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  Terrain Challenge: Terrain Challenge #60 (Solved by Heimdude)
Posted on Wed Apr 25, 2012 6:55 am by webmaster
Terrain Challenge Submitted by Lestayo, hint WW2!


"Terrain Challenge #60 (Solved by Heimdude)" | Login/Create an Account | 14 comments | Search Discussion
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Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by diggin.robat on Thu Apr 26, 2012 11:12 pm
(User Info | Send a Message) http://www.greatwargames.com/
Normandy!




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by Lestayo on Fri Apr 27, 2012 10:32 pm
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Cooooold...




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by Manoi on Sat Apr 28, 2012 1:17 am
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Russia




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by Nacrox on Sat Apr 28, 2012 5:45 am
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Oosterbeek, or something related to British in Market Garden




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by bexx76 on Tue May 01, 2012 2:14 am
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seems normandy, british sector, but really hard to find the two villages, is the picture oriented to nord?




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by breid556 on Tue May 01, 2012 3:48 am
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Is it Britain? Seems kinda vague-just WW2




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by Buck_Compton on Tue May 01, 2012 3:08 pm
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I do not believe this to be Normandy after having had a look. this photo lacks the quality to be taken in that region. So I tend to look somewhere else.

I'm not sure but it does look like France. Maybe something of the may 1940 invasion?

Cheers Buck




Re: Terrain Challenge #60 (Score: 1)
by Heimdude on Tue May 01, 2012 11:42 pm
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Got it!

Battle of Hatten-Rittershoffen during Operation Norwind:

Germans committed the 21st Panzer and the 25th Panzer Grenadier Divisions to the attack with a breakthrough to Hagenau. On 9 January, German armor was able to penetrate the center of the VI Corps sector. This caused Brooks, the Corps commander, to commit his final reserve force, the 14th Armored, in an effort to stop the German XXXIX Panzer Corps advance. Ordered to take up positions in the vicinity of Hatten and Rittershoffen, the 14th assumed command and control of units from the 242nd Infantry Regiment and the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 315th Infantry Regiment. With heavy fighting in and around the towns, success was measured in how many buildings were controlled by each side as the Americans controlled the western half of the villages and the Germans the eastern half. On 15 January, the Germans strengthed the forces in both villages with elements of the 20th Parachute Regiment from the 7th Parachute Division, and the 104th Infantry Regiment from the 47th Volksgrenadier Division. As the fighting raged, the 14th Armored found itself increasingly on the defensive. The resupply of the division was becoming very difficult due to the constant reorganizing of forces, the evacuation of the wounded and the shrinking perimeter. But the divisions' 11 day stand at Hatten and Rittershoffen allowed the VI Corps and Seventh Army to withdraw to prepared defensive positions. On 21 January, after the rest of Seventh Army had withdrawn to the south bank of the Moder River, the 14th and its supporting units withdrew from Hatten and Rittershoffen and moved south to join the rest of the army.

Following the battle, the division's G-4 (staff officer) reported to the commanding officer that the division was still short of 62 medium tanks despite having received over 60 replacements during the month of January. Even more astounding was the 136th Ordnance Battalion's maintenance report for the month in which it listed approximately 150 tanks that had been knocked out in combat, repaired and returned to the division's tank battalions. An example of this is seen in the operational reports of the 47th and 48th Tank Battalions. At the height of the fighting the 47th reported that it had a total of 17 operational tanks out of an authorized strength of 50, all were committed to holding its portion of the line. The 48th Tank Battalion report for the same period included the comment that its tank companies were now of approximately squad strength. Lieutenant-General Jacob L. Devers, commanding general, 6th Army Group later commented that the Battle of Hatten-Rittershoffen "was one of the greatest defensive battles of the war." The 14th Armored Division was nominated for four Presidential Unit Citations for its actions at Hatten-Rittershofen. Of these, two were awarded. Col. Hans von Luck, who commanded the 21st Panzer Division at Hatten-Rittershoffen wrote in his memoirs "Panzer Commander" that the battle ".... was one of the hardest and most costly battles that had ever raged on the western front." These are strong, telling words from a professional German panzer officer who had fought with Rommel's famed Afrika Korps in North Africa, served two tours of duty on the Eastern Front, and led the only armored counter-attack to be attempted against the Allied beachhead in Normandy. A veteran officer who served on the staff of Army Group G during the battle wrote after the war that the American defense of the town against overwhelming odds was "heroic."


Note that the some of the Maginot line fortifications are located in these two towns and were used by the allies during this battle. The Germans broke through using flamethrowers.

The "Musée de l'abri Hatten" is located in this picture.


 
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