Armoured Warfare in the Battle for Normandy
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This fully illustrated WWII history offers a vivid look at the armored vehicles used by Allied and Nazi forces during D-Day and the Normandy Campaign.
The remarkable photographs collected here illustrate in graphic detail the role armor played in the Allied D-Day landings and the liberation of occupied France—as well as the skill and tenacity of the German panzer units that confronted them. The struggle gave rise to a sequence of battles that were among the most intense, and critical, of any fought in the Second World War.
Anthony Tucker-Jones traces the course of the armored campaign through these striking wartime photographs: the D-Day landings, the first clashes of the opposing tanks and anti-tank guns, then the Allied operations that culminated in the Allied breakthrough and the destruction of the German 5th Panzer Army at Falaise.
The images offer a fascinating inside view of the fighting itself and of the widespread destruction it caused. But they also record the routines of tank warfare, and give a vivid impression of the experience of the tank crews of the day and of the tanks they operated, including the German Mk IVs, Panthers, and Tigers, and the Allied Shermans, Churchills and specialized tanks, such as Hobart’s Funnies, that confronted each other in France.
Anthony Tucker-Jones
ANTHONY TUCKER-JONES spent nearly twenty years in the British Intelligence Community before establishing himself as a defence writer and military historian. He has written extensively on aspects of Second World War warfare, including Hitler’s Great Panzer Heist and Stalin’s Revenge: Operation Bagration.
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Armoured Warfare in the Battle for Normandy - Anthony Tucker-Jones
The most common type of panzer deployed to Normandy was the Panzer Mk IV Ausf H and Ausf J. Rommel had almost 750 of these tanks as his disposal and they could easily outshoot the American M4 Sherman. This Panzer IV belonged to the 3rd Panzer Regiment, which was one of the 2nd Panzer Division’s tank units; it was knocked out at Pont-Farcy. (US Army/NARA)
First published in Great Britain in 2012 by
PEN & SWORD MILITARY
an imprint of
Pen & Sword Books Ltd,
47 Church Street,
Barnsley,
South Yorkshire.
S70 2AS
Copyright © Anthony Tucker-Jones, 2012
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978 184884 517 6
eISBN 978 178303 815 2
The right of Anthony Tucker-Jones to be identified as Author of this Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.
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Contents
Introduction
Photograph Sources
Chapter One
Panzergruppe West
Chapter Two
Normandy Bound
Chapter Three
Hobart’s ‘Funnies’
Chapter Four
Failure at Bayeux and Caen
Chapter Five
Off to the Races – Operation Epsom
Chapter Six
Operation Charnwood
Chapter Seven
Galloping Goodwood
Chapter Eight
Cobra – Patton Breaks Out
Chapter Nine
Mortain – Hitler Strikes Back
Chapter Ten
Panzer Corridor of Death – Falaise
Chapter Eleven
Leclerc’s Shermans
Chapter Twelve
Rouen and the Great Escape
Introduction
The Americans, British, French, Canadians and Poles were to commit a total of thirteen armoured divisions and numerous independent armoured brigades to the battle for Normandy. This battlefield was very different to the wide-open spaces of the deserts of North Africa and the sweeping steppe of the Eastern Front. Both sides found themselves engaged in bitter battles amidst Normandy’s fields, orchards and cities. Initially the anticipated mobile armoured warfare did not materialise as the Allies were hemmed in at their bridgehead. Instead there was a brutal slogging match in which the Allies were forced to trade their superior resources with the battle-hardened panzers in an effort to secure first Cherbourg and turn the German flank either side of Caen. The latter in the British and Canadian sector become the lynchpin of the whole battle, because beyond it lay open tank country.
The D-Day Landings on 6 June 1944 presented Allied military planners with a unique set of problems when it came to liberating Nazi-occupied France. They had to not only successfully ferry their armoured forces across the English Channel and overcome German coastal defences, but also fend off and then defeat the inevitable counter-attack by Adolf Hitler’s panzers. The Dieppe raid in 1942 had shown how not to do it: attempting to seize and hold a French port had resulted in Allied tanks becoming trapped in the town. Instead it was decided to assault the open beaches of the Normandy coastline.
A major concern were the beach obstacles in the selected landing zones, which posed a threat to the smaller assault craft. These consisted of steel and wooden posts, many of which had mines attached, capable of tearing a craft’s hull open. The Navy conducted various experiments to determine their effect on the different types of landing craft; General Hobart’s 79th Armoured Division, which operated the specialised assault vehicles known as the ‘Funnies’, was given the task of clearing the way and breaking though the ‘crust’ of Hitler’s ‘Fortress Europe’.
After the Allied landings in the Mediterranean during 1942–43, Hitler was anticipating landings in northern France and intended inflicting a bloody reverse. By mid-1944 about one fifth of his field army was occupying western Europe. Field Marshal von Rundstedt, Commander-in-Chief West, had well over half a million men guarding the European coastline, with about fifty-eight divisions stationed in France and the Low Countries. They were divided into two Army Groups with a Panzer Group of about ten armoured divisions poised to crush any landings.
Field Marshal Rommel, who took command of Army Group B in February 1944, wanted the panzers well forward to deal with the Allies as soon as they came ashore. He had witnessed Allied tactical air strikes in North Africa and knew that if they held their tanks back they would struggle to reach the battle unmolested. Rundstedt on the other hand favoured the ‘crust-cushion-hammer’ concept, the crust being the static sea defences, the cushion the infantry reserves and the hammer the panzers held in reserve. A messy compromise resulted in half the panzers being held as a strategic reserve, with control ultimately resting with Hitler.
Hitler was convinced that Normandy was not the main invasion point. He was aided in this delusion by Allied deception plans, the bombing of Calais and the disruption of the northern French rail system. An American ghost army in northern England had convinced him that they were going to land north of the Seine, and as a result numerous German divisions, especially armoured, remained beyond the Seine for up to a week after D-Day.
Hitler only had eight divisions engaged during the first six weeks of the campaign; the Allies were expecting at least twice as many. More and more German units were eventually drawn into the battle and by the end of June facing the British were approximately 725 panzers, while on the American front there were only 140. The desperately needed German infantry divisions that could free up their armour for a massed counter-attack remained north of the Seine.
Following the American breakout, even as part of Army Group B was being overwhelmed in the Falaise pocket, far to the south the Americans were in a headlong rush toward the Seine to trap even more German forces. It seemed as if Hitler’s generals were on the verge of a second, much bigger, disaster. Unfortunately determined resistance held up the Americans as the retreating troops fought desperate rearguard actions along the Seine. After the Falaise pocket had been overrun Field Marshal Model conducted a highly successful rearguard operation at Rouen, saving the survivors of his exhausted and scattered command.
The situation appeared irretrievable for Hitler: while he had barely 100 serviceable panzers, the Allies could muster almost 8,000 tanks. It seemed as if nothing would stop their armoured juggernaut and by 4 September 1944 they were 200 miles east of the Seine and in control of the vital port of Antwerp. However, while the Allies had won the battle for Normandy, crucially many of Hitler’s panzer troops escaped to fight another day.
Photograph Sources
The dramatic images in this volume have been drawn principally from those taken by the American combat photographers who served with the US Army’s Signal Corps in Normandy: these are now held by the US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and the quality of the photographers’ work speaks for itself.
Other images are also drawn from those taken by the film unit with the Canadian Army in Normandy and held by the Canadian National Archives, the French Normandie Mémoire Collection and the author’s own collection (resulting in part from his earlier Normandy work, Falaise: The Flawed Victory published by Pen & Sword) built up over the last thirty years from a wide variety of sources.
Lastly the author is indebted to a number of individuals who were kind enough to share their private collections and offer their expertise, including Alan Jones. Picture editing is a very subjective art and the final selection in this book rests with the author – he hopes that readers enjoy them.
This book is dedicated to Typhoon pilot Flight Lieutenant Godfrey ‘Wimpey’ Jones, 181 Squadron, who was killed in action over Caen on 16 June 1944 whilst attacking the panzers.
Chapter One
Panzergruppe West
Adolf Hitler mustered ten panzer divisions and one panzergrenadier division in Nazi-occupied Normandy in 1944, totalling 160,000 men equipped with just over 1,800 panzers. In addition he had