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среда, 24 июля 2019 г.

"Many Photos" - Haunting pictures of Allied troops’ bloody road to Berlin after D-Day revealed in new book

FOLLOWING their heroics at the Normandy Landings, a stunning new book captures the fierce resistance the Allied Forces came up against whilst pushing the Nazis out of France.


Harrowing pictures from the latter stages of World War Two include US soldiers running into battle as a shell bursts, a field full of abandoned German helmets, and a crash landing for an allied paratrooper.


Paratroopers from the 1st British Airborne Division aboard a plane bound for drop zones west of Arnhem on September 17, 1944
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Privates Carrington and Gross fire from a trench along a dyke probably in Holland on November 1, 1944
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A bursting artillery or mortar shell among infantry, possibly with the XIX Corps advancing near Maastricht towards the German border
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A stunning new book captures the fierce resistance the Allied Forces came up against whilst pushing the Nazis out of France
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Another incredible image portrays the fearful yet stoic expression of a 24-year-old tank operator, captured just days before he was killed in action, and the gutted landscape of a Dutch town ravaged by constant air raids.


Historian Brooke S. Blades’ new book The Americans from Normandy to the German Border: Rare Photographs from Wartime Archives offers an enthralling, chilling, and gruesome insight into what the American soldiers faced following the D-day landings in the summer 1944, 75 years ago.


After tens of thousands of courageous allied soldiers tackled the terrifying prospect of landing on France’s heavily fortified northern shore and managed to break through the Nazi’s defences, the Allied Forces were then tasked with beating the Third Reich troops back to Germany.

This book takes up the story of the massive American contribution to the campaign in north West Europe during the autumn and early winter of 1944

Brooke S. Bladesauthor of The Americans from Normandy to the German Border

Blades explains: “This book takes up the story of the massive American contribution to the campaign in north West Europe during the autumn and early winter of 1944.


“Following the dramatic breakout from the Normandy bridgehead, events moved fast with the liberation of Paris quickly following and the Allies closed in on the German border.


“But the apparent collapse of the Nazis was illusory.


“As lines of communication lengthened and German resistance stiffened, the Allied High Command was divided on the right strategy.


“The ill-fated Operation Market Garden brought home the reality that the war would continue into 1945.


“The Siegried Line was penetrated and Aachen fell but the American First Army suffered heavy casualties in the Hurtgen Forest.


“As winter set in, the third Army crossed the Moselle River and into the Saar.


“The stage was set for the costliest battle in American history – The Battle of The Bulge.”


HISTORICAL DAY


Following D-Day, the Allied Forces were locked in fierce, close encounter fighting in northern France in a six-week skirmish known at the ‘battle of the hedgerows’ due to the intimate fighting theatre.


In particular larger communities such as Caen put up dramatic resistance and it took a huge amount of manpower and effort to shift the entrenched German defenders.


More blood would be shed and a huge number of German prisoners of war interned following the formation of the ‘Falaise Pocket’ – a huge swath of Third Reich troops and their vehicles who ended up trapped due to a rapid pincer movement from the Allied Forces.


Blades’ book also looks at other key events, including the liberation of Paris, Operation Dragoon, and the costly ‘Operation Market Garden’.


Including approximately 18,000 involved on D-Day itself (June 6), during the Battle of Normandy over 425,000 Allied and German troops were killed, wounded or went missing overall.

This figure includes around 210,000 Allied casualties, with nearly 37,000 killed amongst the ground forces and a further 16,000 deaths amongst the Allied air forces.


German losses of around 200,000 were killed or wounded; a further 200,000 were taken prisoner during the Campaign.


Looking just at the fierce fighting which took place around the Falaise Pocket (or Falaise Gap) in August 1944, the German Army suffered losses in excess of 90,000 men, including those taken prisoner.


A remarkable series of images by a photographer who jumped during the operation on the September 17, 1944, part of the Operation Market Garden effort
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

An African American artillery unit serving with Third Army loading a shell labelled ‘From Harlem to Hitler’ in the vicinity of Mantes-Gassicourt on the Seine on August 20
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A British truck passed a dead Luftwaffe soldier, probably a member of a parachute regiment, on the September 25
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Sergeant John Parks was photographed on 10 December after many days in his tank on the line. Parks, aged 24, was killed shortly afterwards
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A US soldier walks past a flaming building on the Dutch-German border
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

American soldiers examining ruins near the church in Argentan, near Falaise, on August 20, 1944
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Medical personnel reached formerly isolated troops and established an advance aid station to treat some wounded near Mortain, as shown in this photograph by Salvas on August 12, 1944
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

An apparent field of surrender on which Germans dropped helmets and other equipment near Argentan on August 20
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

As the US’s Third Army troops approached the coast of Brittany they encountered a gruesome event on August 7, 1944
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

French women accused of Nazi collaboration: clothes torn, heads shaven and foreheads painted with swastikas
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

One unfortunate parachutist landed upside down near a haystack in a Dutch field
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A sign that American forces came across whilst liberating France. The message was simple: no German prisoners were to be taken due to the atrocities they committed in the vicinity
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

A prisoner of war enclosure near Nonant-le-Pin in the vicinity of Argentan on 21 August contained some of the thousands of German soldiers who surrendered in the Falaise Pocket
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

The scope of damage to the town of Nijmegen was reflected by this view in late September or October
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Wreckage of the German army in the Falaise Gap near Chambois on August 22
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

Notre-Dame facade with Division Leclerc vehicles arranged in front following the liberation of Paris
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA

The famous image of the ‘kiss’ in France
Mediadrumimages/BrookeSBlades/NARA



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News Photo Haunting pictures of Allied troops’ bloody road to Berlin after D-Day revealed in new book
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