Liberation
Auteur : Bill McAndrew, Bill Rawling, Michael Jeffrey Whitby
Date de publication : 1995
Éditeur : Art Global
Nombre de pages : 170
Résumé du livre
Corps and Army Infantry, and the Essex Scottish Regiment) moved troops, and columns and trains of every kind out of Bourgtheroulde on the right to the eastern both completely without command, were forced base of the Seine loop, while 6 Brigade (Les Fusiliers back, driven into inextricable confusion, Mont-Royal, the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders and became victims of the continuous and of Canada, [...] Next day they relieved British edged his tank, with me tucked inside, towards troops in Ghent and began to clear Germans the bridge and out in the open away from the from the sector of the ship canal that runs north protection of the buildings while discussing the to Terneuzen. [...] At the crossing the men had to paddle Anti-aircraft guns were placed in and around across the Lys Canal, manhandle the boats across the village and units marched in again in a an intervening dyke, launch them again in the well-disciplined way under the command of officers Leopold Canal, paddle across it, then fight for their and NCOs on their way to the harbour of Breskens. [...] In single attack would threaten the open German withdrawal file, close to the houses, always on the alert for route through Breskens, and Sander was told to drive the enemy in the sky, they went on to the Scheldt. [...] Their is that commanders went their separate ways, mission was to secure the docks, and in the early particularly Montgomery in the north and Patton afternoon a troop of tanks with a company of in the south, while Eisenhower failed to exert infantry reached the sprawling maze of wharves and his full authority to control them.