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About this sample
About this sample
Words: 1228 |
Pages: 3|
7 min read
Published: Mar 14, 2019
Words: 1228|Pages: 3|7 min read
Published: Mar 14, 2019
Italian campaign Allied forces (including Canadians) invaded Italy in July 1943 which opened up a new front in Southern Europe. They captured the island of Sicily and advanced up mainland Italy By the fall of 1943 the advance was slowed down by determined German resistance. Anchored on two defensive positions--the Gustav line to the west and the Bernhard line in the east The Gustav line hinged on the high point of Monte Casino, while the Bernhard line stood behind the Sangro river Between these two lines lay the military impossible mountains of Apennines In early November, British eighth armies major general Bernard Montgomery decided that a bold advance up the Adriatic coast could enable a left hood from the town of Pescara inland to Rome. He envisioned seizing the Italian capital before Christmas. Arriving at the Sangro River, the British won a small bridgehead on 24 November. Despite heavy casualties, on 28 November, Eighth Army launched a major attack to breakout of its bridgehead. A two day fight to win a strategic ridge overlooking the river ensued that cost 2,800 British, New Zealand and Indian casualties.
The Germans withdrew to the Moro River and dug in for another round. On the night of 5–6 December, the 1st Canadian Infantry Division and 1st Canadian Armored Brigade took over Eighth Army’s lead and drew the job of forcing a crossing of the Moro. In the early morning hours of 6 December, a three-pronged attack began. Only the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI) made headway, winning Villa Rogatti on the left flank. When engineers were unable to erect a bridge across the Moro to enable tanks to support the PPCLI, a withdrawal was ordered.
It took until 9 December for the Canadians to win a firm bridgehead. The expectation was that a quick advance around the flank of Ortona, a port and fishing town on the Adriatic Sea, would follow. There was no expectation that the Germans would make a stand at Ortona.
Two days of fighting brought the Canadians to what appeared on topographical maps as nothing but a narrow, minor gap about a kilometer south of Ortona. But as the leading troops approached, they discovered the line was actually a deep, narrow gully. The Germans had dug deep holes into its southern bank that protected them from artillery fire. When the shelling stopped, the Germans dashed up to the gully’s edge to fire their machine guns on the Canadian infantry advancing up a gradual slope through tangled vineyards and olive groves.
“The Gully,” as the Canadians dubbed it, proved impossible to break with the direct attacks ordered by 1st Division’s Major General Chris Vokes. Each attack by a single battalion was thrown back with heavy casualties. Drenching rain and falling temperatures added to the misery. The battleground mirrored the muddy no man’s land between opposing sides during the First World War.
Finally on the night of 14–15 December, the Royal 22nd Regiment’s 81 men of “C” Company, commanded by Captain Paul Triquet, managed to outflank the gully. Supported by seven Ontario Regiment tanks, this tiny force fought through fierce German resistance to win a farmhouse called Casa Berardi. For four days, fighting raged around this small strongpoint before the Germans slunk away. For his valor, Triquet was awarded a Victoria Cross, the Commonwealth's highest award for military bravery.
Ortona Unexpectedly, the German 1st Parachute Division only withdrew as far as Ortona. Suddenly the Canadians were confronted with something for which they had no training—a street battle. The Germans had started preparing to defend Ortona on 12 December by using explosives to blow many houses apart to create piles of rubble into which they dug deep fighting positions. Mines were scattered throughout the town. By 19 December, all side streets were clogged with rubble.
Two large buildings were blown down to block a street called Corso Vittorio Emanuele, at the entrance to the square facing the town hall. The municipal hall’s clock was removed from its tower and a machine gun mounted in the opening. At dawn on 21 December, German engineers most likely demolished the tower adjacent to the Cattedrale San Tomasso so that the falling structure cleaved the cathedral dome in half.
As this destruction was being carried out, the Loyal Edmonton Regiment’s “D” Company was cut apart trying to fight its way into Ortona. Its 60 men were reduced to 17 in mere minutes. Despite these losses, the company’s survivors gained a foothold on the outskirts and were soon reinforced by other companies of their battalion. The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada and tanks of the Three Rivers Regiment also came alongside.
These two infantry battalions and a single tank regiment would carry the fight through the deadly labyrinth of Ortona in eight days of unrelenting battle. So intense was the street battle that war correspondents nicknamed Ortona “Little Stalingrad” because the fighting so resembled the definitive struggle in that Eastern Front city in Russia.
Finding it suicidal to venture along the streets, the Edmontons and Seaforths resorted to “mouseholing.” Although taught in some British battle schools, none of the Canadians in Ortona had previously heard of this tactic. Instead, they invented it out of need. Explosives packed against the connecting wall of two buildings blasted an opening through which the soldiers chucked grenades and then followed through with a charge to clear any Germans on the other side.
As Ortona’s buildings were typically adjoining, the Canadians advanced from one to another while seldom venturing onto a street. It was a deadly game. At times the Germans responded by setting demolitions that triggered when the Canadians burst through their mousehole. Sometimes an entire structure would collapse, burying the soldiers within.
Christmas As the hand-to-hand struggle inside Ortona played out, two other Canadian brigades tried outflanking the town to the west. Success on this front would have forced the German paratroopers in Ortona to withdraw or be surrounded. The flanking attacks gained some initial headway before being blocked by the Germans.
Christmas Day brought no relief in the fighting either in Ortona or out on its western flank. On a western ridge, the 48th Highlanders were cut off and the supporting artillery officer could only save the situation by circling the Canadians within a ring of shellfire.
Inside Ortona, meanwhile, as Germans and Canadians traded bullets and grenades, the Seaforth’s quartermaster and headquarters staff organized a sumptuous Christmas dinner to which one company at a time was brought out of the line to be fed. The men of the Edmontons, however, had no reprieve. Their rations were delivered to the fighting lines.
On 27 December, the CBC’s Matthew Halton reported that “the battle has the quality of a nightmare.” But it was a nightmare soon ended. The following morning, 28 December, an Edmonton patrol discovered that the paratroopers had pulled out quietly during the night—surrendering Ortona to the Canadians.
December’s fighting cost 2,339 casualties, including 502 killed — although the actual number of Canadians killed inside Ortona was never determined. German losses were also never calculated, but two divisions had been badly mauled between the Moro River and the end of the town battle. As Ortona had not been evacuated before the fighting started, many civilians were also killed and wounded. The most authoritative estimate sets civilian deaths at 1,314.
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