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WWIIWelcome to Battlefield Biker!Battlefield Biker is situated at the intersection of Motorcycle Touring and Military History and their relationships to Current Events. Some features of the site include;
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On the 24th of July 1944, the German forces around St Lo, in Normandy, did not have a clue about the hell that was about to be unleashed upon them. Their dispositions looked like this:
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To the west of St Lo, you can see the area that the Americans chose to breakout from the close hedgerow fighting that had so favoured the Germans for the months of June and July 1944.
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The Allies delivered a devastating aerial bombardment on the German front lines in the area on 25 July 1944. The line did not immediately give way. This was due to the American infantry not pushing quickly at first. Who could blame them? They had just spent 2 months fighting in the hedgerows and had learned to be cautious. Additionally, the lingering shock of the bombardment, which also killed and wounded several hundred Americans was still wearing off.
However, the American Commander on the ground, General J. Lawton Collins, saw no need to delay and committed his exploitation forces on the morning of the 26th. This was risky, because if the Germans had managed to slow down the attack further, it would have meant an American traffic jam right on the front lines. Luckily, they couldn't and the Americans pushed right through and found the German line disintegrating like it had not done for the Americans before in Normandy.
Thus began the great race from the beachheads to the German frontier that occurred over the next 2 months, including the liberation of Paris and most of the rest of France.
I rode through the breakout zone recently and below is some video of a wonderfully twisty ride I took from Gavray towards Avranches. This area was liberated around 28-30 July.
Normandy Breakout from TJ on Vimeo.
Check out the Terre Liberte' route of Cobra- La Percee (the Breakout). The video above is from this route and starts in Gavray which is about half way in between Coutances and Avranches. Here's a Google map of the stretch of road on the video.
Technorati Tags: 1900s 1940s 1944 25 25th 26 26th 4th Armored Division Avranches Breakout Coutances FR-D-7 France Gavray George Patton J Lawton Collins July June Manche Normandy Normandy Operation Cobra St Lo World War 2 World War II WW2 WWII motorcycle touring motorcycles motorcycle-touring battlefields military history military-historyThe Boston Globe reports on the search for 2 American pilots lost 64 years ago over Papua New Guinea.
The search is being conducted by the US Army and is staffed mainly by Afghanistan and Iraq veterans. I can imagine how this team is feeling. It might not be something you think about day to day, but once a soldier got a mission like this between his/her teeth, they will search high and low to find these 2 MIAs. I think this mission is an example of one of the great strengths of the US Army... an institutional memory that says "we will not forget you. It might take us a while to develop the technology to find you, but we will not forget!"
Technorati Tags: 1940s 2008 Japan JPAC MIAs Papua New Guinea Veterans World War 2 World War II WW2 WWII motorcycle touring motorcycles motorcycle-touring battlefields military history military-historyThere are things that you read sometimes that make you realize that some people are better than you. Jacob DeShazer was one of those people.
A Corporal in the US Army Air Force who was captured by the Japanese in occupied China as part of the Doolittle Raid in 1942, DeShazer was very badly treated by the Japanese. However, he survived the war and returned to Japan after the war as a missionary and stayed ..... for 30 years.
I seriously doubt whether I could have forgiven my captors to the extent he did. As the article says, there is little doubt that this good man is resting in peace.
Technorati Tags: 1940s Doolittle raid Japan POW torture World War 2 World War II WW2 WWII motorcycle touring motorcycles motorcycle-touring battlefields military history military-historyGood article from Schenectady on Manhattan's lower east side's own National Guard unit, the Fighting 69th. The Civil, Spanish-American, Pancho Villa, WWI, and WWII all saw the 69th in action. One of America's most decorated units and part of the great "Born Fighting" bunch of Irish Americans.
Technorati Tags: Fighting 69th Irish American US Civil War World War 1 World War 2 World War I World War II WW1 WW2 WWI WWII motorcycle touring motorcycles motorcycle-touring battlefields military history military-historyShout long and loud
for victory won,
By chief and leader
staunch and true:
But don't forget the
boys that fought
Shout for the common
soldier too.
--Anonymous
Cincinnati Daily Gazette
July 7, 1865