Marooned & Forgotten German Garrison 1945

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  • čas přidán 9. 04. 2023
  • When WWII ended in Europe, a German garrison on a tiny island were forgotten about and left in their positions - this is the strange story of the German garrison on The Minkees, one of the last in Europe to surrender.
    Dr. Mark Felton FRHistS, FRSA, is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
    Visit my audio book channel 'War Stories with Mark Felton': • One Thousand Miles to ...
    Help support my channel:
    www.paypal.me/markfeltonprodu...
    / markfeltonproductions
    Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
    Credits: US National Archives; Library of Congress; Hannes2; Harry Holmes; Paul Lakeman; Valerie McGlinchey

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @avnrulz8587
    @avnrulz8587 Před rokem +4034

    Probably the luckiest location for a German garrison throughout the war.

    • @alexdemoya2119
      @alexdemoya2119 Před rokem +410

      was just thinking the same thing. not even any locals to worry about that might be resistance members.

    • @bbbb98765
      @bbbb98765 Před rokem +196

      Definitely a good option. Not all good though... just imagine the tedium

    • @stc3145
      @stc3145 Před rokem +16

      Or be placed in some rural town in Norway and never see action

    • @jimvick8397
      @jimvick8397 Před rokem +106

      @@wm9346 From what I've heard, the German officers at Priest Lake had it pretty good...

    • @carltonleboss
      @carltonleboss Před rokem +97

      It could be worse...you could have been on the Eastern Front...

  • @johncathey310
    @johncathey310 Před rokem +1219

    Probably one of the more laid back and relaxing garrison in the war for the Germans

    • @389383
      @389383 Před rokem +117

      Hope they had a lot of chess sets and board games and cards to while a way the time.

    • @captainpoppleton
      @captainpoppleton Před rokem +129

      @@389383 They played on their Reich-Phones.

    • @david9783
      @david9783 Před rokem +7

      @@captainpoppleton Good one, dude!

    • @david9783
      @david9783 Před rokem +23

      That's what I was thinking. I hope discipline was relaxed a bit. Maybe they got in some good fishing.

    • @jasonrodgers9063
      @jasonrodgers9063 Před rokem +54

      Slightly preferable to the Russian front!

  • @andrewcombe8907
    @andrewcombe8907 Před rokem +343

    Hans: “What did you do during the war Grandpa?”
    Grandpa: “Walks on the beach, swimming, snorkelling and a little bit of fishing. We once shot at our own side who were in a stolen landing craft. That was a bit embarrassing. I got the medal for courage for when I slipped over on rocks while collecting seashells.”

    • @solvingpolitics3172
      @solvingpolitics3172 Před rokem +5

      Yah, sounds like they served out the War at Club Med!

    • @williamarcamo7588
      @williamarcamo7588 Před rokem +4

      Grandpa it’s just joking or being humble in a way. He may not want you to feel how terrible about the situation of the war. Because when he’s gone, he’ll left you with hope, understanding, love and peaceful life. He did it more likely also to avoid hatred.

    • @frankfranks7066
      @frankfranks7066 Před 8 měsíci +9

      At some point those Germans realized they were Blessed to be bypassed by the War...

    • @stevebarlow3154
      @stevebarlow3154 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @andrewcombe8907 Jersey has huge tides, at low water Jersey's land mass increases by about a quarter. I worked with a girl from Jersey and she told me that during the war a group of German soldiers went exploring the uncovered rocks looking for shellfish, crabs etc. Unfortunately for them they were new to Jersey, didn't know about the huge tides and went out too far. The tide came racing back in and all the Germans were drowned, about four or five in number.

    • @DEP717
      @DEP717 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@williamarcamo7588 That reminds me of a story my Dad told me. He served in the 1960s; and was the new Sergeant in a unit full of WW2 Vet NCOs. One day a few of them were talking, and a couple of the WW2 guys - Who had been in the Hurtgen Forest Battle together - Were talking about a time they found an abandoned German truck full of Sausage, Cheese and Bread. My Dad said "Man, I wish I'd been there with you guys for that one!"
      He never forgot their response. "No, you don't."

  • @fvvk3005
    @fvvk3005 Před rokem +252

    My (German) grandfather was part of the occupation troops on Jersey and Guernsey from 1941 to 1945. Although we used to talk a lot about this, he never mentioned these small islands. Interesting episode, thanks!

    • @binaway
      @binaway Před rokem +33

      A good possibility is he never knew they existed. Very few Britons know about them.

    • @allenfenwick6257
      @allenfenwick6257 Před rokem

      Your (Nazi) grandfather lived far too long.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před rokem +11

      ​@@binaway yeah if its over the horizon, no reason to find out about really

    • @andresenna2900
      @andresenna2900 Před 5 měsíci

      Of course not,they lost,poor germans.

    • @paulvial9390
      @paulvial9390 Před 4 měsíci

      Kellyflyin

  • @RZ350NC
    @RZ350NC Před rokem +912

    No one else but Dr. Felton could make the most obscure part of the European theater so interesting. Cheers and thank you.

    • @PNETriffid
      @PNETriffid Před rokem +5

      He's good but the subject matter is interesting so plenty of others could teach it.

    • @MichaelBrodie68
      @MichaelBrodie68 Před rokem +7

      Garrison callsign decrypted by Enigma as, "Hey, Hey, it's the Minkeeys"...in the voice of Michael Caine, "No' many people dat."

    • @cheesecrackers3928
      @cheesecrackers3928 Před 8 měsíci

      The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society

    • @kevinrayner5812
      @kevinrayner5812 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I read up on the occupation and surrender of the Channel Islands some years ago and I did read about the Germans left on the Minkees. I thought it odd that the Germans could spare the manpower to occupy a reef that had no strategic value but this video goes into a bit more depth and the reason to occupy the reef. When I read about it is said the Germans were starving and pleaded with French fishermen to tell the British they were there so they could surrender. This video puts a different slant on that. Despite being told that Germany had surrendered the Germans ordered the French to take them off the reef. If I had been the French I think I would have left them there but then I suppose the Germans did have weapens.

  • @NinjaMan47
    @NinjaMan47 Před rokem +648

    7:10 Very glad to know that, even after the worst war in human history, the British weren't about to let some extremely obscure islands slip away to the French.

    • @moltderenou
      @moltderenou Před rokem +18

      Unlike the Canadians

    • @NorseNorman
      @NorseNorman Před rokem +49

      Indeed, the sovereignty of the Minkies ended up being taken to the International Court of Justice that, after consulting with documents of recent and even as far back as medieval manuscripts, concluded that the islands indeed belonged to Jersey and not the French! But was still involved in many further disputes with the French over sovereignty and fishing rights regardless.

    • @moltderenou
      @moltderenou Před rokem +22

      @@MaxwellAerialPhotography Genghis Khan, the Romans and the Ottomans would agree with you.

    • @moltderenou
      @moltderenou Před rokem +6

      @@NorseNorman Then very similar to the dispute Spain and Portugal have about the Savage Islands

    • @patrickelliott-brennan8960
      @patrickelliott-brennan8960 Před rokem +25

      @@MaxwellAerialPhotography you appear to have mistaken the facts.
      The English owned the Islands AND had a claim to the landmass known as France. In exchange for giving up the claim to the French throne (which was NOT a popular idea back then) the French agreed that England would keep the islands they ALREADY OWNED.
      They didn't 'grab' anything. It was part of the inheritance of the English throne.
      Ensuring the French didn't steal the islands in contravention of the more over 800 year old agreement is an obvious and understandable action.

  • @timsoundz
    @timsoundz Před rokem +55

    I grew up at La Rocque beach in Jersey facing the Minkies. The wall at our property was made with German concrete, and German officers were billeted during the occupation in what would become our house. A twin MG42 was placed on top of a nearby Martello tower, and there was a French tank turret on the very end of La Rocque pier. As a kid in 1960 I remember finding bullets around a nearby bunker. The Minkies and other groups of rocks in the ocean around the Channel Islands make the area especially lethal for shipping, and the hundreds of wrecks attest to this lethality. Thanks to Mark Felton for this fascinating and little known war story!

  • @jbkingusa10
    @jbkingusa10 Před rokem +137

    I worked with a woman who was child on Jersey during the German occupation. The Luftwaffe had an antiaircraft gun set up in the lower part of their garden. Needless to say, the gun's firing made sleeping rather difficult. Initially, the islanders lived basically the same as before the war, but as the tide turned against Germany, supplies became fewer and fewer, and food became fairly scarce for the last 18 months or so.

    • @barcelobrin6656
      @barcelobrin6656 Před rokem +17

      I am French and know the Normandy coast well facing the islands. In the late 1980s, in a public park in Berlin, I happened to have a conversation with an old gentleman who told me that during the war he was in garrison on Jersey or Guernsey (I'm not sure anymore) and that After the Allied landings, he experienced food shortages: according to his words, with his comrades, they only had apples to eat and were sick (dysentery). Well, it's just an anecdote. Cordially.

    • @kpl455
      @kpl455 Před rokem +12

      "made sleeping rather difficult" hahahaha, british understatement at its best:))))

    • @user-yj6ul9kz3p
      @user-yj6ul9kz3p Před 5 měsíci

      I can't understand how France made an alliance with a sworn enemy. The British fought for hundreds of years and joined those pigs who even took away the islands that should have been French.

    • @robertgiles9124
      @robertgiles9124 Před 4 měsíci +2

      So Fritz can shoot but he can't fish?

    • @mandywithell
      @mandywithell Před 2 měsíci +1

      Indeed! And after D Day quite uncomfortable for the German Garrisons as supplies could not get through from the mainland.
      The citizens started receiving Red Cross parcels and at the end the German troops were going hungry.
      The group of people that really suffered were the forced labourers billeted on the Islands who , under fear of being shot by the Germans, had to forage in the fields or beg for food from civilians.
      If you want a good read "Hitler's British Isles" by Duncan Barrett - Might not be the most comprehensive tome but easy and engaging to read.
      Covers a lot of personal stories of people and families involved including what happened after the war.
      Some quite touching stories concerning Islanders and German occupiers that fell in love including one couple that later married.

  • @loyalistmundicomedentisdux9538

    The stories often forgotten garrisons or abandon forces are often incredibly fascinating and speak more about individuals than the field of battle.

    • @cv990a4
      @cv990a4 Před rokem +10

      Thank god the Royal Marines were able to recover that dunny for His Royal Majesty King George VI. Having to use a pissoir instead doesn't bear thinking about.

    • @Camcolito
      @Camcolito Před rokem +5

      There is still a forgotten German garrison posted to my shed in 1944. I bring in some supplies on weekends.

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před rokem +1652

    Props to Dr. Mark for teleporting back in time just to ensure this educational channel is 110% scientifically accurate

  • @johngaller278
    @johngaller278 Před rokem +15

    Mark, when you said Minkees, all I could think of was Peter Sellers! Thanks for all you do, Sir!

  • @oldmanfunky4909
    @oldmanfunky4909 Před rokem +60

    I'm a big fan of history and thought I knew all there was to know about WW2, but this was surprising new history I was unaware of! At 50 years of age I'm still learning new things! Thank you Mark!

    • @DavidLopez-rk6em
      @DavidLopez-rk6em Před rokem +4

      One thing this channel has taught me is that its impossible to know everything about ww2. There's probably still a lot Mark doesnt know as well. It feels like there are still new stories being told every year

  • @jean6872
    @jean6872 Před rokem +341

    On 23 May 1945, three weeks after the end of the war in Europe, a French fishing boat, skippered by Lucian Marie, approached the island of Minquiers and anchored nearby when a German soldier approached him saying, "We've been forgotten by the British, perhaps no one on Jersey told them we were here, I want you to take us over to England, we want to surrender", as reported by Charles Whiting. (1973). _The end of the war; Europe: April 15-May 23, 1945._ New York: Stein and Day. p. 168.

    • @knife-wieldingspidergod5059
      @knife-wieldingspidergod5059 Před rokem +37

      Which the skipper replied, "Do you have money?".

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  Před rokem +160

      Whiting wasn't entirely accurate regarding the conversation, according to documents I've seen.

    • @jean6872
      @jean6872 Před rokem +12

      @@MarkFeltonProductions Okay.

    • @01cthompson
      @01cthompson Před rokem +14

      ​​@@knife-wieldingspidergod5059es. But, I'm not paying until we get to the other side. 😊

    • @statementleaver8095
      @statementleaver8095 Před rokem +3

      Newspapers 😂😂
      Titanic refurned to Southampton Newyork Times april 15th 1912

  • @Blackfyre741
    @Blackfyre741 Před rokem +425

    Theres a story about a german soldier who was stationed in sark during the war, he was a medic or medical officer and was called to a girls house, She was an english girl and could speak fluent german, he was obviously smitten and fell in love there and then, they got married after the war and they grew old together it was a rather sweet story

    • @kettlehat376
      @kettlehat376 Před rokem +11

      Could i get more info about this lovely story?

    • @Blackfyre741
      @Blackfyre741 Před rokem +19

      @@kettlehat376 yes of course, it was part of a documentary I watched yesterday actually il try and find it to link it to you it was very touching and the entire documentary was indeed very interesting aswell

    • @Blackfyre741
      @Blackfyre741 Před rokem +42

      @@kettlehat376 czcams.com/video/JR7v8114XOc/video.html here you are, my grandfather was stationed here before the war and evacuated before the Germans invaded, so obviously I saw this documentary and took an interest, I’m Irish but to see British street, police officers with German escorts and the Wehrmacht marching down the streets was very jarring

    • @rodrigoguerra549
      @rodrigoguerra549 Před rokem +3

      Could i get that link as well?

    • @rodrigoguerra549
      @rodrigoguerra549 Před rokem +1

      @Blackfyre

  • @SlumberBear2k
    @SlumberBear2k Před 2 měsíci +8

    there's so many stories. it's amazing. you'll never run out of material.

  • @cgross82
    @cgross82 Před rokem +31

    The outhouse-too funny! The difference between the small German garrison and cutoff Japanese troops in the Pacific: as soon as they heard that the war was over, they said “Let’s get the hell out of here and surrender!

  • @oldedinburgh6014
    @oldedinburgh6014 Před rokem +594

    Is there no end to the talent, dedication and effort that Dr Felton brings us?
    Thank-you, for yet another fascinating new story, for myself at least.

  • @dukeman3ca1
    @dukeman3ca1 Před rokem +240

    I find the history of the channel Islands during the war fascinating. Thanks for the video !

    • @robert48044
      @robert48044 Před rokem

      Yeah, I think Timeline did an episode on them.

    • @newman977
      @newman977 Před rokem +2

      I still have plenty of family in the Channel Islands and some of the stories are quite epic.

    • @Puxi
      @Puxi Před rokem

      He is doing british propaganda. Germany is always bad in your version of the story. 2015 we took your refugees in our homes.

    • @maginotline7490
      @maginotline7490 Před rokem +2

      Hope he does more about jersey as it’s my home

    • @diffened
      @diffened Před rokem

      @@maginotline7490 Visited with my wife a few years ago. We had a great time and if there weren't 100s of other places we would like to see, we wouldn't hesitate to go back. We went to the various war museums and learned a lot. The island and its history is fascinating and the people very nice.

  • @jollygreengiant7072
    @jollygreengiant7072 Před rokem +14

    Britains most southerly building is a lavvy facing France! Only you could point that historically correct fact out so beautifully Dr Felton. Thank you for sharing your brilliant research on so many aspects. Best channel on the whole internet and always something new learned.

  • @agrivator5901
    @agrivator5901 Před rokem +22

    I stayed in The Minkees when I got married in Jersey 10 years ago. By which I mean I stayed in the penthouse in St. Brelards named after The Minkees. In fact, I think the real Minkees were just about visible on the horizon when it was low tide. Jersey is a great place, and extra interesting for those who enjoy history with some fascinating museums.

  • @colanitower
    @colanitower Před rokem +30

    Yet another unknown WWII story so well told it's worth a movie

  • @cynthiaalver
    @cynthiaalver Před rokem +67

    I've always had a particular fascination with the Channel Islands during the war but today is the first I've heard of the Minkees. I shall certainly do some digging into that. Thank you.

    • @andrewvanatta1569
      @andrewvanatta1569 Před rokem +2

      For a good book set on and around the Minkies, check out The Wreck of the Mary Deare, by Hammond Innes. It's probably my all-time favorite novel.

    • @cynthiaalver
      @cynthiaalver Před rokem +1

      @@andrewvanatta1569 Thank you. I'll check it out!

    • @himoffthequakeroatbox4320
      @himoffthequakeroatbox4320 Před rokem

      Micky Dolenz with the chin.

  • @SunKing968
    @SunKing968 Před rokem +24

    Mark I've attempted several times personally over the last 10 years or so to visit the Minkies but each time am met with armed Wehrmacht personnel. Little has changed and it's growing frustrating

  • @charlielan9287
    @charlielan9287 Před rokem +11

    German Garrison: Guys I think they forgot about us.
    Japanese bunker on random Pacific island: You don't say.

  • @LordVikingLive
    @LordVikingLive Před rokem +35

    I first heard of the minquiers in the movie "The Wreck of The Mary Deare". The Wreck of the Mary Deare is a 1959 Metrocolor British-American thriller film directed by Michael Anderson and starring Gary Cooper and Charlton Heston, and featuring Michael Redgrave, Cecil Parker, Richard Harris and John Le Mesurier. Its a great movie.

    • @iankingsleys2818
      @iankingsleys2818 Před rokem +3

      based on a novel by Hammond Innis.

    • @ldnwholesale8552
      @ldnwholesale8552 Před 9 měsíci +2

      It is a book adapted to a movie. Hammond Innes from memory

    • @ianm452
      @ianm452 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I read the book - the author has a vivid imagination. How he thinks one man, alone on a steamship with no autopilot, can have a little steer then nip down to the boiler room to throw a few shovelfuls of coal into the furnaces then nip back up top for another little steer, and keep repeating this performance is beyond me.

  • @fernandoreynaaguilar1438
    @fernandoreynaaguilar1438 Před rokem +108

    If those walls could talk.
    I remember a british TV series called "Enemy at the Door", chronicling the occupation of the channel islands. Excellent actors. I remember particularly the guy who played Reinicke, the ss officer, now deceased. Great actors all of them. I wonder why they never became super famous.

    • @paultapner2769
      @paultapner2769 Před rokem +6

      I vaguely remember a sitcom as well called 'Owner Occupied' on ITV, which I recalled reading about but never watched. IMDB says it was about a channel islands hotel that carries on regardless with it's business after the occupation. I can find very little info about it. Looks like it was a pilot episode that never went to series.

    • @jerryprice5484
      @jerryprice5484 Před rokem +2

      I watched this series as well, excellent series

    • @davidbrims5825
      @davidbrims5825 Před rokem +6

      Simon Cadell was the ss officer, died of cancer age 46.

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha Před rokem +3

      There was another TV drama series about 20 years ago about the occupation of the Channel Islands. If I remember what it was called I'll be back . . .

    • @junanougues
      @junanougues Před rokem +2

      @@ray.shoesmith Thanks for that, what an intriguing premise for a show.

  • @sebastianpaul6151
    @sebastianpaul6151 Před rokem +19

    I was born in Guernsey, and while I learnt a lot from the various exhibits and stories from islanders who lived through the occupation, it amazes me how you still find these small extremely instresting tidbits regarding the story of the channel islands in WW2, fantastic video, Mark!

  • @johnpritchard5410
    @johnpritchard5410 Před rokem +16

    My mother and her people were from Jersey. Churchill's comment referred to the German garrison, but the people of Jersey were there too. Many slave-laborers from the USSR were on the island. My cousins would encounter them on the beaches, trying to catch fish with their bare hands. They asked "How long?" towards the end. May 9th is Liberation Day on Jersey.

    • @4exgold
      @4exgold Před rokem +3

      good film called "Another Mother's Son" about a Jersey woman who hid a young escaped Russian POW

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge Před rokem +1

      @@4exgold Louisa Gould. None of the film was made in the Island. Her Brother Harold Le Druillenec was also arrested and sent to Belsen. He survived and returned to the Island were he took up his old job as a teacher. As the Island's were under military control, a Festung, the arrests were not made by the Gestapo, which were a civillian organisation, but the Gehime Feilde Poliezi Secret Feild Police, the military equivalent. There are to stories as to how the remark 'Another Mother's Son ' came about. . Her son Edward had been killed serving as an RNVR officer. One tale is then when her Brother Harold took her to task for hiding Fyidor, the Russian she replied 'He's another Mother's son'. . The other story is that when she was being interogated and the NAZI interegator asked why she had risked her life for a pice of sub human waste, she then replied 'He is another Mother's son'. Either way a remarkable woman. Her betryal was probaly due to a pair of sisters that lived near by. Both the sisters were what were described as 'simple'. Post war , they had committed no crime, and as it was considered that both were menatlly sub normal, what would be point of brining any action against them? Both lived till the late 1960's. Thier cottage was on a narrow road, as kids we used to ride our ponies past the cottage. If either were outside they would stop and just stare at us till we wnt past, normally at a fast trot!

    • @4exgold
      @4exgold Před rokem

      @@51WCDodge interesting...thanks for posting.

  • @KittyCatnap
    @KittyCatnap Před rokem +250

    I was wondering if you've heard of Battle of Varolampi Pond, or as it is nicknamed, the 'Sausage War'. There isn't much material to go off, but summarize, Soviet troops attacked Finnish rear which left their field kitchens as they retreated, the starved Soviets proceeded to ignore their orders and just eating the sausage rations, which in turn enabled Finnish counter-offensive. In a twisted way, it really spoke of the Soviet soldiers' conditions of WW2.

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha Před rokem +48

      I assume the Finns adopted this as a standard tactic? "Sergeant, draw 100 sausages from stores and stage a diversion on the left flank."

    • @libertarian4323
      @libertarian4323 Před rokem +54

      That battle was during the Winter War in Dec '39, before the Soviets entered WW2. An interesting war where the Russians decided to invade one of their smaller neighbors, but ended up suffering horrendous losses, similar to their invasion of Ukraine today. Their justification for starting the war was similar to the one Putin used to attack Ukraine.

    • @pagodebregaeforro2803
      @pagodebregaeforro2803 Před rokem +8

      Every army had its bad moments and situations. The Red Army wasnt the IJA, they were most of the times well equiped, but the cold war propaganda and books would paint them as eternal miserable and starved slaves

    • @KittyCatnap
      @KittyCatnap Před rokem +25

      @@pagodebregaeforro2803 Soviets were well equipped during the Winter War of 1939 in terms of weaponry and military vehicles. Having some 100 TIMES more tanks than Finland. However the tactics used in Finland by Soviets were outdated and relied too heavily on roads, which Finnish soldiers would often ambush, this is one of the reasons having such an advantage with tanks didn't bring Soviets an edge over Finland. That being said, some Soviet soldiers lacked winter clothing and went without eating for long periods of time, it is estimated that thousands of Soviets froze to death. But, the biggest reason why the Winter War went so poorly for Soviets was low morale and Stalin having had purged his high ranking officers prior to the conflict.

    • @ursus9104
      @ursus9104 Před rokem +13

      Relatives from Ostrobothnia in Finland described how as children on their way home after school they passed a prison camp with Russian prisoners of war and they felt so sorry for the starving Russians that they threw them some pieces of bread, which they gratefully received and immediately ate.

  • @lioraselby
    @lioraselby Před rokem +32

    "I've mastered the art of standing so incredibly still that I become invisible to the eye."
    - German garrison on the Minkies, probably

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před rokem

      Is not that quote from a character in a film? If so, which one (character/film)? The suggestion of the quote is brilliant, nonetheless.

    • @PeopleOverProfits777
      @PeopleOverProfits777 Před rokem

      THE IMPERIALIST
      CAPITALIST CLASS WILL MOVE HEAVEN AND HELL
      AGAINST THE
      PROLETARIAT. IT WILL TURN THE COUNTRY INTO A SMOKING HEAP OF RUBBLE RATHER THAN GIVE UP WAGE-SLAVERY OF ITS OWN FREE WILL.

    • @Lowlight-pt4zs
      @Lowlight-pt4zs Před rokem +2

      @@skyden24195 Drax from Guardians of the galaxy

    • @bearsausage8599
      @bearsausage8599 Před rokem +1

      @@Lowlight-pt4zs No the Germans said it before

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před rokem

      @@Lowlight-pt4zs oh yeah!!! Thanks for the reminder.

  • @TheJojo01902
    @TheJojo01902 Před rokem +5

    Leave it to Professor Felton to do an excellent job informing his students on ALL facets of WW2! 👍

  • @anthonysoprano7066
    @anthonysoprano7066 Před rokem +6

    Trust Dr. Felton to drop another excellent historic video right as I sit down for dinner!

  • @sidneytaylor8341
    @sidneytaylor8341 Před rokem +22

    Another story I've never heard about before, great work ❤

  • @ekim000
    @ekim000 Před rokem +43

    Best history channel on yoochoob by a very wide margin. I've never watched an episode without learning something about a period I've been reading about for the better part of 40 years. Thanks Dr Felton!

  • @kevindelaney1951
    @kevindelaney1951 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Once again, an excellent bit of forgotten history brought forward. Thanks Mark.

  • @Revolution_now605
    @Revolution_now605 Před rokem +6

    Dr Felton is probably the only person able to make the channel island garrison sound like they had a huge part in the war

    • @ericcarlson3746
      @ericcarlson3746 Před rokem +1

      he's found enough material for two episodes so far. The other one, about the raid on France, is even crazier!

  • @wilhelmvillagracia9670
    @wilhelmvillagracia9670 Před rokem +6

    Uahhhh it's Monday....I don't want to leave my bed.....Notification Mark Felton new video just dropped, me jumping out of my bed and grabbing my phone. Thanks Mark.

  • @johnnyrosborg1156
    @johnnyrosborg1156 Před rokem +17

    Another piece of forgotten but fascinating history. Thank you Mark ❤️.

  • @aceroadholder2185
    @aceroadholder2185 Před rokem +10

    My unit in Viet Nam, 175thRRC, had a similar detachment on Con Son Island. A couple of shacks and a beach to lounge on. Unfortunately, one of guys from the 175th sent there to repair some electronic equipment was washed out to sea while swimming and was never found.

  • @TheLurker1647
    @TheLurker1647 Před rokem +19

    Not sure if Mark has done this one yet, but there's a fascinating tale of the garrison of some Dutch island where a bunch of Georgian POWs from the USSR were recruited by the Germans to garrison the island, then at the end of the war turned on the Germans and butchered them in the night.
    Just looked it up: Texel is the island. More than 1000 dead, right at the end of the war, including many Dutch civilians. I remember reading about it years ago, and it seemed like a horror story for everyone involved.

    • @akacicaa
      @akacicaa Před 6 měsíci +1

      Ww2 keeps getting weirder and weirder for me

  • @FoxWolfWorld
    @FoxWolfWorld Před rokem +12

    “The islands consist of Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark.”
    Herm: 😢

    • @EdMcF1
      @EdMcF1 Před rokem +1

      Lihou and Brechquou aussi!

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  Před rokem +3

      I can't list every single one! The four main ones are the ones usually listed.

    • @ianm452
      @ianm452 Před rokem +2

      and Jethou

    • @Pygar2
      @Pygar2 Před rokem

      @@ianm452 Great book on P. Gutenberg by a man who let himself be stranded on Jethou for a year...

    • @kevinrayner5812
      @kevinrayner5812 Před 2 měsíci

      @@EdMcF1 I was going to add Lihou but is it technically an island. You can walk to it at low tide.

  • @raypurchase801
    @raypurchase801 Před rokem +45

    Lots of Japanese in the islands continued fighting for a couple of years after the Japanese surrender.

    • @atomicshadowman9143
      @atomicshadowman9143 Před rokem +10

      They were turning up when I was in elementary school

    • @nunyabeeswax3936
      @nunyabeeswax3936 Před rokem +20

      Last one gave it up in1974

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Před rokem +7

      We left lots on the islands
      Too much trouble to get them

    • @389383
      @389383 Před rokem +1

      I visited some of those and I would love to hear a recount of how the surrender happened to the US Navy and Marines. Were there any fanatics who resisted?

    • @stevenlubick2689
      @stevenlubick2689 Před rokem +1

      ​@@tomhenry897 About this only major islands in any group were invaded. T!his was major tactic/strategy called (island hopping) if I remember correctly. This was for the reason you gave about being too much trouble or time being involved.

  • @hoosierpatriot2280
    @hoosierpatriot2280 Před rokem +5

    I had no Idea these tiny islands even existed. Thank you for educating me yet again Dr. Felton!

  • @dwightehowell8179
    @dwightehowell8179 Před rokem +8

    There was also a German weather station in Greenland. These guys really were forgotten as in everybody forgot they were there. They were lucky to be discovered and rescued. Greenland can be a very hard location to stay alive in.

    • @frankbaumgartner1229
      @frankbaumgartner1229 Před rokem +2

      I guess this was weather station "Haudegen" on Spitsbergen not Greenland

  • @vangestelwijnen
    @vangestelwijnen Před rokem +5

    Incredible footage! Imagine one son stationed in Köningsberg and the other at The Minkees.... Fate and location were so connected.

  • @asgautbakke8687
    @asgautbakke8687 Před rokem +174

    I know a station of Wehrmacht soldiers who got to surrender well after the Minquers. Long after!
    Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine were branches of service more dependent on weather than the army. Submarines put up and hid automatic weather sensors but such automatization was primitive then, so a number of manned weather observation stations were placed at isolated and faraway locations.
    These stations were in continuous radio contact with Kriegsmarine's meteorological service and at the DNB, the national radio broadcasting service of Das Reich, also they listened in to news report at BBC and various US and Canadian radio broadcasts. They were in other words fully well aware of the German surrender of May 9th.
    But so far away and isolated as they were, evacuating them wasn't straightforwards, certainly not in the chaotic time after the downfall of the Nazi regime. They send repeated and ever more desperate call for rescue to anyone willing to come and take them back home. They staff had to live like eskimos until rescue reached them. I'm not quite sure about the date for the evacuation of the last station, at northeastern Greenland, but the September 9th is a date occuring to me.

    • @tech9803
      @tech9803 Před rokem +61

      There was a German weather unit in Svalbard who surrendered September 4, 1945. They were forgotten after the national surrender, continued to radio weather reports but no-one was responding for months. Finally they made contact and a Norwegian sealing boat was sent to collect them. They were said to be the last.

    • @danepcarver4951
      @danepcarver4951 Před rokem +7

      My Great Uncle Ib Poulsen operated a weather station in Northeast Greenland. He was suppose to transmit weather reports by radio in the clear to that both Axis and Allied forces, however after arriving in Greenland the only reports were in Allied coded messages. His and those who worked with him records of WWII are told in the book Sledge Patrol by David Howarth.

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 Před rokem +7

      Yes, I was thinking about this weather reporting station. Trouble is that I can't remember who retold that story? Was it Dr Felton?
      I am sure that Dr Felton can straighten out the mystery as to just which German Outpost was the last to surrender?
      The trouble for the lads in Greenland was that if their radio had failed catastrophically, then they could have slowly died from starvation and or disease and no one would have known about their plight for years. Fortunately, they were able to get someone's attention and they were rescued, but it could just as easily have gone the other way. Not sure if Polar Bears were a regular problem or not.
      Mark from Melbourne Australia

    • @PauloPereira-jj4jv
      @PauloPereira-jj4jv Před rokem +1

      ​@@markfryer9880... a German weather station was already subject in this channel.

    • @simonh6371
      @simonh6371 Před rokem +12

      @@markfryer9880 The last German soldier to surrender was Georg Gaertner, in the USA, in the early 1980s. He had escaped from a POW camp in the US in 1944 and been on the run ever since, even marrying and building up a new identity.

  • @dammad8584
    @dammad8584 Před rokem +3

    History lost, but never forgotten by you Mark Felton ...always incredible and always "the best of the best".......ty Mark Felton

  • @nodarkthings
    @nodarkthings Před rokem +5

    Absolutely fascinating, Dr. Felton. Thank you.

  • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture

    I have an original publication of “Der Adler”, the German publication for the Luftwaffe, in which there was an article about the German troops in the Channel Islands.

    • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
      @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture Před rokem +1

      I forgot to add that a tagline from the article was “Es ist so fein, ein Soldat zu sein.” (It is so fine to be a soldier). Loses a lot in translation.

  • @raymondcoventry1221
    @raymondcoventry1221 Před rokem +7

    I always enjoy Channel Island stories on your channel Mark.

  • @madmanmechanic8847
    @madmanmechanic8847 Před rokem +7

    Mark you never cease to amazes me with your documentary's ! Well done Sir !

  • @Ronald98
    @Ronald98 Před rokem +6

    As usual, Dr.Felton surprises us with information i've never heard before in my life.
    great job Dr. and keep up the good work! 👍

  • @fordfairlane662dr
    @fordfairlane662dr Před rokem +6

    Some of the most interesting history I never knew about but back2life Mark Felton thank you

  • @flonations1323
    @flonations1323 Před rokem +6

    This history is so important. Thank you for all the hard work bringing this to us. Thank you for preserving history

  • @labby2
    @labby2 Před rokem +5

    Whenever I think I have learned a lot about World War II, Dr. Felton, you show me how little I really know. Thank you so much for your amazing content!

  • @naguerea
    @naguerea Před 2 měsíci

    Mark Felton, always a pleasure, thank you.

  • @Asger21
    @Asger21 Před rokem +6

    What a fantastic and fascinating bedtime story from our WW2 history teacher. Thank you Mark, for sharing all this with us!

  • @davidsorensen7438
    @davidsorensen7438 Před rokem +3

    Always a fountain of information sir - thank you

  • @Paggerd
    @Paggerd Před rokem +1

    Love Dr Felton’s comment at the end regarding the lavatory.

  • @BelloBudo007
    @BelloBudo007 Před rokem +2

    Mr. Fenton has done it again. Love it!

  • @johnhemmert3499
    @johnhemmert3499 Před rokem +6

    Mark, your work is epic. Loving every minute of it. Well researched, well formatted, well presented. Kudos, mate! And thank you so much, for a job well done!

  • @vinceely2906
    @vinceely2906 Před rokem +15

    Here we come,
    Forgotten by your fleet,
    Get no funniest looks from,
    No one we meet.
    Hey, hey we're the Minkees,
    People say we Minkee around,
    But we're too busy swimmin,
    And waiting to be found.

  • @ExtraditionLawFirm
    @ExtraditionLawFirm Před měsícem +1

    Thank you!

  • @wordsmithgmxch
    @wordsmithgmxch Před rokem +2

    Classic Felton!! Keep 'em coming!

  • @roberste
    @roberste Před rokem +4

    Yet another terrific video on a story I never hear if before. Thank you!

  • @johnpaquette6990
    @johnpaquette6990 Před rokem +3

    Again, you have given us concise and intriguing snippet of history. Your presentations are superb ! Thank you

  • @ColinH1973
    @ColinH1973 Před rokem +2

    This is undoubtedly one of your best, Mark! Thanks.

  • @terenceburchett6122
    @terenceburchett6122 Před 8 měsíci

    Wonderful to have an eloquent speaker on a Mark Felton Production at last! Thank you.

  • @wingy200
    @wingy200 Před rokem +5

    Yet another fascinating story, Dr. Felton. Have you thought about doing lecture tours? I would pay top dollar to hear you speak in person if you came to the United States. This is one of the best channels on youtube, hands down.

  • @nataliefaust7959
    @nataliefaust7959 Před rokem +2

    Thanks, Mark! I love your work! ♥

  • @johnquinn456
    @johnquinn456 Před rokem +1

    Thank you again, mark.
    You are the best

  • @FuzzyWuzzy75
    @FuzzyWuzzy75 Před rokem +4

    Thank you Mr. Felton for your wonderfully informative content. It is not just educational but also entertaining.
    God bless you
    .

  • @bobbyricigliano2799
    @bobbyricigliano2799 Před rokem +44

    In retrospect, the German garrison was highly fortunate to be posted there. It is amazing that they were overlooked in Spring of 1945 as the high command scoured German territories to cobble together forces for the Battle of Berlin. There was probably no logistical way to transfer the garrison from the island and across to German lines, but AH probably would have ordered them to try anyway, even if it meant their annihilation.

    • @fredericksaxton3991
      @fredericksaxton3991 Před rokem +9

      I always thought that too, but AH left tens of 1000's of troops in Norway right up to the end.

    • @chestersleezer8821
      @chestersleezer8821 Před rokem +7

      Well it would have been a bit of a problem getting them off of the islands and back to Germany since well all of France was in the hands of the Allies and not really sure that they would have wanted to be removed from the islands. They were short on food but no one was shooting at them.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před rokem +2

      The German garrison on a Norwegian island that hung around until September 1945 was in deeper trouble…

    • @mappingshaman5280
      @mappingshaman5280 Před rokem

      And also they would probably just ignore them anyway. Like if you're on an island where the most dangerous thing is stubbing your toe on a rock, why would you go and die in literally hell on earth just because some guy thinks there's a scenario where not everybody dies?

    • @bobbyricigliano2799
      @bobbyricigliano2799 Před rokem +1

      @@chestersleezer8821 Agreed. I doubt they would have been eager to leave the island and return to Germany, even if they could have. On the other hand, the high command sent thousands of children and old men to their deaths to buy themselves a few extra days. They would have rather seen the garrison annihilated by allied forces in a failed relief mission than to have them surrender peacefully and survive the war.

  • @aswanston6648
    @aswanston6648 Před rokem +2

    Another awesome video Dr Felton, thank you.

  • @philiprife5556
    @philiprife5556 Před rokem +1

    Thank you, Mr Felton for such an interesting story. I learned so much in just 10 minutes.

  • @paultapner2769
    @paultapner2769 Před rokem +6

    Now I've got the theme from the Monkees on my mind. But as the Minkees, that is. At least they got picked up a bit quicker than that weather unit on Svalbard. A place probably more people have heard of before.

    • @mattsyson3980
      @mattsyson3980 Před rokem

      In a similar jovial theme there was Peter Sellers in the Pink Panther asking if the organ grinder had a licence for the 'Minkey'. As I now live in France, and not actually that far from the Minkies I suppose I could 'recapture' it for France but on the other hand, I won't bother. I wonder how it features in the Brexit shenanigans?

  • @you-know-who9023
    @you-know-who9023 Před rokem +15

    Very interesting!
    These troops were almost as lucky as German POWs who somehow ended up in Ireland where they were well fed during the war. Allied POWs in Ireland enjoyed a six month holiday until going back to their armies. German POWs in Ireland remained there until the war was over with some eventually settling down in Ireland.😊

    • @roberthaworth8991
      @roberthaworth8991 Před rokem +5

      German POWs in the US had it pretty good. Initially, many were from the Afrika Korps and were high-morale, with a number of arrogant, committed Nazis among them. But as the war went on, increasing numbers were let out to work on building projects and agricultural harvests around their camps, and were by all accounts good, conscientious workers. The same had been true of Germans captured during the American Revolution -- as, the whole brigade garrisoning Trenton, NJ in 1776, and the German wing which surrendered at Saratoga, NY the next year. The guys from Trenton built (on contract, while POWs) many "Hessian" barns , outbuildings, and little stone bridges and dams in the upper Shenandoah Valley that are still in use today. Once the final peace agreement had been ratified, a Hessian private who'd been captured at Trenton deserted the army column on its march from the Shenandoah back to its port of embarkation in NY. He got clean away, settled down not far from Trenton itself, took up the butcher's trade, married a local girl, and sired a large family. Years later he chanced to meet President George Washington when the latter was riding out from Philadelphia one day. He told GW that being captured was the best thing that could have happened to him, since his status as a poor peasant in Germany (prior to his impressment into the military) would have afforded him no opportunities. As it was, the Army had paid for his ride to America, where he now owned a business, had money in his pocket, and was both a free man and respected member of his community.

  • @leonardcroft1467
    @leonardcroft1467 Před rokem

    Thank You Dr. Felton
    Always Enjoy Your Videos .

  • @codlinks78
    @codlinks78 Před rokem

    Another amazing video about something i knew nothing about yet studied in school. Thank you Mark.

  • @NothingIsKnown00
    @NothingIsKnown00 Před rokem +4

    Imagine setting up a garrison, maintain military order and procedure. For the enemy to finally say “whatever. Just leave them there.”

    • @389383
      @389383 Před rokem +3

      The man in charge must have pissed off the man above him. "Screw him, let them starve".

  • @WillmobilePlus
    @WillmobilePlus Před rokem +3

    It's a well-earned cliche to say this, but I literally had NO IDEA about this!
    Amazing little tidbit of history.

  • @samnewman5927
    @samnewman5927 Před rokem

    One of my favourites this one. Thanks Mark. Looking forward to the next lesson

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 Před rokem +1

    Many thanks, Mark, for yet another fascinating story. I really enjoy your videos.

  • @nicholaskelly1958
    @nicholaskelly1958 Před rokem +14

    I am very glad that you mentioned the Toilet! Some 20 years ago I was lucky enough to be able to spend a few days in one of the cottages on Maitresse IIe it is quite an interesting place.
    Historically substantial quantities of granite were extracted from the various reefs around Les Minquiers. In fact granite extraction was the only significant occupation apart from fishing in Les Minquiers.
    From memory didn't the Germans maning the Casquets Lighthouse also surrender after the main islands?

  • @davidthelander1299
    @davidthelander1299 Před rokem +3

    The Minkies feature prominently in a novel by Hammond Innes “The Wreck of the Mary Deare.” Written in 1957. Been one of my favorites most of my life.

    • @olasek7972
      @olasek7972 Před rokem

      Excellent movie, made me interested in scuba diving. I own this movie on Comcast.

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 Před rokem +2

    Always fascinating. Thanks Dr. Felton.

  • @sergio2aa
    @sergio2aa Před rokem +2

    Good job as usual, Mark Felton. Thanks a lot for that.

  • @jackseward7779
    @jackseward7779 Před rokem +3

    You could do a whole segment on forgotten or non-surrendering Japanese troops (particularly in the Philippines).

  • @rolfagten857
    @rolfagten857 Před rokem +7

    According to legend, 3 hundred-year-old feldwebbels still live under the largest bunker on the island.

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge Před rokem

      Ah no 'A! Is that story from the Evening Post still going round 'A? 🤣 Along with the Havalaugh Puffin colony off Les Landes. For those wondering, both stories were posted at the beggining of april.

  • @Astro_Gardener
    @Astro_Gardener Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the upload Mark, never knew this before.

  • @kevinmckenzie8789
    @kevinmckenzie8789 Před rokem

    Another interesting video Dr. Felton. As always, well done. Thank you sir!

  • @epapa737
    @epapa737 Před rokem +8

    Being marooned on a beautiful island with a recreational machine gun sums up my retirement plans

    • @someoneelse7629
      @someoneelse7629 Před rokem

      Yep, I was thinking the same, is the Minkees for sale?

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 Před rokem +9

    Sucks when you are so unimportant that even the enemy forgets about you!😅😂

    • @389383
      @389383 Před rokem

      And what you thought were your comrades in arms.

  • @DanielHammersley
    @DanielHammersley Před rokem +2

    (Chuckles) at the southernmost building facing France...and "long and difficult relationship" ...(snicker). Well said, Dr Felton!

  • @jensenwilliam5434
    @jensenwilliam5434 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Mark!

  • @hondasaurusrex6998
    @hondasaurusrex6998 Před rokem +3

    Ah the pesky Minkees.... sound like something from the inspector Clouseau movies.... Thank you for the video Mr. Felton.

  • @whiteknightcat
    @whiteknightcat Před rokem +5

    The Minkee lavatory brings to mind the classic Monty Python taunting, but this time directed towards the French.

  • @fundamentos3439
    @fundamentos3439 Před rokem +2

    Marvellous ! Thank you for sharing.

  • @chrisstevens3567
    @chrisstevens3567 Před rokem +2

    This guys channel is the real deal. Really makes things interesting and engaging.

  • @CasusBelli_
    @CasusBelli_ Před rokem +4

    Great video as always! Could you do a video on Felix Kersten, Himmlers Masseur? He has a pretty interesting Story