Michael Wittmann: Legend and reality. Villers Bocage, Joe Ekin, Sherbrooke Fusiliers.

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2020
  • In these videos we will visit D-day sites as if I was guiding you.
    Michael Wittmann was a great tank ace, with over 100 tank kills. Credited with having knocked out a whole column of British tanks at Villers Bocage with one Tiger. What's the reality?
    Free Legend to the maps in the videos.
    www.normandy-tour-guide.com/c...
    NORMANDY VECTOR MAP www.normandy-tour-guide.com/c...
    Bibliography
    Battle Zone Villers Bocage
    Tank Ken Tout
    Decision in Normandy Carlo D'Este
    Breakout from Juno Mark Zeukle
    Photos Bundesarchivs
    Illustrated London News
    My Patreon / walkingdday
    Facebook / colinmcgarrytourguide
    Twitter DdayWalking?lang=en
    Linkdin / colin-mcgarry-b0608b110
    Web Site www.normandy-tour-guide.com
    My play list • Walking D-day
    Visited sites - as of date of upload
    Why D-Day
    Pegasus bridge
    Omaha beach
    Sword beach
    Pointe du Hoc
    American airborne
    Utah beach
    Juno beach
    Gold beach
    British airborne
    Saint Marie du Mont
    Waverly Wray
    Omaha inland
    6th June 2020 76th anniversary.
    Battlefield guide in lockdown.
    La Fierre
    Michael Wittman - Villers Bocage - Gaumesnil
    The Malmann line
    Projected visits -
    Band of Brothers
    Merville gun battery
    General Falley
    Longues gun battery
    Arromanches and the Mulberries
    82nd airborne
    101st airborne
    Donald Burgett
    Totalise
    Tractable
    Worthington Force
    Falaise pocket
    Taking St Lo
    Operation Cobra
    Graignes massacre
    Joe Beryle
    Ed Shames
    Angoville au plain
    Battle of Bloody gulch
    Taking Cherbourg
    Maisy gun battery.
    Abbey d'Ardenne and the Canadian 7th June advance
    Hillman
    Douvre radar station
    Photo credits
    US national archives
    Bundes archives

Komentáře • 46

  • @kerrydennison7947
    @kerrydennison7947 Před 2 lety +3

    It is a shame that the Canadians have not received credit and all of the kudos that went along with it

  • @californiadreamin8423
    @californiadreamin8423 Před 3 lety +3

    The Diary of Jake Wardrop is a very interesting read and sheds light on Villers Bocage.

  • @mathieustephens8391
    @mathieustephens8391 Před 3 lety +7

    Thanks for giving credit to the Canadians for Wittman. 3 tigers knocked out by one British tank is no small feat either!

    • @WalkingDday
      @WalkingDday  Před 3 lety +3

      The available evidence points to the Sherbrooke fusiliers.

    • @mathieustephens8391
      @mathieustephens8391 Před 3 lety

      @@WalkingDday I'm sure you've seen this already, but this is a great in depth investigation on it: czcams.com/video/hn-t2JjHny0/video.html

  • @bpeyman68
    @bpeyman68 Před 3 lety +4

    Monty is very underrated

    • @WalkingDday
      @WalkingDday  Před 3 lety +5

      He was, but he had the problem of a big ego like other generals. When things didn’t go as planned, instead of admitting it, he said that that was what he intended. Didn’t always wash.

  • @porkiepie1997
    @porkiepie1997 Před 3 lety +2

    Very informative thank you. I live in Litteau so am able to visit many of the places you feature

    • @WalkingDday
      @WalkingDday  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for watching. It’s great to walk these battle sites.

  • @steveblunt9532
    @steveblunt9532 Před 4 lety +2

    Very interesting. I've been to VB and surrounding areas and tried to follow the events of the battles around there with a book of the events. I wish I'd had my ipad and this video. Really enjoyed it - many thanks.

  • @17pounderapds
    @17pounderapds Před 3 lety +2

    My father was a gunner with the Sherbrooke Fusiliers that day...he never mentioned firing on a Tiger but did spot them in the area

    • @ynot2385
      @ynot2385 Před 2 lety

      My great grand uncle is Michael Wittmann! I'm a 38 year old American that loves world ww2 stuff and just learned of it 2weeks ago! I share the same name actually

    • @paulbantick8266
      @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety

      The Sherwoods did knock out 2 Tigers in that engagement, but not Wittmann's

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 5 měsíci

      @paulbantick8266
      The Sherbrookes definitely got Wittmann. His Tiger 007 was the closest to them.
      Ekins got the three Tigers closest to him. 312, 314 and 009.

  • @redtobertshateshandles
    @redtobertshateshandles Před 3 lety +5

    It's easy to forget the Germans had a lot of practice fighting in Russia. A formidable enemy.

    • @kerrydennison7947
      @kerrydennison7947 Před 4 měsíci

      That is very true..but remember the frame 7th armored division also had a lot of combat experience from North Africa Sicily n the Italian campaign.

  • @kerrydennison7947
    @kerrydennison7947 Před 4 měsíci

    If general Montgomery was in charge of the land forces. And as I understand the way it was set up all of the other branches were assigned to the land Force Commander as support. Part of the combined air/ land forces that Montgomery put together in the North African campaign. So how could Mallory's Royal Air Force refuse to carry the airborne troops saying it was too dangerous for his pilot,s??? There was probably many cases for the Canadian Commander should have refused the use of their ground forces due to the planning of the battles. I wonder strictly out of curiosity, was there ever a former inquiry made by Montgomery's headquarters to find out why there was not new flank security or reconnaissance ahead of the units and off to the sides in order to prevent ambushes of this type? It seems like maybe this was covered up and there was never a report sent to higher headquarters that would have wound up on general Eisenhower's desk. Case in point. When task force wellborn was ambushed by the king tigers because they did not have any flank security out and lost a lot of tanks and armored vehicles and led to the death of general Rose. General woods who took over for general Rose after his untimely death conducted a thorough investigation and did relieved to lieutenant colonels of command and sent them back to the states. The lieutenant colonel.s subsequently resigned their commissions to avoid Field grades court-martial procedures against them at fort Lee va. Another case in point when the British first met the new hunting panther tank n got shot up very bad during one of their officers order groups, due to the lack of flank and reconnaissance ahead of the main body of tanks.. and that was covered up to avoid a public relations disaster with the people back in London by Montgomery's command. This was a disaster from the beginning when you had the famous seventh armored division of North Africa Fame and Sicily Italy wind up in a very bad position that could have simply been avoided by having reconnaissance units out that could have located the tigers parked on the side of the road.

  • @kevinpowers9024
    @kevinpowers9024 Před 2 lety

    I like your videos. We will be in Normandy in a couple of weeks. We are going to the German Cemetery and we know where Michael Whittmans grave is. I cant find any information on where Bernhard Frerkings grave is. I know he is buried at the German Cemetery also, but I cant find the Plot, row or grave numbers. Can you help me with this? If you know?

    • @WalkingDday
      @WalkingDday  Před 2 lety +1

      Just off the top of my head, B7 R3 G87 Frerking . No it’s one I have noted.
      Some other interesting ones. B25 r4 g 121 Adolph Diekmann ouradour . Decapitated by a Sherman shell.
      B35 g 100 Otto Keller killed at pdh 25 april second bombing raid that destroyed a gun causing them to be moved.
      The graves are numbered by block. Not easy to count.
      B35 g99 Adam Herzberg died after bombing pdh 25 april.

    • @kevinpowers9024
      @kevinpowers9024 Před 2 lety

      @@WalkingDday Awesome! Thank you. I'm watching your Juno Beach video now.

    • @kevinpowers9024
      @kevinpowers9024 Před 2 lety

      Frerking in Block 7. So, as soon as we walk in the main entrance, Block 7 is on the far left. Whittman is on the opposite side in Block 47. That sound correct?

  • @kerrydennison7947
    @kerrydennison7947 Před rokem

    I wonder why they British did not have any flank security or any reconnaissance units out they could have easily found these tigers and avoided all this bloodshed same thing happened with the third guards armor brigade Captain Willie Whitelaw they were assembling to have an orders conference and got hit by artillery and then the hunting panther tanks total like a perimeter and reconnaissance. And the story of Captain Diaz Spoting Whitman's tiger going down the road n his Gunner had went to take care of personal business, if this had been an American crews tank, the captain would have simply drop down into the gunners seat and took over the gunner duties and fired on the side of the tiger, I am quite sure that all British tank crewmen were trained to do other people's duties within the tank same as the American Crews were. So his story is a little suspect of being believable, myself personally from serving 6 years in the United States army armour Corps. We were trained and actually executed the duties of everyone within the tank from the driver on through the tank commanders duty's...

    • @kerrydennison7947
      @kerrydennison7947 Před rokem +1

      Sadly the same thing happened with third armored division task force wellborn they decided to go into the attack without any flank security and the King tiger shot them up very bad probably the last major engagement between American tanks and German tanks on the Western front

  • @kerrydennison7947
    @kerrydennison7947 Před 6 měsíci

    If that had been an American tank crew the tank commander with a simply drop down in the gunners seat and lit up that tiger, even today all American armored vehicle Crews must be familiar with the jobs of every other member of the team. Guess the cast class system of the British army officers does not allow them to soil their hands with enlisted man's dutys.. seems like a shortcoming in the training.

  • @paulbantick8266
    @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety +2

    And just to add: What absolute rubbish. Wittmann's Tiger did not have it's turret blow into the air and land some metres behind. The turret toppled off to the right of the hull. Close scrutiny of an August 9th 1944 aerial, reconnaissance picture shows this. The hulk had been moved forward some time after the battle to remove some of its track links, thus the position of the turret when Serge Varin took the famous pictures in the summer of 1945.
    The Documentary is both inaccurate and misleading. As is Norm Christie's film on the same subject.
    The Sherbrooke Fusiliers were at the Chateau and farm complex of Gaumesnil, where they took up position behind a South facing and South-East facing, 12ft, (3.5m) boundary wall (which they knocked through with their Shermans in order to be able to observe and fire the tank's guns. The wall facing South, with visible repair marks, is still there) facing the Tiger's advance, not pointing east over the N158 towards, the Northamptonshire Yeomanry position who were pointing to the west. Anyway, there was an embankment and a hedgerow lining the N158 with an enclosure, a wall, a pear orchard and a building on the other side of the road which protected Wittmann's left flank on his advance North and to the East of the N158 and totally blocked any action coming from the Sherbrooke's position.
    What unfolded was this. At the Northamptonshire Yeomanry's position, Ekins' Firefly advanced out of an apple orchard at 750 to 950 yards from Wittmann's four Tigers' and fired at the rearmost Tiger (314) which he hit but did not see it burn so he fired a second time, hit the Tiger again and it started to burn. The Firefly then reversed back into the orchard where it started to take fire from Wittmann's tank. A near miss caused the commanders hatch to fall and injure the commander so he was quickly replaced by a Sergeant who advanced the Firefly again. Ekins fired one shot at the Tiger (007) that was firing at them. He hit that Tiger and it 'blew up' so he didn't need to fire a second shot. The firefly repeated the retiring into and out of, the orchard and lined up on a third Tiger (008?) that was "milling about" Ekins fired at and hit the Tiger but like the first of his victims, it did not start to burn so he fired a second round which did cause the Tiger to burn.
    The Sherbrookes did knock out two Tigers that day, Hofflinger's (A crucial eyewitness) that was further South and on the N158, Knocked out by Radley-Walters' 'who was the Commander' tanks. And a Tiger (312) that was farthest north, by two of their Fireflys that were about 500 to 800 yards to the North of the Sherbrookes main position.

    • @WalkingDday
      @WalkingDday  Před 2 lety +1

      Interesting comments. I wonder how you can be so sure of events in an action surrounded by so much fog.

    • @paulbantick8266
      @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety +1

      @@WalkingDday I have the words of Hofflinger, Tout, Ekins, Radley-Waters, and regimental diaries. Infact, there is more knowledge of the action than one thinks. There is also the testimony of Serg Varin who discovered the wrecks a year later. Also, we have the 9th of August Recce photo which shows all the area. I have a 1947 aerial survey photo of the same area which shows in more detail, the positions and especially the the not insignificant, buildings, orchard, banked hedgerow and wall directly opposite Gaumesnil and the N158, directly and right up against, the road which would have greatly protected Wittmann's Tigers' left flank . As an aside, I have a 1978 survey picture too, which shows the changes of the area, and of course, Google Maps. I have a pre-war Photo of Gaumesnil's Chateau and wooded area surrounding it.
      I have read Reid's book 'No Holding Back' where this 'scenario' comes from, and to be honest, his account is full of holes. From where Wittmann was, his positioning of Ekins (as far away as possible, and right in a corner). Oh! Even if Ekin had engaged Wittmann at over 1,000 yards, (which he didn't) the APCBC was fully capable of defeating a Tiger, especially it's 80mm side armour. I believe that Reid (and others) also mentions the so-called 'fact' that the 17pdr was inaccurate over 500 yards, which was blatantly not true (unless Ekins was firing APDS, which he was not). Many Firefly crews engaged and destroyed tanks at well over 1,000 yards. Even Ekins, with his last shot in anger, destroyed a MkIV at 1,200 yards. There was another in his regiment who destroyed a MkIV at 1,500 yards.
      Have you seen a good clear example of the 1944 aerial photo? I suggest you do (spot the Spitfire) and study the photo carefully. Oh! You will see no holes in the N158 facing wall other than the access and egress gaps for the drive to the Chateau and farmers house. If you look at the South facing 'dogleg' wall facing South and South-East, you will see clearly where the Sherbrookes took up position by the spoil where the wall was knocked through. Radley Walters, when he paid a visit a few years before he died, said "My wall is still there" That wall is the South-facing portion that still remained. Something that Norm Christie for example, does not make clear.
      Serg Varin (in the summer of 1945) was cycling on the N158 when he needed a pee. So he got off his bicycle, on the side of the road, pushed his way through the hedgerow in order to be out of sight and relieved himself. that's when he saw the wreck of Tiger 314 ( he said that he wouldn't have seen it had he not needed to take a pee as it could not be seen from the road due to the hedgerow).
      Varin had a camera with him so walked up to 314 to take pictures and have a look at it. He then noticed to his left, out of the corner of his eye, Wittmann's 007 with its turret laying on its roof, about 10 metres to the rear-right of the hull. So! just a year later, at least one very good first-hand account of just how hard it was to see anything beyond the N158 due to the famous and notorious Normandy Hedgerow, was told.
      To have the position of Radley-Walters' tanks lined up facing the way you 'and others' have shown would have been silly in the extreme. Radley-Walters was a very able and competent commander.

    • @paulbantick8266
      @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety

      @@fallschirmjager0000 The mistake came through quoting 'mainly' from memory of what I found in my research. So thanks for the nudge. PS. I have edited the post.

    • @paulbantick8266
      @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety

      @@fallschirmjager0000 I'll see what I can do.

    • @paulbantick8266
      @paulbantick8266 Před 2 lety

      @@fallschirmjager0000 I tried to upload pictures with an explanation, several times. Even though they uploaded, I posted them, I checked that the pictures were OK and pressed reply and the post went through. On closing the thread and reopening it again, the post had disappeared?. I will try again but from my other computer...

  • @michaels5582
    @michaels5582 Před 2 měsíci

    I want my 24 minutes back. That was utter shit.