Attack on the Scheldt

Attack on the Scheldt
Title Attack on the Scheldt PDF eBook
Author Graham A. Thomas
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2017
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9781473850675

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* Graphic account of the battle for the Scheldt, Walcheren and Antwerp in 1944 * Focuses on the Allied attack on the German stronghold of Walcheren * Detailed description of the advance of 21 Army Group across France and Belgium * The first full-length study of a neglected aspect of the final offensive against Nazi Germany

Attack on the Scheldt

Attack on the Scheldt
Title Attack on the Scheldt PDF eBook
Author Graham A. Thomas
Publisher
Pages 212
Release 2017
Genre Antwerp, Battle of, Antwerp, Belgium, 1944
ISBN 9781473850705

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Attack on the Scheldt

Attack on the Scheldt
Title Attack on the Scheldt PDF eBook
Author Graham A. Thomas
Publisher Casemate Publishers
Pages 321
Release 2017-03-30
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1473850681

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During the Allied advance across northwest Europe in 1944, the opening up of the key port of Antwerp was a pivotal event, yet it has been neglected in histories of the conflict. The battles in Normandy and on the German frontier have been studied often and in detail, while the fight for the Scheldt estuary, Walcheren and Antwerp itself has been treated as a sideshow. Graham Thomass timely and graphic account underlines the importance of this aspect of the Allied campaign and offers a fascinating insight into a complex combined-arms operation late in the Second World War. Using operational reports and vivid first-hand eyewitness testimony, he takes the reader alongside 21 Army Group as it cleared the Channel ports of Calais, Boulogne and Dunkirk, then moved on to attack the Scheldt and the island stronghold of Walcheren. Overcoming entrenched German resistance there was essential to the whole operation, and it is the climax of his absorbing narrative.

The Eighty-Five Days

The Eighty-Five Days
Title The Eighty-Five Days PDF eBook
Author Capt. R. W. Thompson
Publisher Pickle Partners Publishing
Pages 340
Release 2017-07-11
Genre History
ISBN 1787206793

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An explosive story of blunders and courage in the battle that might have brought victory in Europe in 1944. “I believe my book could be described as an attempt at an heroic history of a very long and important battle, which is truly a series of battles. All the events ‘depicted’ in it happened, and if I have erred it has been on the side of understatement, for heroism often is beyond the ordinary use of prose, and if one feels unable to express it beyond a doubt it is better to let it speak for itself in the deed....”—Foreword

Summary of Information

Summary of Information
Title Summary of Information PDF eBook
Author United States. Army. American Expeditionary Forces. General Staff, G-2
Publisher
Pages 1412
Release 1918
Genre World War, 1914-1918
ISBN

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Terrible Victory

Terrible Victory
Title Terrible Victory PDF eBook
Author Mark Zuehlke
Publisher D & M Publishers
Pages 562
Release 2009-07-01
Genre History
ISBN 1926685806

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Mark Zuehlke is an expert at narrating the history of life on the battlefield for the Canadian army during World War II. In Terrible Victory, he provides a soldiers-eye-view account of Canada's bloody liberation of western Holland. Readers are there as soldiers fight in the muddy quagmire, enduring a battle that lasted three weeks and in which 6,000 soldiers perished. Terrible Victory is a powerful story of courage, survival, and skill.

Walcheren 1944

Walcheren 1944
Title Walcheren 1944 PDF eBook
Author Richard Brooks
Publisher Osprey Publishing
Pages 0
Release 2011-06-21
Genre History
ISBN 9781849082372

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Osprey's study of the Walcheren campaign of World War II (1939-1945). Walcheren is a saucer-shaped island in the estuary of the river Scheldt, commanding maritime access to Antwerp, the largest port in Western Europe. The Allies captured Antwerp intact on September 4, 1944, but their eyes were on the Rhine crossings at Arnhem, not the lower Scheldt. The failure of Operation Market-Garden later that month brought home the Allies' logistical weakness. As autumn gales drew near, every shell and petrol tin had still to be landed at Cherbourg or across the Normandy beaches. Complete US Army divisions were immobilized for lack of transport. It was vital to re-open Antwerp. The continued German presence on Walcheren, however, prevented Allied shipping from entering the Scheldt. In the fall of 1944, Walcheren had the most heavily fortified coastline in the world. Its seaward defences consisted of 30 coastal and field batteries, mounting 50-60 guns from 75mm to 220mm in caliber, manned by high quality naval personnel behind massive concrete emplacements. Supporting strongpoints had anti-aircraft guns, flame-throwers rocket-launchers and Goliath remote controlled demolition vehicles. The sand dunes protecting the low-lying island from the North Sea were laced with barbed wire, mines and dragon's teeth. Defending infantry came from Generalleutnant Wilhelm Daser's 70.Infanterie-Division, a 'white bread division' consisting of men with gastric problems. Allied intelligence estimated the total garrison at 4,000, but 8,000 eventually surrendered. On November 1, 1944, in a double-pronged attack, the men of 52nd (Lowland) Division plus No. 4 Army Commando seized Flushing (Infatuate I) while in the west 4th Special Service Brigade with three Royal Marine Commandos and No. 10 Inter-Allied Commando would take Westkapelle, and fight their way north and south along the dunes, taking the coastal batteries as they went (Infatuate II). All this was to be supported with HMS Warspite and two 15-inch gun monitors; the Support Squadron Eastern Flank (SSEF) with 25 specialized Landing Craft with guns and rockets; 350 Army guns south of the Scheldt, most of them heavier than 25-pounders; and the Typhoon and Spitfire fighter bombers of 84 Group RAF. In fighting described by one survivor as 'worse than Dieppe and D-Day put together' the Army and Royal Marines forced their way ashore, supported by specialized armour and tracked vehicles, and over the next eight days cleared the positions of their German defenders in bitter street fighting. The first Liberty ships unloaded at Antwerp on December 1, just over a fortnight before the Ardennes offensive began. If Walcheren had not fallen when it did, opening Antwerp just in time, the Allies would have been hard pressed to withstand the German attack, or replace the fuel stocks lost in its opening days, let alone cross the Rhine in the following spring, and meet the Russians on the Elbe. The Walcheren campaign was not merely a dramatic combined operation pulled off against the odds; it helped determine the course of the war and the shape of the post-war world.