Read Overlord (Pan Military Classics) Online
Authors: Max Hastings
5. The Americans Before Cherbourg
T
HE
B
OCAGE
1
Gavin,
On to Berlin
, p. 1212
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 2803
Cota papers, Combat narrative (loc. cit.)4
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 2955
Ibid
., p. 2836
Richardson, narrative (loc. cit.)7
Ibid
.8
Eichen, interview with the author, 7.vii.839
Cota (op. cit.)10
Ibid
.11
Cota (loc. cit.)12
Herman, unpublished narrative loaned to the author13
Ibid
.14
Bryant, interview with the author, 9.vii.8315
First Army diary, copy held in DDE Library16
It is an apparent paradox that while all the combatants in Normandy agreed upon the prodigious scale of Allied resources, the Allied high command complained of constant difficulties with supplies, above all artillery ammunition. Many observers both at the time and since have suggested that the ammunition shortages could readily have been remedied had the vast shipments of rations, equipment, vehicles been moderated somewhat, especially on the American flank. But the scale of supplies provided for the Allied forces reflected a philosophy determined many months before D-Day.17
Preston, interview with the author (loc. cit.)18
Collins,
Lightning Joe
, p. 22019
First Army diary
T
HE BATTLE FOR
C
HERBOURG
1
Carell,
Invasion – They’re Coming
, p. 1942
Herman, narrative (loc. cit.)3
Bryant, interview with the author (loc. cit.)4
Hughes, diary5
Palmer, Wiley & Keast,
The Procurement and Training of Ground Combat Troops
, p. 16
First US Army Report of Operations, p. 1177
PRO WO205/4018
PRO W0232/179
Gavin (op. cit.), p. 7110
Interview with the author, iv.8311
Gavin (op. cit.), p. 7112
Weigley,
Eisenhower’s Lieutenants
, p. 45
6. The German Army: Stemming the Tide
S
OLDIERS
1
PRO219/19082
Schickner, interview with the author, 3.iv.833
Harrison,
Cross Channel Attack
, p. 3744
Kruger, interview with the author, 30.iv.835
PRO WO219/19086
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 2927
Quoted in Irving,
Trail of the Fox
, p. 3408
Ibid
., p. 3439
Ibid
.10
PRO WO205/1021 (Dietrich interrogation)11
Kauffmann, interview with the author, 4.v.8312
Irving (op. cit.), p. 34613
Ibid
., p. 35114
Ibid
., p. 35315
Ibid
., pp. 363–416
PRO WO205/1022 (von Rundstedt interrogation)17
Irving (op. cit.), p. 7418
Ruge, quoted in Irving (op. cit.), p. 37519
Ibid
.20
Ibid
., p. 37621
Williams, interview with the author (loc. cit.)22
Hellmuth Lang, interview with the author, 6.v.8323
For instance, Cave Brown and Irving (op. cit.)24
Kauffmann, interview with the author (loc. cit.)25
Kruger, interview with the author (loc. cit.)26
Guderian, interview with the author, 4.v.8327
Williams, interview with the author (loc. cit.)28
Quesada, interview with the author (loc. cit.)29
PRO WO219/190830
Dupuy,
A Genius for War
, pp. 253–431
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 357
W
EAPONS
1
PRO WO205/5b2
Quoted in Hamilton,
Montgomery: Master of the Battlefield
, pp. 713–143
Kay Summersby, diary, 2.vii.834
Gavin,
On to Berlin
, p. 515
Discarding sabot was a formidable British innovation in armour-piercing ammunition. The casing of the shell was shed after leaving the gun-barrel, and only a slender bolt of hardened steel continued to the target at very high velocity, generating unprecedented power of penetration. Discarding-sabot ammunition had been available for some time for 6-pounder guns, but became available for 17-pounders only in the summer of 1944. It has been one of the principal forms of anti-armour projectile ever since.6
Wilson,
Flamethrower
, p. 547
Ross,
The Business of Tanks
, p. 1538
Ibid
.9
Ibid
., p. 26310
ORS reports nos. 12 & 17, Staff College Library11
Ross (op. cit.), p. 27512
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 32013
et seq.
Hansard14
Ross (op. cit.), pp. 316–17
7. The Battlefield
F
ROM THE
B
EACHHEAD TO THE FRONT
1
Letter loaned to the author by Mr James Verrier2
See, for instance, Dunn,
Second Front Now
; Hartcup,
Code Name Mulberry3
Ibid
.4
See Fergusson,
The Watery Maze5
Patton,
War as I Knew It
, p. 1016
Baldwin, MS (op. cit.)7
Lee, interview with the author, 4.iii.838
Hein, interview with the author, 1.vii.839
Zimmer, diary from Hoover Institute, S644D/1.5.20210
Gunther, interview (loc. cit.)11
Gosset & Lecomte,
Caen pendant la Bataille
, p. 5112
Quesada, interview (loc. cit.)13
Ratliff, interview with the author, 3.vii.8314
Ivon-Jones, interview with the author, 4.ii.8315
Sadi Schneid,
Beutesdeutscher
, p. 11916
Wilson, interview (loc. cit.)17
Whitelaw, interview with the author, 27.vii.8318
Sir David Cole,
Rough Road to Rome
(London, 1982), p. 8219
Current Notes
(op. cit.), no. 4420
Brown, interview with the author, 18.ii.8321
Preston, interview (loc. cit.)22
Current Notes
(op. cit.) for 8.vii.4423
Hansen, diary, US Army Military History Institute24
Current Notes
(op. cit.), no. 5425
Wilson, interview with the author (loc. cit.)
C
ASUALTIES
8. Crisis of Confidence
T
HE FALL OF
C
AEN
1
Quoted in Wilmot,
The Struggle for Europe
, p. 3382
Gosset & Lecomte,
Caen pendant la Bataille
, p. 373
Ibid
.4
Portway. interview with the author, 16.v.835
DF: Defensive Fire – a standard gunnery technique whereby batteries designate certain likely lines of enemy attack by code numbers, and range in upon them in advance. Then, when an attack develops, men in the forward positions can summon immediate artillery support at a threatened point by radioing simply to the guns for ‘DF63’ or ‘DF14’, rather than having to waste precious minutes correcting the gunners’ aim onto map coordinates from scratch.6
Zimmer, diary (loc. cit.)7
Stephens, unpublished MS loaned to author8
Butcher, diary, DDE Library9
Eisenhower Papers
, vol. iii, p. 198210
Bryant (op. cit.), p. 22911
Tedder,
With Prejudice
, p. 55512
Colliers’ Magazine
, 5.x.4613
Note of 18.iii.52 in Dempsey file, Liddell Hart papers (loc. cit.)14
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 319
GOODWOOD
1
Montgomery to Brooke, M5112
Quoted in Pogue,
The Supreme Command
, p. 1883
Dempsey, notes in Liddell Hart papers, ‘The aims of Operation Goodwood’4
Roberts, interview with the author, 17.vi.835
Ibid
.6
Brown, unpublished MS loaned to the author7
Roach,
The 8.15 to War
, pp. 144–68
Wyldbore-Smith, interview with the author, 13.vi.839
Richardson, interview with the author, 21.vii.8310
Quoted in Ellis (op. cit.), pp. 344–511
Butcher, diary (op. cit.)12
Most recently by Hamilton,
Montgomery: Master of the Battlefield
, and Carlo D’Este,
Decision in Normandy13
Richardson, interview with the author (loc. cit.)14
The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Lord Montgomery
, p. 25715
Eisenhower Papers
(op. cit.), pp. 2018–1916
Bradley,
A General’s Life
, p. 27417
Ibid
., p. 25718
Bryant (op. cit.), p. 23519
Carver, interview with the author (loc. cit.)20
Butcher, diary, DDE Library21
Bryant (op. cit.), p. 245
9. The Breakout
COBRA
1
First Army diary, 7.vii.442
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 2713
Gunther, interview with the author (loc. cit.)4
Quesada, interview with the author (loc. cit.)5
Blumenson,
The Patton Papers
, vol. ii, p. 5216
First US Army report (loc. cit.)7
Interview with the author, 2.vii.838
First US Army report (loc. cit.)9
Bradley (op. cit.), p. 27010
Bradley,
A Soldier’s Story
, p. 22611
Ascher, interview with the author, 5.vii.8312
In a letter to the author, 3.viii.8213
Hamilton (op. cit.), p. 65014
Stimson papers, Yale University15
This account is derived from information provided by another NCO of 102nd Cavalry Reconnaissance, Bill Walsh.16
Contemporary narrative by Flint’s executive officer, in DDE papers no. 84, Patton G. no. 2.17
Carell,
Invasion – They’re Coming
, pp. 257
et seq.18
History of the 120th Infantry Regiment
by Officers of the Regiment (Washington Infantry Journal Press, 1947)19
Eichen, interview with the author, 26.vi.8320
Quoted in D. Bruce Lockerbie,
A Man Under Orders
, p. 7921
First US Army diary (loc. cit.)22
History of the 120th
(op. cit.), p. 13323
Carell (op. cit.), p. 25924
Stober, interview with the author, 6.v.8325
Weigley,
Eisenhower’s Lieutenants
, p. 15726
Gunther, interview with the author (loc. cit.)27
Reisler, interview with the author, 4.vii.8328
Guderian, interview with the author (loc. cit.)