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By the evening
of June 6th, the tanks of the 21st Panzer
Division, reinforced later that night by those of the 12th SS
Hitlerjugend, had formed a barrier of fire and steel in front of
Caen, which stopped the Allies in their tracks and banished all hopes of
early deliverance for the thousands of civilians who had not fled the
city after the initial bombings. The German commander brought his best
divisions into play, notably most of his armoured units. The British and
Canadians were pinned down in the cornfields around the city. Caen was
to become the linchpin of the Battle of Normandy.
Temporarily abandoning the idea of a frontal attack, which was judged to
be too costly, Montgomery launched a series of offensives to try and
envelop the city from the west and capture it from the rear.
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| A "Tiger"
tank in a defensive position |
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However,
his troops were brought to a standstill outside Tilly-sur-Seulles on June 9th by Bayerlein’s Panzer Lehr. The
town, reduced to rubble during the fighting, eventually fell ten days
later, but the Germans immediately formed a new line of resistance a few
kilometres further south.
Montgomery then pushed his 7th Armoured Division forward,
slightly further to the west, into what appeared to be a dead zone in
the front. However, the famous “Desert Rats”, still basking in the glow
of their Libyan victories ,were torn to pieces in Villers-Bocage on June
13th by a detachment of Tiger tanks ‑ 55-tonne steel monsters
‑ backed up by a number of Panzer IVs.
At
the end of June, the British launched a large-scale offensive towards
the Odon, between Caen and Tilly-sur-Seulles. This was Operation Epsom
and involved 90,000 men. They crossed the river on June 27th,
but were abruptly brought to a halt by the arrival of two SS armoured
divisions in the sector of Hill 112. For nearly a month, this modest
rise was to be the scene of desperate fighting that was as indecisive as
it was bloody.
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Waging
war in the cornfields north of Caen |
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The memory of trench
warfare cast a long shadow over the Normandy front |
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The
Battle of Caen was in danger of becoming bogged down
– or so it appeared. The fighting turned into a war of position, with soldiers
on both sides holed up in trenches. Attack followed counter-attack without any
tangible results. The Great War cast its grim shadow across the Normandy
front.
In
the early days of July, Montgomery returned to the principle of a direct
assault on Caen. This started in the evening of July 7th,
when the north of the city was subjected to a devastating aerial
bombardment. The following day, the Canadians flushed the SS out of
Buron and Authie, while the British broke down all remaining resistance
on the outskirts of Lébisey. In the evening, the Germans started to
retreat, and in the morning of July 9th, the Canadians took
Carpiquet, Saint-Germain-la-Blanche-Herbe, Venoix and La Maladrerie, and
at long last entered Caen. Further east, the British slowly advanced
through streets that had been rendered totally unrecognizable by the
piles of ruins that had been accumulating ever since June 6th.
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The Germans had taken up position on the right bank, where they were to
hold their ground for a further ten days before a fresh offensive
(Operation Atlantic) dislodged them. On June 19th,
guided by members of the Resistance (FFI), the Canadians took over the
districts on the right bank. Caen was now totally liberated, though the
enemy was still at its gates. That very same day, to the east of the city,
Operation Goodwood was launched in order to open up the entrance to
the plain, but despite the huge resources committed to it, it ended in
complete fiasco
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Preparations for
Operation "Goodwood". (IWM) |
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