THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion

This topic is about
A Bridge Too Far
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2012 - November - "A Bridge Too Far" by Cornelius Ryan


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Most of my knowledge about the war is about D-Day. All I know about Market Garden is from Band of Brothers, so I'm excited to learn the intricacies of the event. I'm into chapter 3. I'm glad to have learned how certain commanders ended up in their positions and locations during the campaign.
AE


http://standwheretheyfought.jimdo.com...
http://www.defendingarnhem.com/index.htm
http://www.market-garden.info/
http://www.pegasusarchive.org/arnhem/...

The Drop

Arnhem Bridge

Bridge at Nijmegen

Grave of a British Para


http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Ope...

(view spoiler) - I wonder if that factory manager got the sack or ended up in prison!

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While probing forward near Cagny on the initial day of the Goodwood offensive, Lt John Gorman, a troop commander of 2nd Armoured Battalion, Irish Guards, suddenly found himself confronted by a Tiger II and three Tiger Is of the elite 503rd Heavy Tank Battalion. Supported by only one other Sherman, and aware that their 75mm guns would be ineffective against such monsters, he gave the order to his driver to ram the King tiger. Gormans tank Ballyragget succeeded in colliding with its target before the Tigers 88mm gun could be brought to bear on his Sherman, and with both tanks immobilised the crews quickly abandoned their tanks. Lt. Gorman, however, was not finished and making his way off the field, he returned shortly afterwards with a Sherman Firefly, to finish off the stricken Tiger II and one of the Tiger Is. For this action he was awarded the Military Cross, and his driver L/Cpl Baron the Military Medal.



I think the quote Ryan begins the book with sets everything up so well: (view spoiler)
My thoughts when I was reading the first few chapters? Hurry up and attack, I've seen the movie and the Germans regroup!



It Never Snows in September is my other favourite book on Operation 'Market Garden' and one I would heartily recommend to anyone interested in reading further on Arnhem.


Cornelius Ryan was born in Dublin. After finishing his education Ryan moved to London in 1940, and became a war correspondent for The Daily Telegraph in 1941.
He initially covered the air war in Europe during WW II, flew along on fourteen bombing missions with the Eighth Air Force and Ninth Air Force United States Army Air Forces (USAAF), then joined General Patton's Third Third Army and covered its actions until the end of the European war. He transferred to the Pacific theater in 1945, and then to Jerusalem in 1946.
Ryan emigrated to the United States in 1947 to work for Time magazine, where he reported on the postwar tests of atomic weapons carried out by the United States in the Pacific. This was followed by work for other magazines, including Collier's Weekly and Reader's Digest.
He married Kathryn Morgan (1925–1993), a novelist, and became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1951.
On a trip to Normandy in 1949 Ryan became interested in telling a more complete story of D-Day than had been produced to date. He began compiling information and conducting over 1000 interviews as he gathered stories from both the Allies and the Germans, as well as the French civilians.
In 1956 he began to write down his World War II notes for The Longest Day: The Classic Epic of D-Day, which tells the story of the invasion of Normandy. Published in 1959 it was an instant success.
His next work was Last Battle: The Classic History of the Battle for Berlin (1966), about the Battle of Berlin.
This work was followed by A Bridge Too Far (1974), which tells the story of Operation Market Garden, the ill-fated assault by allied airborne forces on the Netherlands culminating in the Battle of Arnhem.
Ryan was awarded the French Legion of Honor, and an honorary Doctor of Literature degree from Ohio University, where the Cornelius Ryan Collection is housed (Alden Library). He was diagnosed with cancer in 1970, and struggled to finish A Bridge Too Far during his illness. He died in Manhattan, while on tour promoting the book, A Bridge Too Far, only two months after publication.
Four years after his death, Ryan's struggle with cancer was detailed in A Private Battle written by his wife, from notes he had secretly left behind for that purpose. He is buried in the Ridgebury Cemetery in northern Ridgefield, Connecticut.

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Hi Paul, don't worry about that, just enjoy the book when you can and we will look forward to hearing from you when you get a chance :)

Part Three, chapter 3, page 164:
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There was a time in WW2 that gliderborne troops did not receive extra pay (as did the paratroops) for their airborne duties....whoa.......when was this changed?

http://www.faaa.me.uk/Airborne%20Hist...

Walk, crawl, parachute, swim, float—anything. But don’t go by glider.
…Riding in one of those Waco gliders was like attending a rock concert
while locked in the bass drum.
…The field was scattered with gliders on their noses, on their sides, on
their backs. It was a scene from hell, but the 101st seemed pleased that it
was a successful glider operation.” - Walter Cronkite

In comparison to paratroopers, US glider troops were not volunteers, were not issued jump boots, and were not given parachutes. They did not receive hazardous-duty pay or wear glider wings until July 1944. - Carl Smith. Airborne – World War II Paratroopers in Combat – editor Julie Guard, Publisher: Oxford, U.K. ; New York : Osprey Pub., 2007, p. 57.

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/22...

As far as 1st Airborne Div as a whole is concerned I would recommend Arnhem: The Airborne Battle by Martin Middlebrook:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/12...





Mr. Rick...put that Middlebrook work on Arnhem on your must read list...totally different style than Mr.Ryan..however ,just as good...it was the book that jump-started my interest in Market-Garden,, i Guarantee that you will find it a most factually sought and published work of the operation.

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http://www.pegasusarchive.org/arnhem/...


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AE




From the book it is great to read many of the other more personal accounts of which there are many excellent ones.
Perhaps someone can list a few suggestions. :) Been a few years since I did any reading on this one.



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Some more information on the Sten gun for those interested:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sten

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Here is a link with details about Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Cole:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_G...
Private First Class Mann's official Medal of Honor citation reads:
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It is to the great shame of the town of Arnhem that the modern bridge that crosses the river close to where the Poles paratroopers landed (not "the Bridge" - now the John Frost Bridge) has been called the Nelson Mandela Bridge, honouring a person with no connections with the town. Modern Arnhem has missed the opportunity to honour the indomitable Poles who had come so far from home, who fought so hard, and so many of whom gave their lives for the liberation of the Netherlands. I find their graves in the Ooosterbeek cemetery some of the most poignant of all. They had lost their country and their lives but they never lost Poland's Honour. The modern Netherlands could at least have named the bridge for them.


Books mentioned in this topic
Operation Market Garden: Then and Now (other topics)Operation Market Garden: Then and Now (other topics)
It Never Snows In September: The German View Of Market-Garden And The Battle Of Arnhem September 1944 (other topics)
Arnhem 1944: The Airborne Battle, 17-26 September (other topics)
I Was a Stranger (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Karel Margry (other topics)Robert Kershaw (other topics)
Martin Middlebrook (other topics)
John W. Hackett (other topics)
James M. Gavin (other topics)
More...
Review:
A Bridge Too Far (1974) is Cornelius Ryan’s opus. Author of The Longest Day and The Last Battle, Ryan brings his considerable talent as a journalist, storyteller, and historian to bear in this text.
A dense read, A Bridge Too Far is some 670 page long including a generous selection of pictures, maps, index, acknowledgements, and “Soldiers and Civilians – What They Do Today” sections, and bibliography. Don’t let the length of the book scare you off, however. This is a must read for airborne history readers, with sections outlining the activities of the American 101st, 82nd, and British 1st Airborne Divisions, with emphasis on the British experience, and of course, XXX Corps, whose job it was to navigate Hell’s Highway all the way to Arnhem in short order.
What I enjoyed most about A Bridge Too Far is Ryan’s ability to narrate, especially given its length. His style reads more like a novel than a history, and that’s what makes this book work. To drive this narrative, Ryan artfully presents selections from books and articles, after-action reports and field communication logs, letters, and interviews from scores of civilians and participants, including many German leaders, whose experiences, according to the author, are told for the first time in this book.
For this reader, there is no shortage of highlights. Of particular note is the telling of the American 82nd Airborne’s crossing of the Waal river, and the last hours of Red Devils in Oosterbeek. What I like most about this book are the small touches, moments that Ryan inserts that add depth to the text. For instance, in examining tactical differences between British and Dutch military leaders (who were “excluded from the planning for Market-Garden”), Ryan writes, “the moment Dutch generals learned of the route that…XXX Corps columns proposed to take, they had anxiously tried to dissuade anyone who would listen, warning of the dangers of using exposed dike roads. ‘In our military staff colleges,’ Bernhard (Prince of the Netherlands) says, ‘we had run countless studies on the problem. We knew tanks simply could not operate along these roads without infantry’”.
Ryan adds a footnote about the result of British planning, which relied primarily on “Montgomery’s vast experience”. He writes:
“Lieutenant Rupert Mahaffey of the Irish Guards remembers that an officer of the Dutch Princess Irene Brigade came to the Guards’ mess for dinner shortly after the tanks were stopped at Elst. Looking around the table, the Dutch officer said, ‘You would have failed the examination.’ He explained that one of the problems in the Dutch Staff College examination dealt solely with the correct way to attack Arnhem from Nijmegen. There were two choices: a) attack up the main road; or b) drive it for 1-2 miles, turn left, effect a crossing of the Rhine and come around in a flanking movement. ‘Those who chose to go straight up the road failed the examination,’ the officer said. ‘Those who turned left and then moved up the river, passed’”.
It’s details like this that make A Bridge Too Far more than an ordinary battle history. XXX Corps, with the continued and relentless holding efforts of the 82nd and 101st , were stopped a few miles short of providing relief to the nearly devastated Red Devils. It is, indeed, an epic story. Get the book and read the dozens of other “moments” that Ryan presents here. You won’t be disappointed. By Bryan Hiatt (World War II Database)