AN INTRODUCTION
On the next page we continue the battle for Normandy. It is the follow up after 'Operation Overlord', D-Day, June 6th, 1944.
If you have not visit those pages yet, then I recommend to visit first the home-page . On this introduction page you can make a tour around the objects that are still the silent
witnesses to the fierce battles that were once fought over there.
On the coming pages the battle continues to liberate Cherbourg (to the north), the battle for Caen,
Operation Cobra (to the south) and the final episode, the enclosure of the German troops in 'The Falaise Pocket'.
TO CHERBOURG
In the first three weeks after the landings, while the British 2nd Army was preparing to capture Caen,
the American 1st Army was busy to get a firm grip between UTAH and OMOHA Beach and to clear the Cotentin peninsula from German troops.
Crucial in this was the capture of Carentan. Part of the troops that were at the front of the attack on Carentan was the 506th
Parachute Infantry Regiment (PIR) of the 101st Airborne Division. On June 12th Carentan was taken (later, the attack was re-enacted for the
TV-series 'Band of Brothers'). Despite of some counterattacks by the Germans, the Americans held their positions.
Carentan, the house on the right was torn down to widen the road.
5th Corps tried to break out to the south and east but the lack of enough ammunition and the swampy terrain delayed the operations.
7th Corps headed northwestwards, to Cherbourg. The hilly terrain had hedges around its fields. These gave the defending Germans a great cover.
The advance of the Americans was slow. This was part due to the shortage of material and ammunition that had to come from UTAH Beach that
was still under constant shelling by German batteries. The commander of 7th Corps, General Collins, decides to a quick action with the 82nd
Airborne Division and the 9th Division to cross the peninsula. By coincidence, the Germans pulled back and the action went very swift.
On 18 June the West Coast was reached and the retread route from the north was closed off. The Germans retreated on Cherbourg. The next day the
American troops headed north on a wide front in pursue of the Germans.
Seven kilometers north of Ste-Mère-Eglise, on the N13, lies the town of Montebourg. 505th Para Infanry Battalion first attacked this town on 10 June.
The defence was that fierce, that on the 12th the town was still in German hands. When Collins ordered a new attack on the 19th the town finally fell
in American hands. But the cost was dear, 90% of the town was destroyed.
Montebourg,
Then and Now.
Nine Kilometers north of Montebourg lies the town of Valognes. This was the headquarters of the German
commander Von Schlieben until he also retreated to Cherbourg on June 20. Valognes was, just as Montebourg, almost totally destroyed and after
the war completely rebuilt (see the photalbum below). More to the north, right of the N13 and on the D56, you may come across the remnants of the
V1 launching site. (See for more details on this my
'German Page'). General Von Schlieben was asked to surrender the defence of Cherbourg on 21 June,
but he refused. The consequence was that on the 22nd a heavy bombardment hid Cherbourg. Due through bad marking of the targets and dense smoke a lot
of yhe American troops were badly hit.
Cherbourg was far from easy to capture. On 25 June General Bradley gave the order to three battleships (Nevada, Texas and Arkansas) and four
smaller ships for a sever navy bombardment to silence the last resistance at Cherbourg. The bombardment went on for three hours and were against the German coastal defense east and west of Cherbourg, the so called 'Osteck' and 'Westeck'. The most shells landed east of Cherbourg, Val de Saire. The Osteck complex near Fermanvile was a pain in the neck for General Collins, with it's fourthy blockhauses and heavy guns that threatend the harbour of Cherbourg 25 kilometers away.
The range finding bunker of the Seeadler battery near Fermanville.
During the final attack on Cherbourg, on June 26th, the 22nd US Infantry Regiment went in for the last assault on this battery. The Germans blew the ceilings out of the bunkers, so their guns were able to shoot inland. But on the 28th it was all over when Major Küppers and his garrison surrenderd to the American troops. Meanwhile, on 26 June the battle for Cherbourg was also over with the capitulation of General Von Schlieben. The last German resistance was broken on the 30th with the capture of the north-west point of Cap de la Hague.
WAT IS LEFT AND TO FIND AROUND CHERBOURG
After the was,Cherbourg was rebuilt. The harbour was totally wrecked and destroyed by the Germans. Even though the allies
captured the city, the harbour could not be used for eight weeks and the supplies for the allies were still brought to shore on the beaches.
The most important museum concerning the battle for Cherbourg can be found in
Fort du Roule. If you come from the N13 follow the signs from the Thémis roundabout. In the museum are original maps, posters and
pictures displayed. Around the harbour are still enormous bunkers to be found, as in the vicinity of Hotel Mercure. Left and right to
Cherbourg are some interesting objects to be found. Eight kilometers west of Cherbourg, near Landemer, lay some bunkers which are swept from the dunes and lay as enormous dead skulls on the beach.
Further west of Cherbourg lies a giant bunker complex near Rocher du Castel-Vendon. It is totally destroyed by American engineers. But is well worth the visit when you're around.
To continue the battle for Normandy, click 'HERE'. Then the battle concentrates around Caen.
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