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Battles for the Channel Ports - Le Havre and Boulogne
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Battles for the Channel Ports - Le Havre and Boulogne
Series: Then an Now
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List price R597
Loot Price R486
Discovery Miles 4 860
You Save R111 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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When the Allied armies broke out from the Normandy bridgehead in
late July 1944, it became of paramount importance that they quickly
capture new harbours to sustain the rapid northward advance. All
the Allies� supplies and reinforcements were still coming in
through just two places � the Mulberry artificial harbour at
Arromanches and the port of Cherbourg captured by the Americans �
and with supply lines lengthening by the day, it was essential to
speedily open up ports nearer the armies. For Field-Marshal
Montgomery�s 21st Army Group this meant first of all the channel
ports of Le Havre and Boulogne. Both cities had been declared a
�Festung� (Fortress) by Hitler and were to be defended to the
last man. The attack on Le Havre (Operation �Astonia�) was
launched on September 10 and was a classic example of a successful
set-piece battle. After the German defences had been �softened
up� by colossal aerial and naval bombardment and artillery
shelling, a �siege-train� of specialised armour broke through
the outer crust of the German defensive perimeter and allowed two
British infantry divisions � the 49th (West Riding) Division and
the 51st (Highland) Division � to push through the gap and
methodically reduce the enemy strongholds before driving into the
heart of the city. The attack on Boulogne (Operation �Wellhit�)
began a week later and was the task of the 3rd Canadian Infantry
Division. Another set-piece assault, it was again preceded by a
devastating bombardment by RAF heavy bombers, which reduced large
parts of the city to ruins, and a massive artillery barrage.
Supported by specialised armour, two Canadian brigades then moved
forward but the Germans resisted stubbornly and it took six days of
heavy fighting before the Canadians had subdued all strongpoints
and finally forced the garrison to surrender. Although both ports
were now in Allied hands, it brought no immediate alleviation to
the Allies� logistical problems. Harbour installations had been
extensively damaged by German demolitions and Allied bombardments
and it would take many weeks of rehabilitation before the ports
could be brought into use. Le Havre (which had meanwhile been
assigned to the Americans) did not see the few first ships arriving
until October 2 and Boulogne not until on October 12. As is our
hallmark, all phases of the battles for the two Channel ports are
illustrated with Then and Now comparison photographs. The book
contains the following two stories from ATB magazine: Issue 139:
The Capture of Le Havre Author: Karel Margry. 17,441 words, 76
black & white photos. Issue 86: Operation �Wellhit� � The
Capture of Boulogne Author: Ian Galbraith. 9,099 words,. 80 black
& white photos
General
Imprint: |
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Then an Now |
Release date: |
August 2023 |
Editors: |
Daniel Taylor
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Dimensions: |
246 x 172mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
224 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-399-03111-0 |
Categories: |
Books
Promotions
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LSN: |
1-399-03111-2 |
Barcode: |
9781399031110 |
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