Battle for Arnhem.... (4 Viewers)

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

Monday 18th September 1944

Only one corner of the perimeter had been attacked during the night. This was a library or small school on the eastern side of the lower ramp held by Captain Eric Mackay and some men of A Troop, 1st Parachute Squadron. There were several covered approaches to what was really an exposed outpost, and the Royal Engineers found it difficult to hold.​

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Sapper George Needham says:

We had started to prepare it for defence, by smashing the windows and pulling down the curtains, but we had only been there about ten minutes when the Germans attacked, throwing grenades into the rooms.

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Captain Mackay decided that building was too vulnerable, so he ordered into the larger school building next door, where we joined B Troop. They objected and said,

'Bugger off; go find your own place,'

but Captain Mackay, being the man he was, persuaded them in no uncertain terms to let us in, and we started fortifying some of the empty rooms.

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(The Royal Engineers were later joined in the school by Major 'Pongo' Lewis, the 3rd Battalion's company commander, and twelve of his men. There was some argument after the war between the sappers and the infantry over who was in command in this building, the Van Limburg Stirum School, during the subsequent three days of its defence. Captain Mackay, in an article in Blackwood's Magazine, claimed to have been in command and never mentioned the presence of the 3rd Battalion men. Major Lewis, in his short official report, did not mention the larger RE party. Both officers had been allocated this position separately, in the dark of that first night, and Major Lewis, though clearly the senior officer, probably did not interfere with Captain Mackay's handling of the larger sapper party.)

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

Dawn found the airborne men prepared for a day that would be full of incident. They had completed the preparations for the defence of the buildings they had occupied by breaking all the windows to avoid injury from flying glass, moving furniture to make barricades at the windows, filling baths and other receptacles with water for as long as the supply remained functioning; these were all basic lessons learned in their house-fighting training.

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As soon as it started to get light, Major Munford wanted to begin registering the guns of No. 3 Battery of the Light Regiment on to likely targets:

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'There was some reluctance to allow me to do this. Some people were still harking back to the time the paras had suffered from the results of 'drop-shorts' in North Africa, not by the Light Regiment. But I persisted and was allowed to register on the approach road at the south end of the bridge, only about six rounds, but we got both troops ranged on to it and recorded it'.

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'Sheriff' Thompson, back at Oosterbeek, said it should be recorded as 'Mike One'; 'Mike' was 'M' for Munford.

Our signals back to the battery were working well. The first intruder into the area was a lorry 'full of dustbins clattering in the back', which drove in between the buildings overlooking the ramp and the offices which Brigade HQ was occupying. Trigger-happy airborne men shot it up from both sides; the driver, presumably a Dutchman on a routine refuse-collection round, was probably killed. A similar fate befell three German lorries which appeared, probably also on a routine errand and not knowing of the British presence.​

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