Operation Market Garden

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Number one in a series planned about battles and other historical events. The first video's will focus on WWII battles. More than anything else these first video's are a proof of concept. Therefore I would like to hear your feedback. If you like the video please press thumbs up! And if you are interested in seeing more subscribe.

Komentáře • 512

  • @praisetheomnissiah4475
    @praisetheomnissiah4475 Před 4 lety +46

    This whole clusterfuck of an operation and why it failed can best be summed up like this. "I think the Germans had something to do with it." Honestly, no one gives the Germans credit that they were able to put up stiff resistance where necessary and made pivotal moves that ensured the allied offensive became bogged down.

    • @djmech3871
      @djmech3871 Před 3 lety +2

      I think the British were too busy brewing Tea to fight. It’s too bad John Frost was not reinforced.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +3

      Bernard didn't show up for Monty Garden he pushed for then got this operation approved.Then got lost when it started to unravel unlike a real commanders Field Marshall Walter Model and General Kurt Student who understood modern mobile warfare

    • @anirprasadd
      @anirprasadd Před 11 měsíci +2

      It had way too many moving parts and zero margin of error. So anything that could go wrong pretty much did go wrong

    • @willdoyle29
      @willdoyle29 Před 3 měsíci

      Recent Times article that Anthony Blunt may have betrayed it

  • @tpsu129
    @tpsu129 Před 7 lety +328

    It was 30th Corps, not the 30th Corpse.

    • @duanee.tressler8072
      @duanee.tressler8072 Před 7 lety +2

      XXX Corps (Roman numerals) in the King's Army / British Royal Army -armored tank & armored personnel carriers units

    • @EthanThomson
      @EthanThomson Před 6 lety +82

      yeah, but corps is pronounced core, not corpse
      a corpse is a dead body, a corps creates them

    • @louisburke8927
      @louisburke8927 Před 6 lety +4

      Exactly hahahahaha

    • @bubbythecuck978
      @bubbythecuck978 Před 6 lety +19

      How the fuck does an adult not know this?
      I promise guys, not all Americans are as fucking dim-witted as this youtuber.

    • @arashrezaee1464
      @arashrezaee1464 Před 5 lety +6

      I don't know man they did have a lot of casualties so corps kinda sounds right

  • @paulbrown8478
    @paulbrown8478 Před 3 lety +34

    Corps is a dead body- this is a well intentioned piece disastrously narrated

  • @fhvtxrek6584
    @fhvtxrek6584 Před 5 lety +56

    I bike across the john frost bridge every day!

    • @glennkane6954
      @glennkane6954 Před 5 lety +2

      I am sure it is a very nice place. I hope to visit one day.

    • @crafter170
      @crafter170 Před 4 lety +6

      I was there 2 days ago to see for myself what I was told first hand .A very nice Dutch woman helped me with information of the area and took my picture for me .So nice .Much appreciated .God bless .Love from Scotland. X

    • @otteroperator3822
      @otteroperator3822 Před 3 lety

      Went to Holland last Summer and saw as many bridges as I could. Beautiful country.

    • @adriannv2562
      @adriannv2562 Před 3 lety

      lucky

  • @uniquity4103
    @uniquity4103 Před 6 lety +81

    good vid, but i cringe everytime he says "corpse" instead of corps XD

  • @KameTurtle_
    @KameTurtle_ Před 3 lety +13

    Seeing the pictures of the old bridge makes me appreciate Post Scriptums accuracy.

  • @michaelmorrison5675
    @michaelmorrison5675 Před 6 lety +38

    The 3 airborne divisions totaled ~30,000 men, not 20K

  • @deckerhoff7752
    @deckerhoff7752 Před 7 lety +62

    I don't think Market Garden could have ever worked, there was too much that had to be "perfect" for it to succeed, and everyone knows that in combat nothing ever goes as planned, ESPECIALLY with the unfamiliarity of how to use airborne troops. Even just one blown bridge and the whole element of speed is lost. And asking the Airborne divisions to hold their DZ's for days AND to assault bridges and towns (especially one the size of Arnhem...) is just madness. Doens't matter if you're the Red Devils or 101st or 82nd, paratroopers cant hold an open field against an SS Armored Division, let alone all of Arnhem.
    Great video, its always good to see timelapse maps like this to understand complicated situations where units are scattered all over. Trying to read about Market Garden is very confusing, i can only imagine the confusion of the commanders. I think another interesting video would be the Battle of Mogadishu. Its similar to this one where theres a really sketchy plan with almost no backup preparations in case things go wrong. And of course things go very, very wrong.
    Oh and by the way "Corps" is pronounced like "core" :)

    • @mapsofhistory6499
      @mapsofhistory6499  Před 7 lety +9

      I do agree that the plan was doomed to fail, it was far to bold. It captures the imagination though.

    • @deckerhoff7752
      @deckerhoff7752 Před 7 lety +4

      Definitely. Without all the details the plan sounds foolproof, drop at three points and simply thread the needle. But 60 miles through occupied country in 2 days was simply impossible.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 7 lety +5

      The plan was sound, all it needed was each unit to do its job in securing the bridge it was assigned. The US 82nd failed at Nijmegen. The failure came down to General Gavin of the 82nd. They dawdled for 6 hours before attacking the bridge, and then with only 40 men, with 3,000 jumping, and failed because they allowed the Germans to reinforce the bridge.

    • @xWhocaresxX
      @xWhocaresxX Před 6 lety +5

      John Burns you can’t blame it solely on one regiment. XXX corps, was veeeeerrrrrrryyyyy lax in their approach towards after the 82nd and XXX secured the bridge. Plus the boats they got to cross the river didn’t even have fucking oars 😂😂. So they had to use hands, rifle butts, and their pockets to get a breeze to get to the other side.
      I wish in this video it’d show how close XXX corps was to the 1st. It almost worked

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety +4

      xWhocaresX,
      I blamed it on the 82nd, because they never did what they were supposed to do. XXX Corps got to Nijmegen *ahead* of schedule. Instead of rolling over the Nijmegen bridge they were disappointed to see it still in German hands. In country with lots of bridges and canals, the 82nd didn't even take proper boats, but took a bulldozer. They used the British Bailey bridge engineers boats which were used to construct the bridges. 20% of the men in the boats were British Sappers, who lost more of their numbers than the 82nd men.

  • @JuanPerez-vv5lk
    @JuanPerez-vv5lk Před 4 lety +6

    I just watched the movie A Bridge To Far. Excellent movie and Frost was badass

  • @RomanRoblox
    @RomanRoblox Před 6 lety +20

    Holy fuck never knew that the operation happened like a kilometer away from my house.

    • @zuko803
      @zuko803 Před 6 lety +3

      MelonMan/RomanScrub have you ever watching Band of Brothers ? everyone knows from that tv series I think

  • @brians2808
    @brians2808 Před 4 lety +15

    It’s a shame, A lot of work went into making this video but I can’t even watch it because the narrator keeps pronouncing corps “corpse”

  • @thewoolycontacts
    @thewoolycontacts Před 5 lety +75

    Omg its pronounced CORE! NOT CORPSE! lord jesus!

    • @sce2aux464
      @sce2aux464 Před 5 lety +1

      But that's how Obama pronounces it! :D :D :D

    • @robkeeley3823
      @robkeeley3823 Před 5 lety +1

      I can't listen now! corpse...come on

    • @DutchSkeptic
      @DutchSkeptic Před 5 lety +3

      If you think that's bad, wait until a Dutch person here complains how badly pronounced all the toponyms are :D

    • @kornami8678
      @kornami8678 Před 5 lety

      Either the narrator is ignorant or they are utilizing a computer voice. If it is a computer voice, then they are using a text to voice converter program. It's not that smart. If words are pronounced differently than they spelled, then you have to change the spelling of the text to guarantee it is pronounced correctly. For instance you may want to say that 30th corps advanced to the river. In the text you have to change it to say 30th cor advanced to the river, so that the computer pronounces it correctly.

    • @adepressedcatwithabadnicot246
      @adepressedcatwithabadnicot246 Před 3 lety +3

      @@sce2aux464 a year old but still stfu. He hasn't been president for like 3 when you made this comment, get the fuck over him, snowflake.

  • @kaaskaasx
    @kaaskaasx Před 4 lety +7

    My grandad lived then in arnhem, he survived it and he told me everything about it.... It was a hard battle....

  • @TangoNevada
    @TangoNevada Před 5 lety +3

    You just summed up a 3 hour movie (A bridge too far) in 7 minutes and saved me a boat load of time.

    • @Billy_the_Greek
      @Billy_the_Greek Před 5 lety +1

      Watch the movie. It's good and has a lot of famous actors

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety +1

      The movie is so authentic that Montgomery didn't appear in it either

  • @canuck_gamer3359
    @canuck_gamer3359 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I've been an amateur historian for 30 years and I have studied this operation as much as any other. At the end of the day, the responsibility has to fall upon Eisenhower because he was the one who allowed it to take place when he really should have known better. Eisenhower should have trusted Bradley by that point and he (Bradley) bitterly objected to this farce. I don't know how history ended up letting Eisenhower off the hook and dumping all the blame on Montgomery but in any case, the commanding officer is always where the buck stops. This never should have been allowed to take place- period.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 7 měsíci

      You've read the wrong books then IKE should have been reassigned and the counter productive absent Bernard sacked!!! O'Connor.Auchinleck or Simmonds of the Canadian Army would have been a great choice - Monty was ass and was on the same side as 2 emerging world powers

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- Před 2 měsíci

      @@bigwoody4704 Who knows where O Connor might have ended up if he had not been captured by the Italians in 1941. Perhaps the campaign in North-Africa lasts a few months less long. With the reinforcements I think he could have taken Tripoli before Rommel could do much about it.

  • @Daniel-rm9xf
    @Daniel-rm9xf Před 6 lety +7

    this is an very important mission for me being dutch, i go to that place and keep imaging what it would be 70 years+ ago

  • @oriel229
    @oriel229 Před 4 lety +3

    MARKET GARDEN, SCREWED UP IN THE PLANNING STAGE.

  • @craigisbond007
    @craigisbond007 Před 5 lety +12

    I honestly couldn’t finish the video due to the narrators inability to correctly pronounce “corps”

    • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
      @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 Před 3 lety +1

      Did he not even watch ‘Gettysburg’?

    • @kennethmartin1300
      @kennethmartin1300 Před 2 lety

      Me too, even 2 years later they haven't bothered to fix it, I'm killing the vid at 3:16. I cannot believe an adult narrating a vid would have never heard "corps" before.

  • @ncsuor
    @ncsuor Před měsícem

    I was lucky enough to visit the area. It is a very special place to visit and the Museum is amazing.

  • @bibostin1182
    @bibostin1182 Před 7 lety +10

    Really great video! Makes the subject accessible without thinning out too many details. Looking forward to more.

  • @yairmottes6622
    @yairmottes6622 Před 5 lety +34

    that's what happens, when you make a fool a fieldmarshel.

    • @davecocoa3866
      @davecocoa3866 Před 5 lety +8

      monty wasnt a fool and thats coming from me an AMERICAN

    • @TheSupart91
      @TheSupart91 Před 5 lety +3

      @@davecocoa3866 monty used our larger American forces like a kid whos given his parents inheritance before his 18th birthday

    • @doolittlegeorge
      @doolittlegeorge Před 5 lety

      you mean Von Rundstedt?

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety +1

      Um no he wanted to retreat - no surprise there,Gens.Collins & Harmon ignored the rube and went on the offensiv.Monty was forced to apologise for lying about his contributions.Pretty much like he did after the war

    • @xaoc6084
      @xaoc6084 Před 5 lety +1

      Arturo Hernandez More British died in Operation Market Garden than American didn’t they?

  • @willemvanbeek5210
    @willemvanbeek5210 Před rokem +2

    My grandfather was 17 years old and living in Nijmegen during market garden, sadly he passed away before i was born. I would have loved to hear his story’s

  • @johanderuiter9842
    @johanderuiter9842 Před 3 měsíci +1

    They encountered the regrouping 9th and 10th Waffen SS Divisions, SS and SS Landstorm units, German Heer's LXXXIV Korps, Kampfgruppe Walther, Kampfgruppe Chill and a good number of other Heer and Luftwaffe field units that showed our friends what a real war is. They cut Hell's Highway on three occassions and long enough to cause a debacle. It wasn't a failure, it was just a test of willpower.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The failure to secure the Nijmegen highway bridge on the first day was a command failure in 82nd Airborne Division (Gavin) and the 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment (Lindquist). Lindquist failed to interpret Gavin's instruction to send his 1st Battalion directly to the bridge after landing with the required urgency. This exposed the weakness of Gavin's divisional plan, since he assigned his least aggressive and experienced regiment to the critical Nijmegen mission, and also discarded a British request to drop a battalion on the north end of the Nijmegen bridge, and that suggestion in itself was a replacement for USAAF officers Brereton and Williams at 1st Allied Airborne Army having deleted Browning's planned glider coup de main assaults on the Arnhem-Nijmegen-Grave bridges.
      The Germans didn't need an invitation to occupy Nijmegen and reinforce its bridges - the door was left open for them.

  • @andym9571
    @andym9571 Před 4 lety +5

    This completely misses the point that the 82nd were supposed to take the bridge at Nijmagen as quickly as possible before 30 Corps arrived. They didnt because General Gavin of the 82nd prioritised the taking of the Heights outside Nijmagen. As a result the bridge wasn't taken until 30 Corps turned up and as a result became 36 hours late.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety

      The Tanks sat when it was taken and it wasn't taken until they arrived,go take on armor with a Thompson or a M-1

  • @stevegek
    @stevegek Před 5 lety +6

    At 7:16, in the far right corner, I can see the window I'm sitting behind right now. :D

  • @jess2111
    @jess2111 Před 4 lety +2

    THIS VIDEO REMIND ME ABOUT THE MOVIE " A BRIDGE TOO FAR".

    • @franiyl4956
      @franiyl4956 Před 4 lety +1

      I watched that move 1 hour agi wtf

    • @franiyl4956
      @franiyl4956 Před 4 lety +2

      And yeah the movie is about this operation

  • @loafgeneral
    @loafgeneral Před 5 lety +8

    They should have used Mantreads

  • @RonaldReaganRocks1
    @RonaldReaganRocks1 Před 4 lety +3

    Monty screwed this up proper. Patton beat him across Sicily, and he was looking to outdo Patton, but he fumbled again in Market Garden. Patton was a better commander, plain and simple.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 4 lety +2

      Total Rubbish.
      There is not a shred of evidence that Montgomery ever tried to outdo Patton.
      Why would he?
      Montgomery was an army group commander in another army and thus was more senior than Patton.
      Patton got himself sidelined for D-Day and Normandy by attacking his own soldiers and was then left to command a single US army.
      As for Sicily read this:
      From a review of BITTER VICTORY The Battle for Sicily, 1943, By Carlo D'Este.
      Review written by Walter Lord in the New York Times: 27/11/1988.
      ‘Montgomery was heading for Messina too, but the German forces still on the island threw up a tough defense line and it was late July before Montgomery worked his way through them and resumed his advance. Fans of the movie ''Patton'' think they know what happened next. Montgomery marched into Messina at the head of his triumphant troops - to find a smirking Patton waiting for him. Mr. D'Este assures us it didn't happen that way. Patton was indeed trying to beat Montgomery to Messina, but Montgomery would not make a race of it. He wanted only to keep the Germans from escaping and realized Patton was in the best position to accomplish that. In fact he urged Patton to use roads assigned to the Eighth Army.’
      For your convenience, the link below will take you to this review…
      www.nytimes.com/1988/11/27/books/the-finish-line-was-messina.html

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 lety

      Bull Crap monty later admitted the Americans outperformed him in Sicily.Alexander was giving him the paved roads and preferable routes and the rube still stutter stepped it like everything else he did

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 4 lety +1

      Ronald Reagan Rocks1
      Again, for those do not read:
      From a review of BITTER VICTORY The Battle for Sicily, 1943, By Carlo D'Este.
      Review written by Walter Lord in the New York Times: 27/11/1988.
      ‘Montgomery was heading for Messina too, but the German forces still on the island threw up a tough defense line and it was late July before Montgomery worked his way through them and resumed his advance. Fans of the movie ''Patton'' think they know what happened next. Montgomery marched into Messina at the head of his triumphant troops - to find a smirking Patton waiting for him. Mr. D'Este assures us it didn't happen that way. Patton was indeed trying to beat Montgomery to Messina, but Montgomery would not make a race of it. He wanted only to keep the Germans from escaping and realized Patton was in the best position to accomplish that. In fact he urged Patton to use roads assigned to the Eighth Army.’
      For your convenience, the link below will take you to this review…
      www.nytimes.com/1988/11/27/books/the-finish-line-was-messina.html
      Btw BigWoody also goes by he name of Para Dave. He is from Ohio in the US of A and he seems to like posting on CZcams when he is out of school.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 lety +1

      *ladislas Farago - Patton: Ordeal and Triumph (New York: Astor-Honor, Inc., Inc., 1964), p. 505* 'If Manstein was Germany's greatest strategist during World War II, Balck has strong claims to be regarded as our finest field commander. He has a superb grasp of tactics and great qualities of leadership' - Major-General von Mellenthin
      General Balck, commenting on the Lorraine Campaign, said: "Patton was the outstanding tactical genius of World War II. I still consider it a privilege and an unforgettable experience to have had the honor to oppose him"
      *From Patton:A Genius for War,By Carlo D'Este* After the War General Fritz Bayerlein commander of Panzer Lehr Division and the Afrika Corp.He assessed the escape of Rommel's Panzers after Alamein *I do not think General Patton would have let us get away so easily" said Bayerlein .Comparing Patton with Guderian and Montgomery with Von Rundstedt*

    • @HeadHunterSix
      @HeadHunterSix Před 3 lety

      @@thevillaaston7811 Patton was assigned command of the "Ghost Divisions" which was an elaborate counter-intelligence plan to distract the Germans from the actual Normandy invasion. So yes, in a way he didn't have a lot of actual soldiers as these divisions existed only on paper, but it was a convincing ruse that _worked_ .
      I love how every time a Brit tries to make it sound like the Americans were slackers while the Brits were delayed, they fall back on "tough opposition on route" or some BS. Monty was slow to Palermo just like Horrocks was slow to Nijmegen. It wasn't Gavin's job to get XXX Corps up Hell's Highway - he had taken the bridge by the time they got around to showing up.

  • @faninho2210
    @faninho2210 Před 6 lety +33

    I live in Arnhem!

    • @mcj2219
      @mcj2219 Před 5 lety +1

      Faninho i lived in Arnhem!

    • @Haasenpad
      @Haasenpad Před 5 lety

      czcams.com/video/hmaskz-LLoU/video.html

    • @hmshood9212
      @hmshood9212 Před 5 lety +2

      Watch out for a descendant of Jimmy Patterson barging through your house!

    • @jklhjkhjl
      @jklhjkhjl Před 5 lety +2

      my grandfather fought at arnhem in this battle also one of the few to return uninjured all at the age of 15/16 thank fuck the poles showed up otherwise i may not of been here

    • @hiddevanrenssen5129
      @hiddevanrenssen5129 Před 5 lety

      Haha ik ook

  • @nickdanger3802
    @nickdanger3802 Před 2 lety +4

    "The 82nd Airborne Division, however, certainly does not deserve any particular criticism for this as their priorities appear to be a further product of the blind optimism that dogged Operation Market Garden, of which everyone involved was guilty. At Nijmegen, as with everywhere else, the assumption was that resistance would be light and so the main concern of the airborne units was to make the advance of the ground forces as rapid and as uncomplicated as possible, instead of devoting all their attention to primary objectives. Furthermore, it should be understood that the 82nd Airborne Division had by far the most complicated plan of any of the Airborne units involved with Market Garden, their troops being required to capture numerous objectives over a considerable expanse of terrain."
    Pegasus Archive In Depth 30. Reasons for the Failure page

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před rokem +1

      Opinion.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem +1

      @@thevillaaston7811 - also ignores the fact that the 82nd had a completely free hand in Nijmegen for the vital first few hours and failed to take advantage of it. The "regiment of SS" troops Gavin was told might be in Nijmegen was the 'sanitised' information from Ultra that the 10.SS-Panzer-Division (reduced to a regimental battlegroup in Normandy) was in the eastern Netherlands, but their exact location was unknown. In the event it was actually a greater threat to 1st Airborne, because II./SS-Panzer-Regiment 10 (aka Kampfgruppe Reinhold) based at Vorden needed the Arnhem bridge to get to Nijmegen, but in spite of that the 1st Parachute Brigade seized the Arnhem bridge and denied its use to the enemy for 80 hours.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem +2

      Monty doesn't show up as the plan comes apart and Carrington stops 8 miles away. But in Britain they'll give you lofty titles like Field Marshall and LORD ,can't make that shyt up. Carrington and Guards Armor stopped in Lent and stayed there for 18 hours . The Germans,Irish Guards and GIs ALL recorded this - you may now return to your Britsh Mythology

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před rokem +2

      @@davemac1197 Why did it take 1st AB four hours to go 4 miles/6k from LZ Z to the rail bridge only to get there in time to see it blown up?

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem +2

      @@nickdanger3802 - six hours?
      The 2nd Parachute Battalion dropped at 1445, left the DZ at 1500, reached Oosterbeck Laag by around 1730, from where C Company began its attack on the rail bridge. The bridge was blown at approximately 1800 by a Sprengkommando that had been stationed there for months and was blown with a platoon from C Company actually on the bridge.

  • @mattygates1
    @mattygates1 Před 5 lety +8

    The British, Irish Guards and American Airborne soldiers fought valantly. It was Eishenhower appeasing Monty that screwed this up. Should have given Patton the gasoline and we would have been in Berlin before the Soviets. Couldn't do that because we had to appease Stalin too.

    • @mattygates1
      @mattygates1 Před 5 lety +1

      @John CornellDuring the build up for Market Garden the Germans used the time to reorganize and fortify Metz. Patton was also being ordered to conserve supplies while going against French forts occupied by germans, Attacks were repelled so XX corps were taken out of the line to train on methods of attacking these fortresses. I get that it took a while. If he had been allowed to keep pushing instead of hold the Germans would not have had time to reorganize at Metz

    • @mattygates1
      @mattygates1 Před 5 lety +1

      @John Cornell Would agree that they were both great taticians. Would have been a much longer war without them.

    • @mattygates1
      @mattygates1 Před 5 lety

      And cheers to you as well. Best Allies the the USA has ever had.

    • @robertbaker4284
      @robertbaker4284 Před 5 lety +1

      Berlin was never an objective of the American forces. Gen. Marshal didn't want to spill American blood in a drive toward Berlin when the Yalta Conference had already decided that Berlin was to fall withing the Soviet sector of a post war divided Germany. Marshal saw no need to take Berlin at a high cost when it was to be given back to the Soviets anyway. As it was, the capture of Berlin cost the Red Army 100,000 casualties. Marshal quite rightly wanted no part of an ultimately futile effort.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety

      @@robertbaker4284
      What has that got to do with Market Garden?

  • @kicksavonturen7683
    @kicksavonturen7683 Před 4 lety +1

    Its raining man amen

  • @vaughnrice6103
    @vaughnrice6103 Před 6 lety

    My father, Wm. V Rice, told me about this event and how the 82nd under the leadership of Maggie stormed the river under fire using their rifle butts as ors as they worked their way to the Nijmegen Bridge. . They crossed the river and he said they were sitting ducks and many in his boat were killed. He and his brother Daun Rice (Who was killed on the 26th) fought to take the bridge. He said that young girls as young as 14 were scripted by the Germans to fight or be killed on the spot. Only 7% of his company survived. Sad but history teaches us somethings. Your video is great in laying out what was happening. Thanks.

    • @willb8684
      @willb8684 Před 6 lety

      hmmm maybe they didnt bring boats because dumb fuck boy browning used them for his stupid useless HQ....

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety

      will B
      *You are a complete idiot.*

  • @aaronrowell3566
    @aaronrowell3566 Před 5 měsíci

    Watching from NW AR, hoping we get lucky.

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Před 11 měsíci +1

    1:22 Even IF Market Garden had had no opposition, the supply line to Normandy was too long.
    There was no way to exploit the breakthru without supplies coming in thru Antwerp.
    Market Garden = Barbarossa
    Same wishful thinking "if you kick the door the building will come crashing down"

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 2 měsíci +1

      "There was no way to exploit the breakthru without supplies coming in thru Antwerp." - That's why the exploitation was to take place after Antwerp was opened. EIsenhower's strategy was for all armies to advance to the Rhine and establish multiple crossings, and then advance into Germany after Antwerp was open. MARKET GARDEN was British 2nd Army's advance to the Rhine and only supposed to go as far as the Zuider Zee (Ijsselmeer) coast and establish bridgeheads on the river Ijssel - the last Rhine delta distributary before the German border. Montgomery had planned for Canadian 1st Army to clear the Scheldt estuary to open Antwerp as the next 21st Army Group operation and were repositioning themselves around Antwerp during MARKET GARDEN in preparation for this.

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Před 2 měsíci

      @@davemac1197 From Imperial War Museum
      "Field Marshal Montgomery believed that the Allies should employ one bold stroke to shorten the war. His plan, Operation Market Garden, would put the Allies across the Rhine on Germany's frontier in a few days and possibly end the war by Christmas 1944."
      Montgomery sold Market Garden as "solution" to NOT having Antwerp open. His pitch was that a "bold" stroke would end the war quickly and reach Berlin WITHOUT large logistics support.
      Montgomery (later, after the failure) retconned his participation in the plans and fudged the objectives.
      Market Garden was poorly executed, yes. But it was fundamentally flawed in the premise that they could finish the war it WITHIN the constraints of lacking a suitable port.
      Respectfully.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@ricardokowalski1579 - with respect, this is the same problem as the Cornelius Ryan narrative, first established in his book A Bridge Too Far (1974), and followed by many historians since, until the more recent second cut at history challenged that narrative in the 2010s with authors like Dutch researcher Rick Poulussen (Lost at Nijmegen, 2011 and Little Sense or Urgency, 2014) and Swedish historian Christer Bergström (Arnhem 1944 - An Epic Battle Revisited vols 1 and 2, 2019-2020). The IWM's website is out of date and has, like Cornelius Ryan, conflated the three items on the agenda of Montgomery and Eisenhower's 10 September meeting into one discussion - Logistics - Strategy - Current Operations.
      After first discussing the logistics situation, the meeting turned to the difference of opinion they had in strategy, namely Montgomery's single thrust idea of a strong force of 40 divisions (including US 1st Army) driving to Berlin to end the war, versus Eisenhower's broad front strategy of all armies advancing into Germany on a broad front after making multiple Rhine crossings. This argument had been going on in their correspondence for weeks and came to a head during this meeting, in which Montgomery pushed as far as he could and Eisenhower finally shut it down, and the broad front was to be the decided policy with no further argument.
      The meeting then turned to current operations, and it was only then that Montgomery presented his proposal for operation SIXTEEN (it had not received the final code name MARKET yet) as an upgraded replacement for operation COMET that he had cancelled only that morning (at 0200 hours as men were loading their aircraft). Since the expanded operation involved adding the two American airborne divisions to allow the British and Poles to concentrate at Arnhem (COMET had them split between Arnhem-Nijmegen-Grave) to deal with the increased intelligence threat of German armour, Montgomery needed Eisenhower's approval, which he enthusiatically gave. This operation had nothing to do with Montgomery's single thrust to Berlin proposition, it was a limited advance to the Dutch Rijn (Rhine delta) in the Netherlands. Eisenhower backed this operation because it fitted in with his broad front policy - he wanted all of his armies to advance to the Rhine and establish crossings - and he was also under pressure to show what the 1st Allied Airborne Army could do, and SIXTEEN presented an opportunity to use virtually all of its assets.
      The Ruhr pincer was the exploitation idea that won out in the strategy argument, and Montgomery and Eisenhower were still corresponding on this during the next weeks while MARKET GARDEN was being planned and executed, because the pre-requisites were that British 2nd Army would need to be positioned on their river Ijssel bridgeheads in the Netherlands (the Ijssel is the last Rijn delta distributary in the Netherlands before the German border) and US 1st Army in a bridgehead on the German Rhine between Cologne and Bonn. I don't believe anybody was under the illusions that any advances into Germany were possible without a major port open, such as Antwerp, and Montgomery envisaged 1st Canadian Army conducting the Scheldt clearance operations after MARKET GARDEN had concluded while US 1st Army cleared Aachen and advanced to the Rhine. Without the port open to supply all armies for simultaneous operations, Montgomery's 21st Army Group would have to strike first with the right (British 2nd Army for the Rhine) and then the left (Canadian 1st Army to clear the Scheldt), and he was arguing that Bradley would have to halt and all supplied prioritised to him, and even after this Bradley would have to stop Patton in order to supply Hodges to the Rhine north of Bonn.
      I'm sure if you think about it, it will make sense, because a British 2nd Army advance to the Rhine was going to happen in some form regardless of what kind of advance(s) were made into Germany subsequently, so COMET or MARKET GARDEN were irrelevent to the subsequent strategy for Germany except as a pre-requisite to establish the necessary bridgeheads for either the Berlin thrust or Ruhr pincer. Bringing Antwerp into a discussion on MARKET GARDEN is therefore a distraction, the only issue is a sequencing issue while logistics limited operations to either clear Antwerp first or cross the Rhine first. The Rhine made more immediate sense, because opening Antwerp was already proving to be difficult (Brereton had refused Montgomery an airborne operation on Walcheren) and delaying a Rhine crossing until later after the Germans had more time to establish their river and canal defence lines would only make that operation more costly. The right time to strike for the Rhine was as soon as possible, and COMET was delayed two days by weather and then cancelled because of the worsening intelligence picture, leading to another week's delay for planning MARKET.
      Even Eisenhower understood the logic of Rhine crossing first and delaying Antwerp until later (the Canadians needed time to reposition around Antwerp anyway), and even felt that he had to set the record straight after Cornelius Ryan's misleading book was published:
      Eisenhower was similarly unapologetic when he declared after the publication of Cornelius Ryan's best-selling account, A Bridge Too Far, “I not only approved Market-Garden, I insisted upon it. We needed a bridgehead over the Rhine. If that could be accomplished I was quite willing to wait on all other operations.” (Eisenhower: A Soldier's Life, Carlo D'Este, 2015)
      If you really want to get into the weeds, Montgomery's memoirs are available online and Chapter 15 on Allied Strategy North of the Seine shows the correspondence back and forth between Montgomery and Eisenhower. You don't have to agree with Montgomery's views or opinions (although memoirs are written in retrospect they are a primary source) and you can ignore his post-war writing if you wish, but the correspondence is a matter of contemporary record and these communications thrashed out their exchange of views at the time. I'm afraid Ryan was a newspaper journalist and did that thing most journalists do in that they stop digging when they have got their 'story' and anyone reading his book would think Eisenhower agreed to MARKET GARDEN as a consolation for losing his single thrust to Berlin argument - the two are not connected in that way.
      MARKET GARDEN was not a solution to the problem of not having Antwerp open, it was done first because a Rhine crossing was simply more time sensitive than Antwerp. MARKET GARDEN was actually the solution to the problem of COMET being too weak to deal with the presence of II.SS-Panzerkorps in the Netherlands. The operation failed because a bridge was missed at Nijmegen on D-Day and not because Antwerp wasn't open or even because of the II.SS-Panzerkorps.

  • @jahidmasud1099
    @jahidmasud1099 Před 6 lety +1

    very good making. It will help me in military history lesson. keep up the good work

  • @PrehistoricLEGO
    @PrehistoricLEGO Před 4 lety +1

    God this channel has so much potential if they gave it a chance

  • @rickjohnson9558
    @rickjohnson9558 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm sorry...."Thirty CORPSE?" Its Corps ("KOR", or "CORE"). You lost me there, pal.

  • @nickdanger3802
    @nickdanger3802 Před 8 měsíci +2

    "In the event, the state of the flanks did become important when, on Friday 22nd September, a German counterattack near Veghel, in the 101st Airborne Division's sector, successfully cut the single road for forty-eight hours, forcing Lieutenant-General Horrocks, already struggling with enemy counterattacks and the wide diffusion of his strength, to send armour back down the line to help re-open the road. Montgomery largely blamed the failure of the Operation on the lack of progress made by XII and, in particular, VIII Corps, who were ordered to protect the flanks of XXX Corps as they advanced. The progress of both of these was very slow and so the single road became extremely exposed to such attacks. It must be stressed, however, that the supplies Montgomery had asked for to fuel the advance of the 2nd British Army had only partially arrived, and both VIII and XII Corps experienced great difficulties in this regard. In addition it is important to note that German resistance on the flanks was equal to that encountered by XXX Corps, and both VIII and XII Corps sustained marginally higher losses."
    Pegasus Archive Market Garden 30. Reasons for the Failure

  • @chizhang2765
    @chizhang2765 Před 6 lety +1

    Can' believe I'm the first subscriber! Great video!

    • @chizhang2765
      @chizhang2765 Před 6 lety

      But seriously, when's the next video? 😳

  • @nickdanger3802
    @nickdanger3802 Před měsícem

    Planning "The essential plan (Comet) was not dead, however, and on the 10th September 1944, Montgomery personally briefed Browning for Operation Market Garden." "Browning, having asked Montgomery how long the 1st Airborne would have to hold Arnhem and being told two days, replied that they could hold it for four."
    Pegasus Archive Browning, on line
    Of the over 2,000 men tasked with taking all three bridges only 740 men captured one end of a lightly defended bridge in Arnhem and held it for 3 days and 12 hours.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 29 dny

      'Of the over 2,000 men tasked with taking all three bridges only 740 men captured one end of a lightly defended bridge in Arnhem and held it for 3 days and 12 hours.'
      Perhaps if US General Brereton had arranged for more of those men to be landed closer to those bridges, and sooner, things might have been different. Who can say?..

  • @NotSean269
    @NotSean269 Před 7 lety

    Awesome channel man, Can't wait to see whats next!

  • @macvena
    @macvena Před 3 lety +2

    Hey folks, "Corps" is always KÔR as in Marine Corps. The p and s are always silent.

  • @seeharvester
    @seeharvester Před 2 měsíci +1

    The p and s are silent. Pronounced Kor, not corpse.

  • @thec.dragon2247
    @thec.dragon2247 Před 5 lety +1

    Perfect Perfect.... Keep Up Please

  • @raulduke6105
    @raulduke6105 Před 5 lety +2

    If Patton had 30 “corps” it would not have taken 9 frigging days to reach Arnhem

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety +1

      4 full years and Britain didn't come across a 30 mile wide channel,WTF - 4FULL YEARS!!!.Ya run away to a desert 3000 miles way.BRILLIANT - said no one ever.The Brits never got tossed into the channel again after the Yanks arrived - imagine that

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety +1

      @John Cornell
      More silly nonsense from Para Dave.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety

      Little Villa for 4 full years the German Army sat 30 miles off of your shores. So Monty runs away to an out of the way post 3,000 miles away at least the Navy and Air Corp pounded a German Army pretty much out of everything.Go tell your heroism to the rest of Europe specially the Czechs

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety +1

      ​@John Cornell
      The US took three and a half years to join in with Britain's invasion of Western Europe in 1944. Despite the nearest German soldier being 3,000 from offering any threat to their shores. No enemy warplane ever entered US air space. during the war. Then when it happened Britain supplies over half of the aircraft, two-fifths of the shipping and four fifths of warships.
      Care to guess how the USA might have got on if they had decided to invade Europe on their own?
      6,000 ships, two artificial harbours, and several fuel pipelines to be taken cross the Atlantic. No Ultra intercepts. 20% of the Warships used on D-Day. Aircraft having to cross the Atlantic. Greenhorn commanders in charge.
      Even when they landed in North Africa in late 1942 they were only up against the Vichy French.
      There was of course the lunatic plan by the armchair general - Marshall to invade France in 1942. Shall we remind ourselves of what Churchill had to say about this idea? Yea, lets:
      Former Naval Person to President 8 July 42
      ‘No responsible British general, admiral, or air marshal is prepared to recommend “Sledgehammer” as a practical operation in 1942. The Chiefs of Staff have reported “The conditions which would make “Sledgehammer” a sound, sensible enterprise are very unlikely to occur. They are now sending their paper to your Chiefs of Staff.’
      Any idea who Para Dave means to call 'Shit stain'?

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety

      @John Cornell
      That last comment from Para Dave smacked of desperation.

  • @BigKWS
    @BigKWS Před 5 lety +1

    A good and informative video of a hard-fought battle that didn't go so well for the allies.

  • @cocacrocs
    @cocacrocs Před 2 lety +3

    My great great uncle, Winston Glover, who I was never able to meet, fought in Operation Market Garden. He was a paratrooper, and was captured by the Germans. Those are the facts as I know them, but there is much more to his story. He put his life in danger for the well being of his country, and I thank him, where ever his body may lie.

    • @Latbirget
      @Latbirget Před 2 lety

      My partner's grandfather was dropped with the first paras and captured on day 2 of operation market garden. He never spoke about it apparently which seems to be a common theme.

    • @wampyr88
      @wampyr88 Před 2 lety

      He fought on the wrong side

  • @HeavyMetalConspiracy
    @HeavyMetalConspiracy Před 5 lety +15

    Gee, thanks Montgomery

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety +2

      You mean for taking the allies to the end of the Siegfried Line?..
      And of course, for hindering the lauch of V Weapons against British civilians. Also for liberating thousands of Dutch people.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety +1

      Yoi might wish to thank Bradley for Aachen, Metz and the Hurtgen Forest...

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety

      Didn't liberate shit and the Dutch suffered thru thr Honger Winter thanx to you pathetic hero's shot at glory he was a bigger dick than you

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 5 lety

      HeavyMetalConspiracty
      Big Woody also goes by the name of Para Dave and claims to have been to Sandhurst.
      Which Sandhurst no one knows.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety

      Smashing riposte Little Villa - I left a link last month on the Monty interview board to Dave's thread where he thrashed you in the form of Cornhole.Go have at or in your case like Carrington do nothing at all

  • @CODRD
    @CODRD Před 7 lety

    Really good video. It reminds me of Military History Visualised. And you earned yourself a sub :P
    Also around 0:50 that fade in and out was a bit unnecessary.
    I'd like to request a video of some of the battles in Italy like Battle of Anzio. or from the Eastern Front Operation Bagration.

    • @mapsofhistory6499
      @mapsofhistory6499  Před 7 lety +2

      You're absolutely right. Working to long on a video makes you overlook these small mistakes. Thanks for the sub and feedback.

  • @mutleyeng
    @mutleyeng Před 5 lety +1

    The point of Market Garden was to cut off the 15th Army that had control of the Antwerp approaches

  • @stunov3181
    @stunov3181 Před 6 lety +3

    Great video, quality content, easely understandable. *10/10*

  • @Tarelom
    @Tarelom Před 4 lety +1

    How did you make the map? I am currently working on a game map for a boardgame and would be very thankfull for any help.

    • @mapsofhistory6499
      @mapsofhistory6499  Před 4 lety +1

      Hi Tarelom, I used Mapbox. They have nice map design webapp and some really cool pre-made styles: www.mapbox.com/gallery/. If you use the print option you can export the map as a jpg or png in high res.

  • @wtgardner6914
    @wtgardner6914 Před 10 měsíci

    This is a well thought out and well executed video. I genuinely loved watching it. However, Corps is pronounced as Core. I know that is a minor and insignificant item, but it was something that each time you said it just threw me off. It was as you were calling them Corpse. Other than that, I look forward to more videos from this channel. Very nicely done!

  • @Fordnan
    @Fordnan Před 3 lety +3

    This whole operation was a severe misuse of some exceptional personnel and materiel. The Glider Pilot Regiment provided the means to assault and take the bridges over the Caen canal. A more clinical precision strike should have preceded the body of the assault on each of the bridges at night. Yes, it was a long shot to start with, but stupid planning negated the power of the forces used, and doomed some of the best forces of the allies.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem +1

      The GPR provided the pilots, and although they were trained and equipped to fight as light infantry once on the ground, I hardly think the 12 pilots of the six gliders landing at Pegasus Bridge should take all the credit. Their passengers were D Company, 2nd (Airborne) Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry - at establishment that would be 127 men.
      Similar glider coup de main operations were planned at dawn for the Grave, Nijmegen and Arnhem bridges for Operation Comet using a Company from each of the three Airlanding Battalions, and the Glider Pilot that flew the lead glider at Pegasus Bridge was also due to fly the lead glider at Nijmegen bridge, Staff Sergeant Jim Wallwork, and he was not looking forward to the job at all. When Comet was cancelled and upgraded to Market with the addition of the American divisions, 1st Allied Airborne Army took over the air plan and deleted the glider coup de main attacks, because of the Flak near the bridges. Wallwork was relieved he would no longer be doing it, but the decision was one of the many compromises made to Operation Market by Brereton and Williams at 1st AAA and US IX Troop Carrier Command respectively.

    • @Fordnan
      @Fordnan Před rokem

      @@davemac1197 I wrote that two years ago, but I can see I haven't said the GPR deserve all the credit.

  • @donalhartman6235
    @donalhartman6235 Před 4 lety +2

    Too many hurdles and false expectations. One, airborne infantry are too light to hold or secure positions for any lengthy period against a force with access to rail and road and capable of bringing in armor and artillery at will. Two, Montgomery knew but didn't reveal he was aware of an intelligence report that German units had at the last minute moved into the area of Arnheim; so he decided to plow ahead without changing his plan to rely on airborne forces to fight off much stronger infantry and armor in Arnheim. Three, too many bridges and canals to secure and cross. The loss of any single one for any extended time meant delay and delay meant the Germans would be able to reinforce and block the advance, which did occur. The general area was not suited for use of armor for attacking but ideal for armor used in a defensive role. The Germans knew they only had to defend narrow corridors of access with their anti-tank guns. The whole plan in essence was doomed to fail, and this was such a tragedy given the courage and sacrifices of the paratroopers engaged in the operation.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 3 lety +2

      'Montgomery knew but didn't reveal he was aware of an intelligence report that German units had at the last minute moved into the area of Arnheim; so he decided to plow ahead without changing his plan to rely on airborne forces to fight off much stronger infantry and armor in Arnheim.'
      Your words.
      Montgomery knew no more than Allied Land Forces Commander, Eisenhower, First Allied Airborne Army Commander Brereton.
      A SHAEF Intelligence Summary week ending September 4th 1944 stated that the German forces facing Montgomery's armies were "no longer a cohesive force but a number of fugitive battlegroups, disorganised and even demoralised, short of equipment and arms".

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety

      Are you his like Swiss Boy?Ah another of Monty's apologists pokes his head out of Monty's backside to explain why Monty was not responsible for the failure of Monty's plan. Monty even admitted - a bad mistake on my part
      SHAEF finally realized giving good troops to Monty was making Russian generals look like humanitarians.Attacking up a 64 mile lane with no room for maneuver and winter closing in is the idea of an idiot that had no business leading a boy scout troop
      *From Eisenhower's Armies,by Dr Niall Barr,page 415* After the failure of Market-Garden,Eisenhower held a conference on 5 October 1944 that not only provided a post mortem on the operation but in which he reiterated his strategy for the campaign.Alan Brooke was present as an observer,noted that IKE's strategy continued to focus on the clearance of the Scheldt Estuary,followed by an advance on the Rhine,the capture of the Ruhr and a subsequent advance on Berlin.
      After a full and frank discussion in which Admiral Ramsey criticised Montgomery freely,Brooke was moved to write, *I feel that Monty's strategy for once is at fault,instead of carrying out the advance on Arnhem he ought to have made certain of Antwerp in the 1st place....IKE nobly took all the blame on himself as he had approved Monty's suggestion to operate on Arnhem*

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 3 lety +1

      Big Woody is a liar, and this is why:
      czcams.com/video/G2obwt4n1G0/video.html&lc=UgyXsiASB8pi_JS_WfV4AaABAg.9Afuv3FHaYc9BMmj0JXY2u&feature=emcomments
      Lead comment:
      John Cornell
      3 weeks ago (as of 31 07 2020)
      Patton should have kept his mouth shut and concentrated on achieving his task of taking Metz, which had been his objective two weeks before Market Garden and yet still hadn't done it 8 weeks after Market Garden.
      The 25th reply is the lie:
      Big Woody
      1 week ago (as of 31 07 2020)
      Das Deutsches Afrika-korps: Siege und Niederlage. By Hanns-Gert von Esebeck, page 188 Returning from North Africa with an inflated ego after the comparatively easy defeat of the German Africa Corps, he considered himself to be the greatest commander ever. Later information has revealed that he inflated the number of German casualties to improve his image. At El Alamein he claimed that there were more German casualties than there were German troops all together on the actual front!
      This is were Big Woody unwisely took it from:
      ww2f.com/threads/what-went-wrong-with-operation-market-garden.28468/page-5#post-389603
      What went wrong with Operation Market Garden?
      Discussion in 'Western Europe 1943 - 1945' started by tovarisch, Feb 2, 2010.
      Page 5 of 14 < Prev1←34567→14Next >
      RAM
      Member
      Joined:Dec 11, 2007
      Messages:507
      Likes Received:9
      ...
      'Returning from North Africa with an inflated ego after the comparatively easy defeat of the German Africa Corps, he considered himself to be the greatest commander ever. Later information has revealed that he inflated the number of German casualties to improve his image.
      At El Alamein he claimed that there were more German casualties than there were German troops all together on the actual front!' ...
      RAM, July 28 2010
      ...From another opinion in a hack forum, not from 'Das Deutsches Afrika-korps: Siege und Niederlage. By Hanns-Gert von Esebeck' as Big Woody claimed.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety

      Vile Ass - Get the Book and have your handler read it to you- it's in English as the link showed.Or when you get your ankle monitor removed they will allow you into the library

  • @olddoggeleventy2718
    @olddoggeleventy2718 Před 4 lety +2

    Corps is pronounced core...Core, core, core, core, core. I bristled every time he said corps.

  • @stephenhounsell7257
    @stephenhounsell7257 Před 5 lety +1

    Can you do the hunt for the German battleship Bismarck next?

  • @MadRS
    @MadRS Před měsícem +1

    I hate when people say corpse and not core (Corps). I'm guessing it's AI narrated.

  • @spudwish
    @spudwish Před rokem

    Great video! Sad to see it's your only one 😔

  • @stza16
    @stza16 Před 5 lety +1

    I didn't know a corpse could do so much.

  • @spencerboone10
    @spencerboone10 Před 4 lety +1

    Not sure what corpses the narrator is referring to. A “corps” is pronounced “core”. Also the H in Arnhem is silent.

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem

      'Corpse' is theatrical slang for spoiling your lines. Ironically.

  • @6eaglefan
    @6eaglefan Před 5 lety

    Great Video thank you!

  • @dougalharding506
    @dougalharding506 Před 4 lety +2

    Market Garden was mostly successful!

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 lety

      MORE BULLSHIT,didn't knock out any Rocket sites and that was the excuse for stopping 3rd Army and allocating provisions to the Mongoloid.11000 go inti Arnhem and 2100 come out.Not to mention the mayhem to the rest of the 34,000 troops involved in theis debacle. As retribution the NAZI's stripped the country bare and lead to 21,000 Dutch civilians starving over winter - it's a damn shame you couldn't have been one of them Cornhole

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 4 lety +3

      @John Cornell
      '21,000 Dutch civilians starving over winter - it's a damn shame you couldn't have been one of them Cornhole'
      You are not alone... He wishes that I would get the Coronavirus.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 4 lety

      Don't care what you read - I present facts from actual historians and not your pathetic backside
      *Max Hastings,Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,1944-45* Freddie de Guingand Monty's Chief of Staff telephoned him saying the operation would be launched too late to exploit German disarray.That XXX Corps push to Arnhem would being made on a narrow front along one road,Monty ignored him
      *The Second World War by John Keegan,page 437* The Plan was the most calamitous flaw in the post Normandy campaign .It was more over barely excusable,since Ultra was supplying Montgomery's HQs from Sept 5 onward with intelligence .As early as Sept 12 Monty's own intelligence reported the Germans intended to hold out along the approaches to Antwerp. Monty - despite every warning and contrary to common military sense - refused to turn his troops back in their tracks to clear the Scheldt Estuary.
      *Max Hastings,Armageddon:The Battle for Germany,1944-45* The release of the files from German Signals by Bletchley Park conclusively showed that the 9th & 10th Panzer Divisions were re-fitting in the Arnhem area.With their Recon Battalions intact.Yet when Bedell-Smith(SHAEF) brought this to Monty's attention "he ridiculed the idea and waved my objections airly aside"
      This from the BBC
      *www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/battle_arnhem_01.shtml* At the end of the first day, XXX corps had advanced only seven miles from their start line, and had not reached the first in the sequence of bridges. Meanwhile the Germans were reinforcing, and their tanks were moving into Arnhem ready to take on the lightly armed British paratroopers.
      *From Retreat to the Reich by Samuel W.Mitcham Jr.,page 244* The US 82nd Airborne was also tied up in heavy fighting in Nijmegen against elements of the 9th SS Panzer Reconnaissance Battalion which was reinforced by I Battalion/22nd SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment(part of the 10th SS Division). Still the Allies might have won the Battle had the armored advance not been slow .By September 19th they were still miles south of Nijmegen trying to push an entire Corp down a single road.
      *From September Hope,John C McManus,p.63*
      General Browning cautioned General Gavin "Although every effort should be made to effect the capture of the Grave and Nijmagen Bridges,it is essential that you capture the Groesbeek ridge and hold it

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 3 lety +1

      @Dougal Harding
      Market Garden was a success:
      ♦ It kept Antwerp out of German artillery range.
      ♦ It created a 60 mile buffer between Antwerp and German forces. Antwerp was the only port taken intact. This buffer proved itself in the German Bulge attack right through US lines. The German went through a forest rather than the direct route, which would have been through the Market Garden salient.
      ♦ It created a staging point to move into Germany at Nijmegen, which was used.
      ♦ It eliminated V rocket launching sites aimed at London.
      ♦ It isolated the German 15th army in Holland.
      ♦ They reached the Rhine.
      ♦ The salient was fleshed out to the Meuse.
      ♦ The Germans never retook one mm of ground taken.
      ♦ It captured the important Philips radio factory at Eindhoven.
      All this while Patton was stalled at Metz moving 10 miles in three months against a 2nd rate German army. Also US forces were stopped before Aachen and eventually defeated at Hurtgen Forest - you know that engagement, the US historians and History channels ignore. To flesh out the salient the US 7th armor was sent into Overloon. They were so bad they were extracted with British forces sent in to take the town.
      The Germans never thought Market Garden was a failure. It punched a 60 mile salient right into their lines in a few days, right on their border. They saw it as a staging area to jump into Germany - which it was. In late '44/early '45, the longest allied advance was the 60 mile Market Garden advance. The only operation to fully achieve its goals in that time period was Monty's clearing of the Scheldt.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety

      You keep refuting yourself with the stupidity of your own statements.None of the objectives were met you knob
      -Monty wasn't there to direct while an actual Field Marshall Model and Air Borne General Student were in fact conducting a clinic on effective modern mobile warfare
      -The V-2s were still being launched
      -The deep sea port of Antwerp was still closed that was needed for supplies
      -Over 17,000 crack allied Paras were lost.
      -The Dutch people suffered reprisals from the hunger winter in 22,000 of their citizens died of starvation and disease.
      -Many young Dutchmen were sent to work as slave laborers in defense industry in the Reich
      -Allies never made Arnhem much less Berlin as your hero bragged
      -Monty would not cross the Rhine for 6 more months and that was with the help of Simpson 9th US Army
      -Bernard,Prince of the Netherlands said later *"My country can never again afford the luxury of another Montgomery success"*
      How come Model/Student were able to ferry tanks and troops over , under the ever watchfull RAF at Pannerden, and Monty/Horrocks could NOT do the same ? Not in September, not in October and not in November.

  • @orsboo4447
    @orsboo4447 Před 2 lety +1

    we’re the germans heer or ss?

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem +1

      Every branch of the German military was represented, from SS, Heer, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine and RAD. If you have any specific questions on German units at a specific location, I would be happy to give them a name check, but for the entire operation there are far too many to mention.
      In the first week of September, the Germans used the Operation 'Valkyrie' Plan to mobilise the Reserve Army, which consisted of training and replacement units, and many were based in the German occupied Netherlands and involved in fighting Market Garden.

  • @vaughnrice6103
    @vaughnrice6103 Před 6 lety +9

    After seeing and talking to my dad the operation was a genius in thought, but in practical sense a disaster. Ninety two percent of his company were killed. The weather was against them, the roads were way to narrow and one tank would have stopped the whole operation when it clogged the road. Supplies were missed as the British were out of ammo and the Germans were luck to get it and other things. Yes, the plan was a genius thought and may have worked but it diden't and my family paid for it in death and others lost so many many people. War is shit.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety

      Vaughn Rice
      Total tripe. Market Garden failed to be a 100% success by a whisker. *The failure point was the US 82nd not seizing the Nijmegen bridge immediately.* At the end of the 1st day all bridge were denied to the Germans, except one, the Nijmegen bridge. That was down to General Gavin. XX Corps never put a foot wrong and even seized the Nijmegen bridge which the 82nd should have done.

    • @willb8684
      @willb8684 Před 6 lety

      browning made grossbeck heights priority for the 82nd...even john frost didnt blame the 82nd he blamed boy browning

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety

      will B
      *You are a complete idiot.*

    • @johnq4535
      @johnq4535 Před 6 lety +4

      Actually the polish leadership spotted the SS tank units on recon photos and pointed that fact out to the British planners who were too arrogant apparently to listen. The plan was flawed from the start. Expecting airborne units to withstand inevitable counter attacks from those SS armor units for long is lunacy.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 6 lety

      John Q
      Utter crap. First Allied airborne army, led by the US General Brereton assessed intelligence information. The Poles receiced the inso along with everyone else.

  • @SasukeUchiha-pv4xn
    @SasukeUchiha-pv4xn Před 6 lety

    Great content , are you planning on making ww1 videos as well . Subbed by the way

  • @fartimusbumworthy4682
    @fartimusbumworthy4682 Před 6 lety +4

    XXX Corps (Pronounced Core)

    • @piebomb8221
      @piebomb8221 Před 6 lety

      Fartimus Bumworthy this is why i hate English sometimes

  • @davidcaceres9184
    @davidcaceres9184 Před 2 lety

    Came for tf2, got war info

  • @vaughnrice6103
    @vaughnrice6103 Před 6 lety +1

    Hate to tell you John B. but they did fight on the bridge and they may not have taken it but they did make it a fight. I have two relatives who were there and did it.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety +1

      Vaughn Rice
      *No* 82nd men were on the Nijmegen bridge. XXX Corps took the whole bridge with tanks and infantry. The 82nd failed to seize the bridge with XXX Corps having to seize it for them. The 82nd men were 1km north of the bridge in the village of Lent. Once XXX Corps entered an area taken by paras of First Allied Airborne Army XX was on command. XXX immediately put together a plan to seize the bridge as the 82nd had failed.

    • @willb8684
      @willb8684 Před 6 lety +1

      whel it doesnt matter because the polish were to blame for this disaster....at least thats who the british blamed....ill admit gavin should have taken the bridge but the monty and browning being of low character scape goated sasobowski ... the whole plan was stupid and that is on monty....it was poorly executed as well

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety +1

      will B
      *not this nut again.*
      The British never blamed the Polish at all.

    • @johnq4535
      @johnq4535 Před 6 lety +1

      And then XXX took the bridge only to pause a day because of Montgomery's usual ponderous and slow nature. General Slim was the best the British had, give me Slim all week and twice on Sunday. They should have sent Montgomery to the jungles and brought Slim to Europe. Slim kicked ass with a rusty spoon, sketchy logistics and malaria, imagine what he would have done with Montgomery's wealth of resources? Slim and Patton would have rampaged across Europe like Godzilla and King Kong.

    • @johnq4535
      @johnq4535 Před 6 lety +1

      How could they, the Poles tried to tell the British about the spotted panzer units in the recon photos before the operation even started. They should have APOLOGIZED to the Poles.

  • @Blazaboi95
    @Blazaboi95 Před 5 lety

    it sounded to me that the plan could have worked if the British drop could have went all in on the first day of operations instead of having to make 2 trips

  • @mapsofhistory6499
    @mapsofhistory6499  Před 7 lety

    The first video is out! What do you think about Operation Market Garden? Could the plan have worked?

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 7 lety

      It was a success it its prime aims.

    • @willb8684
      @willb8684 Před 6 lety +1

      it was a total failure

    • @willb8684
      @willb8684 Před 6 lety +2

      the plan could have worked....2 drops in 1 day. no daylight drops.. should have droped the poles closer to the north end of nijmegan and attacked from both sides DAY 1. drop a regiment south of arnhem bridge and not attacked through arnhem.some 1st para guys volunteerd to drop on top of arnhem i would have let them and take arnhem from both sides as well.....closer drop zones radios that worked...no general browning...the whole plan was rushed and i think that was the biggest issue.with 9th and 10th SS in the area i would have brought a lot more PIAT with me...i believe 1st para ran out pretty quick...i could have worked

    • @asdf-fl1ib
      @asdf-fl1ib Před 6 lety +1

      CORPS! SILENT P!

  • @kyrapearl6489
    @kyrapearl6489 Před 5 lety +4

    I truly hope that the whole "corpse" thing is a joke. Would otherwise have been a fair, informative video. The focus becomes the bad pronunciation and misspeaking a rather common verbal abbreviation.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 Před rokem

    Seemed no one worried if traffic hit jammed or a bridge blown up before they got to it. Everything had to work or nothing worked

  • @altair458
    @altair458 Před 4 lety +3

    Montgomery was a typical British commander. Second rate at best.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 4 lety +2

      Still...at lrat he did not hit his own soldiers.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety +1

      Ya but he lathered little Lucian - Pervo

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 3 lety +1

      The finest army in the world from mid 1942 onwards was the British under Montgomery. From Alem el Halfa it moved right up into Denmark, through nine countries, and not once suffered a reverse taking all in its path. Over 90% of German armour in the west was destroyed by the British. Montgomery, in command of all ground forces, had to give the US armies an infantry role in Normandy as they were not equipped to engage massed German SS armour.
      *Montgomery* stopped the Germans in every event they attacked him:
      ♦ August 1942 - Alem el Halfa;
      ♦ October 1942 - El Alamein;
      ♦ March 1943 - Medenine;
      ♦ June 1944 - Normandy;
      ♦ Sept/Oct 1944 - The Netherlands;
      ♦ December 1944 - Battle of the Bulge;
      *A list of Montgomery’s victories in WW2:*
      ♦ Battle of Alam Halfa;
      ♦ Second Battle of El Alamein;
      ♦ Battle of El Agheila;
      ♦ Battle of Medenine;
      ♦ Battle of the Mareth Line;
      ♦ Battle of Wadi Akarit;
      ♦ Allied invasion of Sicily;
      ♦ Operation Overlord - the largest amphibious invasion in history;
      Market Garden - a 60 mile salient created into German territory;
      Battle of the Bulge - while taking control of two shambolic US armies;
      ♦ Operation Veritable;
      ♦ Operation Plunder.
      *Montgomery not once had a reverse.*
      *Not on one occasion were ground armies, British, US or others, under Monty's command pushed back into a retreat by the Germans.* Monty's 8th Army advanced the fastest of any army in WW2. From El Alamein to El Agheila from the 4th to 23rd November 1942, 1,300 km in just 17 days. After fighting a major exhausting battle at El Alemein through half a million mines. This was an Incredible feat, unparalleled in WW2. With El Alamein costing just 13,500 casualties.
      The US Army were a shambles in 1944/45 retreating in the Ardennes. The Americans didn't perform well at all east of Aachen, then the Hurtgen Forest defeat with 33,000 casualties and Patton's Lorraine crawl of 10 miles in three months at Metz with over 50,000 casualties, with the Lorraine campaign being a failure. Then Montgomery had to be put in command of the shambolic US First and Ninth armies, aided by the British 21st Army Group, just to get back to the start line in the Ardennes, with nearly 100,000 US casualties. Hodges, head of the US First army, fled from Spa to near Liege on the 18th, despite the Germans never getting anywhere near to Spa. Hodges did not even wait for the Germans to approach Spa. He had already fled long before the Germans were stopped. The Germans took 20,000 US POWs in the Battle of The Bulge in Dec 1944. No other allied country had that many prisoners taken in the 1944-45 timeframe.
      The USA retreat at the Bulge, again, was the only allied army to be pushed back into a retreat in the 1944-45 timeframe. Montgomery was effectively in charge of the Bulge having to take control of the US First and Ninth armies. Coningham of the RAF was put in command of USAAF elements. The US Third Army constantly stalled after coming up from the south. The Ninth stayed under Monty's control until the end of the war just about. The US armies were losing men at unsustainable rates due to poor generalship.
      Normandy was planned and commanded by the British, with Montgomery involved in planning, with also Montgomery leading *all* ground forces, which was a great success coming in ahead of schedule and with less casualties than predicted. The Royal Navy was in command of all naval forces and the RAF all air forces. The German armour in the west was wiped out by primarily the British - the US forces were impotent against massed panzers. Monty assessed the US armies (he was in charge of them) giving them a supporting infantry role, as they were just not equipped, or experienced, to fight concentrated tank v tank battles. On 3 Sept 1944 when Eisenhower took over overall allied command of ground forces everything went at a snail's pace. The fastest advance of any western army in Autumn/early 1945 was the 60 mile thrust by the British XXX Corps to the Rhine at Arnhem.
      *You need to give respect where it is due.*

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 3 lety +1

      Outside of your posts being totally full of shit,they're not that bad - well yes they are. Market Garden is what happens when a moron in the form of Monty is handed command .SHAEF finally realized giving good troops to Monty was making Russian generals look like humanitarians.Attacking up a 64 mile lane with no room for maneuver and winter closing in is the idea of an idiot that had no business leading a boy scout assembly.Your distortions are ludicrous postmortem to absolve the abrasive egomaniac who in any other army would have been relieved .
      And if it wasn't for the sorry fact the British Press propped him up beyond his accomplishments & abilities he would have been.Monty won in the desert when he had an embarrassment of Riches.Not because of maneuver,guile or tactics
      .
      Johnny is a sick juvenile who has made up other accounts to agree with himself
      Barrie Rodliffe joined 26 Sept 2013
      Giovanni Pierre joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Peate joined 28 Sept 2013
      John Burns joined 07 Nov 2013
      John Cornell joined 13 Nov 2013
      TheVilla Aston joined 20 Nov 2013

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- Před 2 lety +2

      What do you mean typical Mike? Are you going to ignore Bill Slim, Richard O Connor and Auchinleck who were successful?

  • @osram2739
    @osram2739 Před 6 lety +1

    Please do Operation Barbarossa

  • @ellisjames7192
    @ellisjames7192 Před 10 měsíci

    What is Corps?

  • @Idk_496
    @Idk_496 Před 4 lety

    *earrape soldier noises*

  • @aposescout6280
    @aposescout6280 Před 4 lety +2

    Operation Market Garden
    haha
    tf2

  • @stephenpronouncedlikesteve8337

    coming at you with a crit shovel

  • @clarencegreen3071
    @clarencegreen3071 Před 4 lety

    To all those obsessed with corps vs corpse, may I point out that English is one screwed-up language? Can you pronounce the following pairs of words: wind wind; wound wound; read read; bow bow; tear tear; lead lead; bass bass, and etc.? Both the sound and the meaning are different. It makes no sense; or is it since? And I'll admit, Americans have their (they're, there) fair (fare) share of problems with it, and I'm one of them.

  • @vaughnrice6103
    @vaughnrice6103 Před 6 lety

    John Burns, my father was on the so called boats crossing the river and did go to the bridge. His brother Daun was on the bridge and fired at those in the riggings of the bridge. He told me the Germans scripted young girls as young as 14 to shoot or be killed. He looked at one shot off the bridge and confirmed that.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 6 lety +2

      'the Germans scripted young girls as young as 14 to shoot or be killed.'
      Shake of the head. I would need to documentary evidence of this.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 5 lety

      @@thevillaaston7811 you need a suppository in your mouth and a history lesson

  • @alexandanu
    @alexandanu Před 3 lety

    How did a corpse do so much damage?

  • @georgequalls5043
    @georgequalls5043 Před 2 lety

    The “corpses”. sure were active for a bunch of dead people.

  • @Harry_mse
    @Harry_mse Před 4 lety

    any1 know how i can get rid of 12 kids in my basemant ??

  • @larky368
    @larky368 Před 4 lety

    Why didn't he pronounce it goo ards instead of gards for guards?

  • @raymarkporsuelo3259
    @raymarkporsuelo3259 Před 5 lety +1

    The plan was perfect but the execution fail. They did not utilize perfectly there airpower. No artillery and air support available on the main bridge. Supply was poor mostly landed on german hands.

  • @iamdafuriousofall
    @iamdafuriousofall Před 5 lety +2

    Just one video?

    • @davidcarlson4958
      @davidcarlson4958 Před 5 lety +3

      Ikr, I subbed, looked at the channel was disappointed to unsub... Beautiful title, channel art, and animation looked like it had been done by an experienced team. Guess not.

  • @sldessel
    @sldessel Před rokem

    Why was there not a plan to include close air support in this operation?

    • @davemac1197
      @davemac1197 Před rokem +2

      There was. Close air support was available and used, but it suffered from a number of compromises:
      First, it was decided by Brereton (1st Allied Airborne Army) that 2nd Tactical Air Force based in Belgium had to be deconflicted from the airborne airlifts, so they were grounded when the transports were in the air.
      Second, the 2nd TAF were not informed when the airlifts were delayed by bad weather in England, so they were grounded unncessarily due to the deconfliction rules.
      Third, there were days of bad weather in the Netherlands and the 2nd TAF were not available then, and the 3rd airlift was also delayed several days.
      Finally, the USAAF Fighter Control Squadron Teams were supplied with the wrong crystals for their special VHF sets for contacting the aircraft, a fact that often gets conflated with the British communications problems at Arnhem, which was a problem of reduced ranges due to the high iron content in the glacial moraine of the Veluwe region. The only sets at Arnhem affected by the wrong crystals were the two that belonged to the two USAAF teams sent to Arnhem.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před rokem

      Monty doesn't show up as the plan comes apart and Carrington stops 8 miles away. But in Britain they'll give you lofty titles like Field Marshall and LORD ,can't make that shyt up

  • @davidsewellclarke4997
    @davidsewellclarke4997 Před 4 lety

    I've been to Nijmegan by the way it's written Corps , but pronuced Cor . My Late Fatherand Grandfather, where ex Royal Engineers both Majors retd. ,

  • @jacksonperry7069
    @jacksonperry7069 Před 4 lety

    Is this your only video?

  • @vat6989
    @vat6989 Před 6 lety +2

    wait a minute so once they captured Nijmegen they actually reached Arnhem, just to save the Polish and the 1 Airborne so they coould withdraw. In the film "The bridge too far" it was the British who came with boats to saves them.

    • @Mimilastar70
      @Mimilastar70 Před 6 lety +1

      No,, it was the Americans that came in boats (Robert Redford was the Major), and the british were on the other side.. and didn't want to move...!

    • @Daniel-rm9xf
      @Daniel-rm9xf Před 6 lety +1

      that was an nice move

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety +2

      Zeliard99
      *Total nonsense.* The 82nd dropped in territory full of rivers and canals with boats. The British provided engineering boats for the 82nd used by the Baily Bridge teams. 20% of the men who went over in the boats were Brits (Sappers). They lost more of their numbers than the Yanks.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 6 lety +1

      You knob,not one fooking Brit were in those boats and you know it .Brits were in some tanks(10) offering covering fire.Listen to the narrator - poor plan.

  • @kennethmartin1300
    @kennethmartin1300 Před 2 lety

    I'm going to join in UNapologetically with my fellows in this comment section and punch out of this vid early - i'm sorry, but I cannot believe an adult narrating a vid has never heard "CORPS" before in his life. REAL military expert there - Oh Yeah, you can really count on all of THIS info being accurate. 4+ years and 'Maps of Hist' STILL not bothered to fix it - Thanks for keeping in touch.

    • @thevillaaston7811
      @thevillaaston7811 Před 2 lety +1

      What makes you a 'REAL military expert'?

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety +1

      Again Little Villa you've displayed your extraordinary ability not to think.The man's pointing out errors,you should recognize them they blow up in your face and circle around and bite you in your ample ass everyday

  • @Jeffybonbon
    @Jeffybonbon Před 5 lety

    good maps but why no scale on the maps are we looking at 10miles or 100miles ???

    • @HeadHunterSix
      @HeadHunterSix Před 3 lety

      Entire NATIONS, ffs... how big do you think we're talking?

  • @MasterChief-sl9ro
    @MasterChief-sl9ro Před 6 lety +2

    The whole plan was screwed. As you had to take the port at Antwerp. Which is open canal areas. And the Germans punished your ass for trying an Amphibious assault to take it! So without the port. Resupply is non existent...

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 6 lety

      Master Chief 00117
      Antwerp was not a part of Market Garden.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Před 2 lety

      The idea of Monty in charge of an operation,filled the Allies with almost unspeakable terror.And the Krauts with incredible Joy

  • @kasiairys
    @kasiairys Před 3 lety +1

    polecam na yt Pierwsza Samodzielna Brygada Spadochronowa. Market Garden. Generał Stanisław Sosabowski 1 SBS. IIws

  • @westerncivic
    @westerncivic Před 4 lety

    Pls make more videos!

  • @majorchungus
    @majorchungus Před 2 lety

    No real historian would replace the swastika with an iron cross.

  • @npw9648
    @npw9648 Před 4 lety

    BTW do you just read off wikipedia?

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před 7 lety +7

    The 82nd never reached the north end of the Nijmegen bridge. They only reached the village of Lent.

    • @mapsofhistory6499
      @mapsofhistory6499  Před 7 lety +7

      The village of Lent is the north end of the Nijmegen bridge.

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 Před 7 lety +5

      Maps of History
      Lent is *1 km* north of the road bridge. The 82nd never reached the north end of the road bridge. The bridge was seized by the Guards infantry and Guards tanks. Apart from maybe a diversionary tactic in rowing over the Waal in broad daylight, the 82nd had no part in seizing the bridge. BTW, 20% of the men in those boats were British Sappers.

    • @papapabs175
      @papapabs175 Před 6 lety

      John Burns John how do you get some of your words in a darker colour ?

    • @Haasenpad
      @Haasenpad Před 5 lety

      czcams.com/video/hmaskz-LLoU/video.html

    • @jasonfenton8250
      @jasonfenton8250 Před 5 lety

      @@papapabs175 You put asterisks before and after the word. (*)like this(*) just without the parentheses. *example*