Friday, April 29, 2011

The Battle of the Bulge

Now I will move forward into the war, towards the end of 1944. By this time the German army had been pushed back and out of the Normandy sectors (France, Belgium, Luxemburg areas) and the allies had put a choke on German supplies, making it difficult for the German army to operate with a shortage of things such as oil, gasoline, and fabrication supplies to build more units.
                The state Germany found itself in was brought by an Allied campaign following Operation Overlord (aka the Normandy Beach Landings), this campaign was known as Operation Market-Garden. The purpose of which was to fly paratroopers over key positions (mainly bridges at significant river crossings) and to seize these positions and hold until reinforcements could battle their way to the paratroopers. The operation was given such attention that it was said that “The Troops would be home before Christmas!” however, the operation didn’t succeed in that goal and now in the winter of 1944, Germany would launch its own offensive.
                Hitler had devised the plan himself, and had the developed a strategy that took advantage of the winter, with the winter the skies would be too thick for the Allies to use their overwhelming air power. Hitler’s hopes with the offensive were capturing Antwerp Harbor, to divide the Allied armies into a state of confusion and hopefully negotiate a truce so that Germany could concentrate their forces against the Russians. When the time came to launch the offensive, the Germans had assembled “330,000 men and eight hundred tanks and assault guns [participated] in the campaign.” – (Bulge) Within these armored divisions would be the best tanks fielded at that time, a collection of German Panther, Tiger, and King Tiger tanks. However, for all their technological worth the men of the Allied forces would still put up a stubborn but effective resistance in a small village.
The battle was that was most predominant was the battle of the small town of Bastogne, a small village that would become the centerpiece of the Allied defense during the Battle of the Bulge. The German army had moved so quickly through the Allied lines that some Allied units which were in frantic retreat linked up with other units in Bastogne, the resulting defense here left a bulge in the line marking the Allies defense, hence the name –Battle of the Bulge. The Germans outnumbered the small force at Bastogne, so the Allied forces their put together a defense plan where there would be a main force within the village and small manned post on the outskirts of town. Whenever one post was attacked the main force would move in and add to the defense, this strategy worked long enough until armored forces could push back the German forces and relieve the soldiers at Bastogne, ending the Battle of the Bulge.
On another, lighter note; at one point through the Siege on Bastogne the German commander of the forces attacking Bastogne asked for the Allied surrender, and the Allied commander  “…sent a handwritten one-word note back. It read "NUTS." Surrounded on all sides…” – (Military Ch.)

Sources:
(Bulge) "Bulge, Battle of the." Europe Since 1914: Encyclopedia of the Age of War and Reconstruction. Ed. John Merriman and Jay Winter. Vol. 1. Detroit: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2006. 480-483. Gale World History In Context. Web. 29 Apr. 2011.

(Military Ch.) Curry, Andrew. “Bastogne: The Battle of the Bulge”. Military.Discovery.com. Web. 29 Apr. 2011 http://military.discovery.com/history/world-war-2/battle-bulge/battle-bulge-2.html
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Friday, April 22, 2011

Operation Overlord

I often wonder just what it was like for the men of the allied forces on the day of June 6, 1944. This was the day of the landings on the beaches of Normandy, as part of operation Overlord. Were the soldiers all silent, all burrowed within the sanctum of their own minds thinking of something, home, the upcoming battle, the speech that Eisenhower delivered to them (Speech is in the video above), or friends and family? The soldiers were mostly young, inexperienced men, a collection of draftees (men who were drafted into the military) and volunteer soldiers.  However the allied force that was heading towards the beaches of Normandy was not just composed of American forces, and not all were heading towards Omaha beach.
                The Allied force that took part in the Normandy Invasion was composed of multiple nations, primarily American, British and Canadian forces. As for their landing points Americans landed at the infamous Omaha beach, as well as Utah beach and Point du Hoc. Meanwhile the Canadian and British forces landed at the beaches of Gold, Juno, and Sword. The battle wasn’t fought on beaches alone but also miles into France itself, paratroopers from the American and British airborne forces were being dropped in behind enemy lines. “[These airborne forces launched from England as early as] 12am on June 6th, 1944 [and would arrive over France around] 2am”. –(WWII database) The number of planes taking part in the offensive were so numerous that one writer from the New York Times wrote “we saw tracers arching through the air in a parade of Allied planes.”  The fighting at some locations were at a high intensity, in one reported case, German soldiers inside a bunker defending the beaches of Normandy reportedly “… fired 12,000 rounds at the Americans and were running out of ammunition.” –(WWII Database). In fact by the end of the day Allied forces would suffer over 10,000 casualties but the beaches of Normandy would be in the hands of the Allies, and from that a foothold into Fortress Europe.
Source Information:
 “Parade of Planes Carries Invader” The New York Times. 1944. Print.

(WWII Database) worldwar2database. MFA Productions LLC. Web. 4/22/11. 
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Friday, April 15, 2011

The Great Cusade..

The Great Crusade…
30 Seconds! That was the amount of time left in the lives of a few soldiers being portrayed in the film “Saving Private Ryan”, for once the ramp of the landing craft dropped the men inside the small craft would be exposed to a hail storm of bullets from German positions on the shores of Normandy.  The scene described is one that many remember from films and historical footage, as well as the memories of those who were on the beaches the day of June 6, 1944.
I was in the 5th grade when I saw “Saving Private Ryan” for the first time (Probably not the most age appropriate movie for me at that time) and just like that, a spark ignited within me. That spark was a thirst for knowledge over the events, stories, people, machines, tactics and minds behind World War II. I grabbed at every minute detail from then on that had to do with WWII’s history, and thankfully history is a never-ending resource of information.
World War II holds many stories of the heroic, brave and inspirational nature but it also holds many tragic, and dark stories as well. I hope that through this blog I can give some insight into a few of the events and people that followed the landings of D-Day.


Picture Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:1944_NormandyLST.jpg