj. Ralph

  Innocents Abroad, The (Twain)

  Institute of Physics and Chemistry (Halle, Germany)

  “Instrument of Surrender”

 

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