Posted on 07/17/2003 12:00:55 AM PDT by SAMWolf
![]() are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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The small passage between Argentan and Falaise, where German armies tried desperately to escape, was one of the great slaughters of World War II. The ground was so littered with fallen equipment and corpses that, after the shooting had ceased, passage through the area was almost impossible. Here the once-vaunted German Fifth Panzer and Seventh armies bled to death. Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower, when traveling by foot through the area, quoted, it was literally possible to walk for hundred of yards at a time, stepping on nothing but dead and decaying flesh. But the allied victory was tainted with uncertainty; how many Germans escaped the trap of the Falaise Pocket because of a delayed closing of the encirclement? ![]() The German troops were in chaos, and had no real chance to defend against an oncoming onslaught. As George Patton drove toward Argentan, and the British and Canadian forces captured Caen, he was ordered by General Omar Bradley stop his drive for fear that Patton might charge into Bernard Montgomerys men. Patton protested vehemently, because he felt that by advancing further, he could capture Falaise and consequently have every German in Normandy in his grasp. Because the war seemed to be almost over, Eisenhower, who backed Bradleys order, and Bradley himself cared little that the Germans escaped. The attack on the night of August 7 toward Falaise was a key Canadian operation. At 11:00 p.m., 1,020 heavy bombers dropped 3,500 tons of bombs on the flanks of the ground assault, and a total of 720 artillery barrels bombarded the enemy and lighted the battlefield. At dawn on August 8th, the Canadian troops had broken the German defense and the road to Falaise was wide open. The Canadian forces came to a halt though, and did not start again until 12:30 p.m.. Tanks of the 21st panzer Division in ambush The Canadians, along with the Poles, had trouble getting started and allowed the Germans to reorganize their defenses. The offensive sputtered and eventually dissipated, but the Germans were still being attacked by the Americans and British on two other sides. Depression was rampant in the German high command, and General Bradley could not contain his elation on the morning of August 8th. While the Canadians slowly fought on toward Falaise, the Americans battled the Germans at Mortain. Patton and Bradley disagreed in their assessment of the situation: Patton wanted to outrun the Germans and consequently fully encircle them; Bradley was concerned about what was happening at Mortain, and suggested a hook to threaten the Germans there. Bradley argued that his drive would complement the Canadians drive on Falaise and their meeting would trap an estimated twenty-one German divisions. He was concerned about safety while Patton wanted to rid Normandy of all Germans so the Allies could advance on Germany with ease. Both plans were based on the idea of encircling the Germans in one pocket. Hitler, with growing concern over Normandy, wanted six panzer divisions to advance on Avranches while two additional supported them; he later issued an order to increase the attack on Avranches. Hans van Kluge felt that Hitlers instructions could not be carried out because the Germans had to continually hold of the Canadians at Falaise while also preventing the Americans from obtaining Alençon, and encircling them. However, Alençon interested Bradley less than Mortain because he continued to see the Germans in that region as a threat. ![]() US. troops advance On August 11, Montgomery issued a new plan of how to encircle the Germans. He figured that if the Canadians reached Falaise and the Americans entered Alençon, thirty-five miles would separate them, and the Allies would take control of two of the three main east-west highways, surrounding the Germans. It was vital for the Canadians to obtain Falaise quickly and for Miles Dempsys British Army to push eastward to both Falaise and Argentan. The Americans, under Patton, advanced very quickly on Alençon while the Canadian army continued slowly toward Falaise. This was because the Canadians were meeting much stronger resistance from the Germans than the Americans were. The Germans, sensing the Allied advance, retreated from Mortain during the night of August 11th and took over the town of Argentan on August 12th. ![]() Despite the Germans quick capturing of Argentan, Wade Haislips forces took over Argentan and were ready to advance toward Falaise to meet the Canadians and therefore entrap the Germans. To Patton and Haislips surprise, Bradley said that in order to prevent a collision between the Canadians and the Americans, they should stay in Argentan and not advance on Falaise. It was one of the most controversial decisions of the campaign. Dempsey was now attacking Falaise along with the Canadians, and when it fell, Montgomery would have the Canadians meet the Americans to close the pocket. On August 16th, the Canadians finally arrived in Falaise and Hitler allowed Kluge, who later committed suicide, to retreat from the pocket. Crerar, the Canadian commander, after obtaining control of this long sought after Falaise, was ordered to head for Trun and Chambois, and push south until he met the Americans who were coming north. At the same time, the British were ordered to approach Chambois from the west. The Germans in the west part of the pocket retreated toward the Orne River that night, and were not interfered with by the Allies. The Canadians and Poles found their way to Trun heavily blocked by the Germans, but by evening were only two miles short of the town. The Germans, realizing that hope was lost, resumed their withdrawal to the Orne River under heavy Allied artillery fire. Eisenhower assumed command of the Allied ground forces on September 1st, and the Allies finally closed the gap. However, the pocket was like a sieve, and many Germans poured through the under-defended barrier. ![]() Abandoned German equipment litters a road (DA photograph) Despite many setbacks on the Allied side, the Falaise pocket was one of the bloodiest campaigns in the War. The fleeing Germans were attacked on all sides by the Canadians, Americans, British, and Poles, and could not sustain a steady defense much less and offense. Over 10,000 Germans were killed, 60,000 were injured, and 50,000 were taken prisoner; they also had more than 1,000 guns, tanks, and trucks destroyed . One can only imagine how badly the Germans would have been defeated if Patton had had his way. Raymond Callahan said, In the end, the Falaise pocket gave the Allies a great, if an incomplete victory.
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Hi Sam.
German prisoners, amongst them their Corps Commander Gen. Otto Elfeldt (with cigarette in hand) taken captive in the "Falaise Gap"
An officer of the 120th Infantry examines a knocked out German halftrack after the battle for Mortain.
90th inf. div. "Tough Ombres"
The T and O of Texas and Oklahoma.General Eugene M. Landrum then Raymond S. McLain after August 1st.
The 359th inf. Regt. landed at Utah. Battles of Cotentin, Mt Castres, Periers, Le Mans. Closed the "Falaise pocket" with the 1st armored Polish division.
Advancing toward Chambois
It's 9:00 am CDT and there's no new FoxHole thread..
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Let's Roll!
We are the pirates who dont do anything
We just stay at home and lay around
And if you ask us to do anything
Well just tell you we dont do anything
But Ive never been to Cleveland
And I've never been to Denver
And Ive never buried treasure in St. Louie or St. Paul
And Ive never been to Moscow
And Ive never been to Tampa
And Ive never been to Boston in the fall
We are the pirates who dont do anything
We just stay at home and lay around
And if you ask us to do anything
Well just tell you we dont do anything
And Ive never hoist the mainstay
And Ive never swabbed the poop deck
And Ive never veer to starboard
Cause I never sail at all
And Ive never walked the gangplank
And Ive never owned a parrot
And Ive never been to Boston in the fall
Cause were the pirates who dont do anything
We just stay at home and lay around
And if you ask us to do anything
Well just tell you we dont do anything
O Ive never plucked a rooster
And I'm not too good at ping ball
And Ive never thrown my mashed potatoes
Up against the wall
And Ive never kissed a chipmunk
And Ive never gotten head lice
And Ive never been to Boston in the fall
And Ive never licked a spark plug
And Ive never sniffed a stinkbug
And Ive never painted daises
On a big red rubber ball
And Ive never bathed in yogurt
And I dont look good in leggings
And Ive never been to Boston in the fall!
Is it quitting time yet?
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