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Last Stand At Le Paradis The Events Leading To The Ss Massacre Of The Norfolks 1940 Illustrated Lane

  • SKU: BELL-11237218
Last Stand At Le Paradis The Events Leading To The Ss Massacre Of The Norfolks 1940 Illustrated Lane
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Last Stand At Le Paradis The Events Leading To The Ss Massacre Of The Norfolks 1940 Illustrated Lane instant download after payment.

Publisher: Pen and Sword Military
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 3.58 MB
Pages: 192
Author: Lane, Richard
ISBN: 9781844158478, 9781844685103, 1844158470, 1844685101
Language: English
Year: 2021
Edition: Illustrated

Product desciption

Last Stand At Le Paradis The Events Leading To The Ss Massacre Of The Norfolks 1940 Illustrated Lane by Lane, Richard 9781844158478, 9781844685103, 1844158470, 1844685101 instant download after payment.

In early September 1939, the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment were one of the first complete infantry units of the BEF to land in France. The first months of World War Two were relatively quiet but after deploying to the Maginot Line sector during January 1940 they came into contact with those Germans manning the West Wall or Siegfried Line. A patrol led by Captain Peter Barclay entered German territory and was attacked. As a result, the first decorations of the war were awarded. Barclay received the Military Cross and Lance-Corporal Davis the Military Medal while the remaining members of the patrol were mentioned in dispatches. Two days later, the battalion suffered a tragic first when Lieutenant Patrick Everitt was mortally wounded while leading a daylight patrol. Everitt was the first British officer to be killed in action in the Second World War. When the Germans launched their first offensive on 10 May, the BEF advanced to the River Dyle in Belgium. Within days the Allied Armies had been forced onto the back foot by the speed and ferocity of the German breakthrough. The Norfolks withdrew to the River Escaut where the BEF was to make a stand. On 21 May, the Company Sergeant Major George Gristock courageously destroyed some German machine-gun posts and won a posthumous Victoria Cross. As the Allies withdrew towards the Channel, the Norfilks were ordered to defend a section of the Canal Line between B thune and Le Cornet Malo. Already down to around half strength, the Norfolks held their sector from 24 to 27 May. By the time the order was issued for them to withdraw, it was too late, Battalion HQ at Duries Farm, Le Paradis was surrounded and they had no alternative but to surrender, although 'C' Company held out until the following morning. After surrender, ninety-nine men of the Battalion were marched to a paddock where they were machine-gunned in cold blood by their SS captors. Miraculously, two men survived and were instrumental in bringing the SS officer responsible, Fritz Knoechlien, to justice after the war. When the remnants of the battalion reassembled in England, its strength was just five officers and 134 other ranks. The remainder had either been killed or captured as POWs. AUTHOR: Richard Lane is a keen military historian who lives in Norwich. SELLING POINTS: Detailed investigation and account of oone of the most infamous German atrocities of the Second World War. Of the 1000 men of the Norfolk Regiment who sailed for France in September 1939, only 139 returned safely to England in early June 1940. 16 pages of b/w plates

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