Michael Dorosh
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 410
And that makes Hill 127 an even bigger flight of fancy, since the Canadians left France in September 1944 and fought in Belgium, then Holland in October thru February, then briefly in Germany on both sides of the Rhine, then Holland, then Germany again.
As for Hitler ignoring the warnings of his generals, I don‘t think any of them were especially clairvoyant vis a vis Normandy. Rommel also expected a landing at Pas de Calais, for example. Hitler did release panzers late in the day on the 6th, and sizeable armoured formations made their way to the bridgehead area in days to come, notably against the British and Canadian sectors. The Mortain counteroffensive was a major attempt to defeat the landings, and actually helped the Allies by forming the Falaise pocket, which unfortunately the Allies were too slow to close.
To continue the theme of Canadian abilities, the closure of the pocket is sometimes blamed on the inexperience of the Canadian troops fighting to close it. While they certainly didn‘t lack in courage (as evidenced by Currie who won the VC at St. Lambert sur Dives) a combination of inexperience, combat exhaustion (Third Division was in the line for a long stretch between 6 June and the Falaise fighting), and perhaps inadquate equipment (ie the Sherman V) led to (understandable) delays in sealing the gap (as well as the order to the Americans not to advance north and close off the gap at its neck).
The German Army at Falaise suffered great casualties nonetheless, and much equipment was lost.
Perhaps the greatest evidence that Hitler had lost favour with his generals was not his handling of Normandy, but in the fact that on 20 July, he was injured in an assassination attempt.


As for Hitler ignoring the warnings of his generals, I don‘t think any of them were especially clairvoyant vis a vis Normandy. Rommel also expected a landing at Pas de Calais, for example. Hitler did release panzers late in the day on the 6th, and sizeable armoured formations made their way to the bridgehead area in days to come, notably against the British and Canadian sectors. The Mortain counteroffensive was a major attempt to defeat the landings, and actually helped the Allies by forming the Falaise pocket, which unfortunately the Allies were too slow to close.
To continue the theme of Canadian abilities, the closure of the pocket is sometimes blamed on the inexperience of the Canadian troops fighting to close it. While they certainly didn‘t lack in courage (as evidenced by Currie who won the VC at St. Lambert sur Dives) a combination of inexperience, combat exhaustion (Third Division was in the line for a long stretch between 6 June and the Falaise fighting), and perhaps inadquate equipment (ie the Sherman V) led to (understandable) delays in sealing the gap (as well as the order to the Americans not to advance north and close off the gap at its neck).
The German Army at Falaise suffered great casualties nonetheless, and much equipment was lost.
Perhaps the greatest evidence that Hitler had lost favour with his generals was not his handling of Normandy, but in the fact that on 20 July, he was injured in an assassination attempt.