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Normandy '44

Page 79

by James Holland


  Dahlstrom, Michael P., The Role of Airpower in the Overlord Invasion: An Effects-based Operation, Airpower Research Institute, 2007

  Hallion, Richard P., D-Day 1944: Air Power Over the Normandy Beaches and Beyond, Air Force History and Museums Program, 1994

  O’Brien, Phillips P., ‘East versus West in the Defeat of Nazi Germany’, Journal of Strategic Studies, 23:2, 2008

  Peaty, John, ‘Myth, Reality and Carlo D’Este’, War Studies Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2, Spring 1996

  Widder, Werner, ‘Auftragstaktik and Innere Führung: Trademarks of German Leadership’, Military Review, September/October 2002

  Zabecki, David, Auftragstaktik

  FILMS, DVDS

  The Fighting Wessex Wyverns: Their Legacy, The 43rd Wessex Association

  Acknowledgements

  This book has only been possible thanks to significant help from a number of people. It has been fascinating to visit several archives and I am hugely grateful to Tammy Horton at the US Air Force Historical Research Agency at Maxwell, Alabama, for all her help and for allowing me to pester her with far too many questions and requests. I am also indebted to all the wonderful people at the truly brilliant National World War II Museum in New Orleans – and specifically to Rob Citino, a true friend, as well as Jeremy Collins and Seth Paridon, who allowed me access to many of the museum’s incredible oral history interviews with Normandy veterans. My thanks, too, to Sarah Kerksey, Becky Mackie and all the team in New Orleans. Thank you also to the staffs at the US Army Heritage and Education Center at Carlisle Barracks, the Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv at Freiburg, the Liddell Hart Centre for Military History at King’s College, London, the Imperial War Museum in London, the National Archives in Kew and the Mémoriale de Caen. Huge thanks as well to David Willey for all his enormous help and to all his staff at the brilliant Tank Museum, Bovington in Dorset. Thanks also to Shaun Illingworth of the Rutgers Oral History Archive for his considerable help.

  A number of friends and colleagues have given me more assistance than I’m sure I deserve. In Normandy, Paul Woodadge has bent over backwards with help, advice, documents, insights and his enormous knowledge of both the campaign and the countryside over which it was fought. Professor John Buckley is a historian whom I admire enormously and who has given me much to think about. No man has done more work on the British Army in Normandy than Brigadier Ben Kite, and his book and knowledge have been invaluable. My thanks, too, to David Christopherson, son of Stanley, and a great friend. It was with David that fifteen years ago I toured Normandy and walked a quiet track on Point 103 where his father and the Sherwood Rangers had fought all those years ago. Thank you also to my great friend Trevor Chaytor-Norris and our fellow travelling companions on that trip, and to Peter Livanos and friends for two fabulous, eye-opening and highly instructive trips to Normandy. Al Murray has been a huge help and sounding board, and has pointed me in the direction of a number of works on the subject. In the US, Nicholas Moran has also been another very willing to share his immense knowledge of WWII armoured fighting vehicles and has encouraged me to think about these weapons of war in a different way. Thank you. I am also hugely grateful to Aaron Young, Freya Eden-Ellis, Jon Wood and Keith Branch, who all helped make the TV documentary Normandy 44 back in 2014. Thanks, too, for help go to Shane Greer, Christopher Jary, Michael Dolan, Michael Wharton, Ian Holmes, Andrew Whitmarsh and his team at the D-Day Story Museum in Portsmouth, Martin Bishkek at Legasee, Daphna Rubin, Steve Hoggard, and Jonathan Ware.

  Jim Clark and Jamie Meachin have become good friends and the opportunity to drive around in Jim’s Sherman has added an extra experiential dimension to the research for this book. I am also hugely grateful to Tom Crawford, and especially James Shopland and Tobin Jones for all their knowledge, help and willingness to demonstrate and share their incredible collections of wartime machinery and weaponry. Several other friends have given enormous help: Simon Keeling, a brilliant meteorologist, who first alerted me to the vagaries of wartime weather forecasting. He then spent considerable time examining wartime meteorological maps and documents for the weather around the beginning of June 1944, which he then explained in painstaking detail and with immense patience. It was a reminder to me that historians do need to seek the knowledge of people beyond their own field.

  Seb Cox, the Head of Air Historical Branch, has been extremely generous with his time and knowledge. Thank you, as well, to Antony Beevor for his help and advice. Paul Beaver is an expert on all matters aviation who has helped along the way, while I am also grateful to Paul Stoddart for his advice and suggestions. Two friends stand out especially: Steve Prince, Head of the Naval Historical Branch, has readily shared his enormous knowledge and I owe him for allowing me to pinch his phrases ‘the freedom of poverty’ and ‘the constraints of wealth’, for which I can claim absolutely no credit. I’m also grateful to his team in Portsmouth for all their help on naval aspects of the campaign. The second is Dr Peter Caddick-Adams, great friend, one-time neighbour, colleague and a man of immense knowledge always very happy to chew the cud, argue about Monty, and offer his services as a wise and invaluable sounding-board. Thank you, all of you.

  Various others have given assistance along the way. Elisabeth Gausseron in France has helped with both research and translation, Michelle Miles and Ingo Maerker in Freiburg, Emily Brown with further French translation and Rob Schaefer in Germany has interviewed several veterans so brilliantly. Lalla Hitchings and Rachel Sykes have also helped with transcriptions, for which huge thanks, as always. Extra special thanks, however, are due to two people. The first is Laura Bailey, who has done a huge amount of photographing of documents at the National Archives in Kew and the Imperial War Museum and has been a truly enormous help. The second is Dorothee Schneider, a great friend and wonderful person, who went more than the extra mile with translations of German testimonies. Thank you so much, both of you.

  Any book like this is, to a certain extent, a collaboration, and I consider myself immensely lucky to have had Brenda Updegraff to copy-edit the book. It has been a Herculean task and Brenda has done this with incredible skill and good judgement. I really am eternally grateful and simply cannot thank her enough for her phenomenal help. Enormous thanks, too, are due to all at Grove Atlantic in New York: Deb Seeger, Justina Batchelor, Morgan Entrekin and everyone who has worked on the book, but I owe especial thanks to George Gibson for all his patience, advice, wisdom and immense support. Thank you. In London, thank you to all at Bantam Press: the brilliant Phil Lord, Darcy Nicholson, Eloisa Clegg, Tom Hill and all who have helped get this book into being. Particular thanks, however, go to Bill Scott-Kerr: great friend, supporter, brilliant publisher and all-round lovely person, and to whom this book is dedicated. Thank you.

  Finally, I’d like to thank Patrick Walsh for being not only a great friend but also a brilliant literary agent, advisor and advocate, and also my family, Rachel, Ned and Daisy. This book has been possible only by sacrificing many mornings, evenings and weekends, and they have been extraordinarily supportive, as always, from start to finish. Thank you.

  Picture Acknowledgements

  All photographs have been kindly supplied by the author except those listed below. Every effort has been made to trace copyright holders; those overlooked are invited to get in touch with the publishers.

  1. Anti-invasion beach obstacles along the Normandy coast: Helmut Grosse/Bundesarchiv, bild: 101I-674-7773-07

  2. Pegasus Bridge on 7 June. On the far – Ranville – side, crashed gliders: © IWM (B5288)

  3. Cromwells and Shermans of the 4th County of London Yeomanry heading inland from Gold Beach on 7 June: © IWM (B5251)

  4. 12. SS troops moving through the much-fought-over village of Rauray: dpa picture alliance / Alamy Stock Photo

  5. Fallschirmjäger (paratroopers) moving by horse and cart: Zimmermann/Bundesarchiv, bild: 101I-583-2145-31

  6. Robert Capa’s photograph of German troops surrendering in Cherbourg, as witnessed and reported by Er
nie Pyle on 27 June 1944: Robert Capa © International Center of Photography/Magnum Photos

  7. Churchill tanks and men of the 15th (Scottish) Division move forward through the mist and drizzle at the start of Operation EPSOM, 26 June 1944: © IWM (B5956)

  8. Fontenay-le-Pesnel, the scene of vicious fighting. A knocked-out Pak 40 75mm anti-tank gun alongside its dead gunner, 25 June 1944: © IWM (B5939)

  9. Shermans of the Sherwood Rangers near Rauray on 30 June 1944: © IWM (B6218)

  10. A Panzer IV well camouflaged in the hedgerows: Reich/Bundesarchiv, bild: 101I-586-2215-34A

  11. British troops awaiting a counter-attack in hastily dug trenches and foxholes between hills 112 and 113 on 16 July 1944: © IWM (B7441)

  12. Allied armoured units were supported by large numbers of low loaders: © IWM (B9091)

  13. A British ammunition truck is hit and explodes during the EPSOM battle, 26 June 1944: © IWM (B6017)

  Gallery of Portraits

  14. All pictures supplied by the author

  Integrated Pictures

  All pictures supplied by the author except where listed below:

  15. Hawker Typhoon rocket attack: © IWM (CL617)

  Front endpaper

  Supplied by the author

  Back endpaper

  Courtesy of After the Battle

  For more photographs, please visit www.griffonmerlin.com/normandy44

  General Eisenhower (left) confers with Generals Omar Bradley (centre) and J. Lawton Collins.

  Index

  The page references in this index correspond to the print edition from which this ebook was created, and clicking on them will take you to the the location in the ebook where the equivalent print page would begin. To find a specific word or phrase from the index, please use the search feature of your ebook reader.

  Aachen 37, 96

  Abbeville 19, 148

  Achernar, USS 75, 208

  Adam, Flight Sergeant Klaus ‘Ken’ liii, lvi, 100–1, 219, 226, 385, 438, 439, 457, 520–21, 532, 537

  Adam, General Ronald ‘Bill’ 434

  AEAF see Allied Expeditionary Air Force

  Ainsworth, John (pilot) 121

  Aisne, River 95

  Ajax, HMS 170

  Alam Halfa, Battle of (1942) 33, 60

  Alamein, Battle of (1942) 14, 33, 42, 43, 60, 68, 128, 365, 423

  Alençon 523

  Alexander, General Sir Harold 86, 432

  Alexander, Lt-Colonel Mark lii, lvi, 109–11, 117, 134, 213–14, 232, 261–2, 303–4, 379–81, 538

  Alexander, Mary (née Collins) 110

  Algonquin, HMCS 118, 119, 168, 175, 313, 319, 320, 471

  Allied Expeditionary Air Force (AEAF) 30, 254, 365

  Allied Military Government for Occupied Territories (AMGOT) 69

  Allied Naval Expeditionary Force 4

  Alynbank (blockship) 257, 258, 315

  Ambrose, Stephen: Band of Brothers 538

  American War Production Board 82

  Amfreville 272, 274

  Amos, Corporal 246

  Angoville 234

  Anguerny 211

  Anisy 211

  ANVIL, Operation 49, 82, 435, 507

  Anzio, Italy 49, 163

  Apollo, HMS 229

  Arazo (member of Maquis Surcouf) 121

  Argentan 250, 523

  Argonaut, HMS 170

  ARGUMENT, Operation 28

  ‘Armored Column Cover’ 447–9, 480

  Armstrong, Lieutenant 244

  Arnold, Kanonier Fritz 466

  Arnold, General Henry ‘Hap’ 29, 35, 76, 90, 114

  Arromanches 169, 170, 257, 258, 314–15, 321, 421, 538

  Asnelles 210

  Atlantic Wall, the 9–10, 11, 13, 15, 53, 55, 220, 229, 345

  AT&T 255–6

  Audrieu 249

  Augusta, USS 75, 93–4, 153–4, 163, 207, 208

  Aunay-sur-Odon 488, 489, 493, 523, 531

  Aure, River 247, 253

  Australian airmen 146–7, 255, 295, 374, 451

  Authie 240, 241, 242, 276, 387

  Avranches 473, 480, 483, 491, 500, 501, 502, 506, 515

  AVREs (Armoured Vehicles, Royal Engineers) 171, 175, 181, 182, 183, 197, 212

  ‘Axis Sally’ 71

  B-17s, B-24s, B26s see under United States Army Air Forces

  Bagguly, Bill (tank crew) 322;

  BAGRATION, Operation 325

  Bailey, Corporal Alec 239

  Bailey bridges 423, 426

  Baldwin, Hanson 406

  Balfour Beatty 86

  Bangalore torpedoes see weaponry

  Banneville 451

  BARBAROSSA, Operation 15, 21, 48, 428

  Barbie, Klaus 290

  Barkhausen, Oberleutnant 496

  Barnett, Bill (tank crew) 322

  Barneville 311

  Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire 124

  Battle of Britain 31, 90, 93, 100, 269

  Baumann, Lieutenant Ernest ‘Moon’ 96, 226, 476

  Bayerlein, Generalleutnant Fritz liv, 202; commands Panzer-Lehr Division 17, 55; moves to the front 202–3, 219, 249–50, 251; attacks British positions 260–61; and Allied air forces 281; angry at lack of support 423; in the bocage 425; proposes withdrawal 475–6, 478, 484; later service 538–9

  Bayeux 191, 206, 210, 247, 248, 251, 289, 313, 321, 519; fire brigade 249; hospital 218

  Bazenville: airfield B-2 294, 295–6

  BBC 70, 71, 72, 102, 128, 433, 497, 498

  Beau-Coudray 403, 404

  Beck, Kanonier Eberhard liv, 397–9, 414, 445, 462, 463, 466, 523–4, 533, 536

  Becker, Major 56, 416, 454

  Bedell Smith, Lt-General Walter 2, 78, 79

  beehives see weaponry

  Bégau (French soldier) 273

  Belfast, HMS 168

  Bellême 523

  Bellengreville 128, 151

  Belval 483

  Benitz, Karl 294

  Benmore, Bill ‘Benny’ 322 (tank crew) 322

  Bennett, George (Canadian soldier) 455

  Bénouville 136

  Bénouville Bridge (PEGASUS) 116, 122–3, 125, 134, 182, 200, 204

  Bény-Bocage, Le 250, 491

  Berjou 530

  Berlichingen, Oberstleutnant Wolf Freiherr von 151

  Bernard (member of Maquis Surcouf) 290

  Bernay: Luftwaffe hospital 443

  Bernières-sur-Mer 169, 175, 211

  Beslier (member of Maquis Surcouf) 120, 121

  Besnardière, La 475

  Bethell-Fox, Lieutenant John 61, 249, 251

  Bezo (member of Maquis Surcouf) 121, 137

  Biddle, Major Lawrence 180–81

  Biehler, Private William lii, 320–21, 403–4

  Bily, Sergeant Romeo 305

  Black, Private 334

  Blackburn, Second Lieutenant Richard lii, 404–5, 426, 477, 479, 483, 485, 502–3, 526–8, 536

  Blandford Camp, Dorset 62–3

  Blay 432

  Bléhou 263

  Bletchley Park 72, 505

  Bliss, Flight Sergeant 438–9

  Blizzard, Corporal Arthur liii, 59–60, 61, 182–3, 212–13, 239

  BLUECOAT, Operation 482, 486, 487–95, 501, 503, 523, 525, 528, 530; map xlii–xliii

  Blumentritt, General Günther 189

  bocage 9, 132, 239, 247, 253, 282, 355, 358, 377, 378–9, 381, 396, 405–6, 418, 425–6, 445–7, 481–2, 487

  Bois du Mesnil, Le 239

  Bomber Command see under RAF

  Bonesteel, Colonel Charles ‘Tick’ 49, 50, 82, 381, 426

  Börner, Jäger Johannes liv, 300–1, 305, 441, 534

  Bosq, Le 337, 339

  Bosquet (member of Maquis Surcouf) 121

  Bougnat (member of Maquis Surcouf) 324

  Bourguébus 453, 456

  Bourguébus Ridge 354, 437, 449, 450, 451, 456, 457, 458

  Bowles, Pfc Henry ‘Dee’ lii, lvi, 61–2, 195, 196, 207, 252–3, 536

  Bowles, Pfc Tom lii, lvi, 61–2
, 195, 196, 207, 252, 253, 272, 477–8, 503, 536

  Boylan, Lieutenant Joe lii, 97–9, 226–7, 363

  Bra 456, 457

  Bradley, Lt-General Omar: lvi, given command of First Army 50, 435, 436, 535; and Montgomery 52; watches exercises 63; riled by Leigh-Mallory 74, 111; and Patton 74; and Hansen 74, 75; aboard USS Augusta 93, 153, 163, 207, 208–9; and Quesada 255; confers with Montgomery 229–30, 283, 301, 302; accepts Collins’s recommendations 303; crosses the Douve 304; drives on Cherbourg 310, 319, 325, 374, 376, 445; meetings with Montgomery 432–3, 434; relations with Quesada 440, 447–8; given demonstration of ‘Rhino’ 446; and COBRA 468–9, 470, 472, 473–5, 476; issues new orders 480; interviews Hartdegen 484; and Eisenhower 485; commands US 12th Army Group 485, 499; and BLUECOAT 489, 493; praised by Churchill 507; and German counter-attack 505, 522; writes post-war memoirs 539

  Brannen, Lieutenant Malcolm 144–5

  Brécourt 186, 189n, 213

  Brécy 503

  Bremen 23, 24

  Brereton, Lt-General Lewis 33, 34, 89, 254, 269, 271, 364, 365, 468

  Brest 84, 257, 301, 473, 498, 499, 526

  Bretteville-l’Orgueilleuse 251, 332, 384

  Bretteville-sur-Laize 441–2, 450, 511

  Bréville 273, 274

  Bréville Ridge 51, 125, 206, 272, 274

  Briouze 226–7

  British Army 46, 88, 317–18, 328–31, 447, 471; losses 229, 274, 354, 356, 434, 458–9, 530

  21st Army Group 1, 42, 50, 63, 246, 434

  Second Army xxvii, xxx, xxxiii, xli, xlii, xlviii, 182, 189, 282–3, 316, 326, 327, 367, 373, 399, 431, 435–6, 437, 438, 449–50, 458, 471, 494, 525

  Eighth Army 2, 33–4, 60, 432

  Fourteenth Army 82

  VIII Corps 316, 317, 325, 329, 335–6, 356, 384, 437, 470, 481, 486, 487, 490, 492, 528

  XXX Corps 317, 326–7, 333, 354, 481, 487, 490, 493

  6th Airborne Division 126; 3rd Parachute Brigade 126–7; 5th Parachute Brigade 126, 127, 135, 274; 7th Parachute Battalion 126, 134–5, 136, 272–3, 274; 12th Parachute Battalion 274

  Anti-Aircraft Command 434

  Armoured Brigades: 8th 60, 180, 317, 485, 487, 489–90, see also 24th Lancers, Sherwood Rangers; 27th see 13th/18th Hussars, Staffordshire Yeomanry; 31st 330, 400; 33rd 271, 297

 

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