Battle for Arnhem.... (2 Viewers)

Ref: Arnhem - 1944: The Airborne Battle by M. Middlebrook

The third lift of 'Market' should have brought in the whole of the Polish Independent Parachute Brigade Group (less its Light Artillery Battery for which no gliders were available) and part of the American 878th Airborne Aviation Engineer Battalion whose task would have been to construct a forward fighter strip in the Arnhem area.

A large supply-dropping mission would also be flown to Arnhem by 101 Stirlings and 63 Dakotas. The American engineers were to have been carried in ten Hamilcars towed by Halifaxes from Tarrant Rushton, but their part in the operation was postponed because the situation at Arnhem was so serious; their part in the operation would eventually be cancelled.

Another postponement was caused by the weather; it was so poor at the American troop-carrier airfields, Spanhoe and Saltby, that it was declared unsafe for the C-47s to take off and assemble into their formations, so the whole of the Polish parachute lift was also postponed by at least one day. This was a severe set-back for the British troops fighting at Arnhem.

The flight of the thirty-five Horsa gliders for the Polish lift did go ahead when the weather eventually cleared in southern England to allow take-offs at Tarrant Rushton and Keevil at noon, several hours late. Also taking off were seven Horsas and one Hamilcar which had aborted from the first or second lifts.

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The Polish gliders contained two troops of five guns each from the Anti-Tank Battery, part of the Medical Company and some of the brigade's jeep transport. Both the supply-dropping flight, which came in first, and the tug-and-glider force were flying the southern route - in over the friendly territory of Belgium and then turning north to fly close to the corridor along which the ground forces were advancing. This was a longer but hopefully safer route than the northern one used on the first two Arnhem lifts.

The glider force suffered considerable depletion before reaching the Arnhem area. Seven Horsas suffered various problems and force-landed either in England, the North Sea or in Belgium, where the only Hamilcar also went down. A further seven Horsas were lost over Holland, six with tow ropes cut by flak and the seventh destroyed by a direct hit on its nose compartment. That glider was seen to disintegrate and its contents spill out, killing the two Polish anti-tank gunners and the glider pilots. It is estimated that only twenty-eight of the gliders with Polish loads and two of the ones carrying British troops from previous lifts arrived in the Arnhem area.

One report suggested that the escort ....

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... and flak-suppression fighter force failed to rendezvous with either the supply-dropping aircraft or the glider force.

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This meant there was nothing to combat the effect of the flak batteries which the Germans had assembled on the approach to Arnhem.

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The supply-dropping aircraft lost nine Stirlings and four Dakotas from flak; see later. The tug aircraft and the glider force escaped the worst of the fire, because they were flying at a greater height, and none was lost on the final approach. However, the gliders had to descend through part of the flak barrage and German small-arms fire. Several were damaged but only one seriously, crashing just before reaching the landing zone.

This was probably the glider observed from his bedroom window in Oosterbeek by a young Dutchman, Sjoert Schwitters:

I watched a German light anti-aircraft firing at the gliders. I saw one of them hit. There was an explosion - the nose of the glider seemed to have been shot off - and I saw soldiers and items of equipment, a jeep perhaps and other items, all falling out. It was a terrible sight, and I hated the Germans for what they were doing – all those young men dying.

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I should probably have tried to do this before .... (of course the table has gone to pot) ... see what you think.

Arnhem Thread Contents

Page

63 - 64
Date

10 Sept 1944
2nd Household Cavalry (2HCR) and Irish Guards advance to the Escaut Canal and take ‘JOE’s Bridge’.
64T 17 Staghound Armoured Car
6411 Sept 1944Lt Buchanan-Jardine’s Reece (1st Allied troops to enter Netherlands)
64Sd.Kfz. 9/1, Sd.Kfz 8 with 88mm gun (K&C WS103)
64 - 652 Aug 1944First Allied Airborne Army officially activated and planning began.
65Supply problems and solutions, stretched Allied forces after rapid advance, failure to clear Antwerp approaches, Red Ball Express.
65Short review of the breakout from Normandy and the desperate German losses (east and west) since D-Day.
65 - 66Ike’s problems. Monty’s pitch for the advance into Holland. Brereton issues and refusal of ‘Coup de Main’ as per Pegasus Bridge.
66 - 6717 Sept 1944Assault towards Valkenswaard, initially against Fallschirmjager Regiment Von Hoffmann (FRVH), but other units also present.
67 - 6817/18 Sept 1944Irish Guards reach Valkenswaard, Dorsets follow up. Welsh Guards try to press to the N.E. (C Sqn 2HCR would lead the way). HCR seek a way around Aalst. IG enter Aalst.
68Fighting German armour and AT guns around Aalst, Typhoons unavailable due to fog. Artillery assist.
68Grenadier Guards (GG), with HCR, make progress to the west.
6818 Sept 1944101st take Einhoven and XXX Corps link up, reaching the canal at Son, but the bridge was blown.
6817/18 Sept 19441st Airborne plan, given miles to march to attack the Arnhem Bridge, due to Air Force planners. RAF shortages have an impact on timings.
6817 Sept 1944Crashed US glider or spy or traitor – Germans have the complete Market-Garden plan.
 


Page

68


Date

18 Sept 1944
Arnhem Thread Contents



At Best, Pte Joe S Mann (502 PIR) earned the Congressional Medal of Honor.
6817 Sept 19442 Para, Ist Airborne, take north end only of the Bridge.
6817 Sept 1944C Company, 2 Para is destroyed by advance elements of 9th and 10th SS Pz Divisions.
6817 Sept 19441 and 3 Para Battalions are blocked from advancing into Arnhem by SS training battalion at Wolfheze. They also destroy the Recce Sqn jeeps.
6817 Sept 19449th and 10th SS Pz Divisions organise.
6918 Sept 1944HCR cross the newly built Son (Class 40 Bailey) Bridge
69Dingo Scout and Armoured Cars
69Guards Armoured Division
69107 Panzer Brigade
6918 Sept 1944Von Maltzahn, 107 Panzer Brigade attack on Son bridge and 101st defence.
6918 Sept 1944Skirmish at Neunen (made famous in Band of Brothers).
69 - 7018 Sept 1944Von Maltzahn leads 107 Panzer Brigade attack on Son, with their 1034 Grenadier Regiment working closely with the Panthers.

The German 59th Division was held up.

Son Bridge is blocked.
6918 Sept 1944101st fight them off.
69Confusion and traffic jams
6918 Sept 1944 that nightLuftwaffe launch a raid by seventy aircraft on Eindhoven, much damage caused.
 

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