Jagdpanther
2nd Lieutenant
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2008
- Messages
- 3,154
No I never seen any Indian troops either in Normandy.
Where does it mention Normandy regarding this set?
Here is the K7C description
WS078
Name: Atlantic Wall Set
Desc.: This very useful diorama piece is cast in sturdy polystone and is typical of hundreds of similar reinforced concrete machine gun positions up and down Hitler's "Festung Europa" (Fortress Europe). Accompanying this piece are a new crouching 2-man MG42 gun team and…a turban-clad volunteer from the "Free India Legion" firing his MG34 machine gun from the "Tobruk" style turret on the side of the bunker.
Price: US$149.00
Status: To be released in Early Jul
Mine will be off to the curry shop & replaced with germans.
I knew there were many foreign contingents in the German army in Normandy, many serving reluctantly under SS officers. But I had not heard of Indian troops.
Terry
The Indian Legion consisted of approximately 2,300 soldiers, many captured by the Germans in North Africa. They were under the command of SS officers. They were part of the Atlantic Wall defence in Belgium until Fall 1943 when they were moved to France and again used in coastal defense duties in the area of Lacanau near Bordeaux until August 1944. They were not at Normandy during D-Day. I will give Andy poetic license on this one - it is an imaginiative idea which ,while not historically accurate, adds some spice to a part of the war (Indian Legion) which otherwise would in all likelihood, never have been modelled.
The Indian Legion did not actually see combat until August 15, 1944 when on their withdrawal towards Germany, they were attacked by the French Resistance and later by the Free French Forces.
So it looks like the Indian Legion was used almost exclusively on the Atlantic Wall Defence, they were not at the D-Day landing beaches. But I am still going to use the Indian figure in my display.
There is a good article on the Indian Legion at http://www.feldgrau.com/azadhind.html Photo is of remains of beach defenses at Lacanau.
Terry
Heard somewhere (may have been the doc.) that this soldat was nicknamed "the beast of Omaha" with possibly hundreds of soldiers killed or wounded. -- lancerHow scary it must have been that morning when they looked out across the sea and saw the biggest armada in History heading their way with (as Edmund Blackadder from 'Blackadder goes forth put it') 'The express intention of using my nipples for target practice'!.
It sure must have taken some bravery and will power to stay in those Bunkers when the ships of the Royal Navy and the US Navy brought their guns to bear,when you go to Normandy its easy to see the damage inflicted by those guns and you can imagine the hell inside them.That scene in SPR in which they use a flame thrower on the Bunker must have been repeated up and down the coast that day and must have been an awful death.
However they wern't all killed of course.And i understand that the one young soldier who manned a pillbox on his own on Omaha with a machine gun and is thought to be the soldier who singlehandedly killed more allied soldiers than any other soldier in WW2,slipped away and eventually went to live in the US.I also understand it has only been in the last ten years or so that he has come forward and identified himself and appeared in the docu 'Slaughter on Omaha'.
Rob
Heard somewhere (may have been the doc.) that this soldat was nicknamed "the beast of Omaha" with possibly hundreds of soldiers killed or wounded. -- lancer