GROESBEEK CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY
Transcription
GROESBEEK CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY
My Recollections APPENDIX E - GROESBEEK CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY The Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery is the largest of several in the Netherlands. It is located south of Nijmegen, a few kilometers north east of Mook, not far from the German border. Sam spent Christmas 1944 in Mook. He believes that his foray to “liberate” cutlery and dinnerware for the Christmas turkey dinner may actually have come from Groesbeek, which was in “no-mans” land at the time. (The Christmas turkey never showed up.) Soldiers who fell in Germany were temporarily buried near the battlefields there but Canadian command refused to allow them to remain there. After the war they were reburied in the Netherlands. The editor visited the cemetery in the afternoon of 16th October 2003. It was a deeply moving experience. The grounds were exceedingly well kept and, as we entered, a couple of local families were leaving. The gate through which one enters marks the ground as a “gift of the Dutch people”. Page E1 My Recollections As one enters the gate and proceeds to the cemetery proper, on both the left and right hand, stand Memorials. On the memorials are carved the names of missing servicemen. On the right memorial is a bronze plaque describing the battles and giving some background on the memorial and cemetery. The inscription is in English and Dutch, and is reprinted below. Proceeding past the Memorial, one is greeted by the sight of row upon row of grave markers, mostly Canadian, set off by commemorative monuments both front and back. Page A2 My Recollections I then looked for markers for soldiers from the Queens Own Cameron Highlanders of Canada regiment. It took only a minute to find one, then another, then another, then another, … young men, with families back home, now resting here. Two examples are shown below. Page E3 My Recollections The Inscription on the Plaque in the Groesbeek Memorial THE LIBERATION OF BELGIUM AND THE NETHERLANDS AND THE ADVANCE INTO GERMANY SEPTEMBER 1944 – MAY 1945 In the three months following their landing in Normandy the Allied armies had defeated the German Army in France, liberated Brussels, captured Antwerp and, in the east, reached a line running southwards along Moselle through the Vosges to the Swiss frontier. On 17th September, with the object of outflanking the Siegried Line, two American airborne divisions were dropped in the Nijmegen area and one Britich at Arnhem to clear the path for British Second Army. Speedy defensive concentration and bad weather prevented full success; the crossings of the rivers Maas and Waal were secured but that of the lower Rhine at Arnhem had to be abandoned after an epic stand by the British 1st Airborne Division assisted by the Dutch Resistance. By late September the Allied advance had outrun the logistic capacity to support it. The Channel ports, except Dunkirk, were in Allied hands but unusable until bombing damage had been repaired, and the lines of supply and reinforcement ran back to Normandy. Antwerp, with the help of the Belgian Resistance captured intact, was unusable so long as both shores of the Scheldt estuary remained in German hands. The south shore was finally cleared by Canadian I Corps on 2nd November after a month of hard fighting. The clearance of the north shore and Walcheren Island, completed on 8th November, involved some bitterly contested combined operations by British and Canadian troops. The mined approaches to Antwerp were swept and the port quickly restored. The shortened supply lines thus gained marked a turning point in the campaign. By early December, as a result of the Allied November offensive, British Second and Canadian First Armies lay along the Maas and Waal, American Ninth and reached the Roer, American Third was pushing forward into the Saar and French First Army had reached the Rhine at Mulhouse. On 16th December the Germans launched their last counter-offensive of the war against the lightly held Ardennes sector. Its object was to recapture Brussels and Antwerp thus cutting the Allies’ supply lines. The advance, 50 mines at its maximum, was halted on Christmas eve. On 3rd January the Americans, with some British reinforcement, struck back and within 4 days the Germans were withdrawing. Meanwhile British Second Army eliminated the bridgehead west of the Roer and the Americans and French dealt similarly with the salient south of Strasbourg. The last main battle of the campaign began on 8th February with an attack by Canadian First and British Second Armies from the Nijmegan bridgehead south-east through the Seigfried Line and the Reichswald into Germany itself. On the 17th, American Ninth Page A4 My Recollections Army attacked north-eastward and after intense fighting, the armies made contact on 3rd March in Geldern. To the south, by 9th March American First and Third Armies had secured bridgeheads at Mannheim and Oppenheim. Preceeded by intensive air and artillery bombardments the passage of the Rhine was successfully accomplished by the British and Canadians on the evening of 23rd March. By the following evening the bridgeheads had been expanded to link up with the British 5th and American 17th Airborne Divisions dropped that morning to the north of Wesel. Furhter crossings in strength followed and, by 3rd April, the British and Canadians had taken Osnabruck and were approaching Minden, American First and Ninth Armies had encircled the Ruhr, trapping large German forces, and in the south French First and American Seventh had crossed the Rhine. This battle marked the end of co-ordinated German defense although improvised battle groups continued to resist stoutly until late April. First contact with the westward advancing Russians was made on 25th April. By that time Canadian First Army had reached the North Sea Coast and contained the large German force cut off in west Holland. British Second Army, with a corps in Denmark and another in Schleswig-Holstein, was on the Elbe from its mouth to Wittenberge, southward of which the American First and Ninth Armies lay along that river. Further south French First and American Seventh Armies were in Austria and American Third had entered Czechoslovakia. Final German capitulation came on 8th May and after five years and eight months of war Europe was again at peace. The Commonwealth servicemen who died in the campaign are mostly buried in war cemeteries and Commonwealth sections of other cemeteries, along the line of advance. Allied command of the air played a large part in the success of the campaign and many of the airmen who died during operations over Europe are buried singly or in small groups in village cemeteries and churchyards where their graves are tended with loving care by the local communities. The 1,062 soldiers whose graves are unknown are commemorated on the memorial in Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery and the missing sailors and airmen on memorials at their home ports or at Runnymede, England. GROESBEEK CANADIAN WAR CEMETERY This cemetery contains burials gathered in from the battlefields in Germany and in the southern Netherlands. There are 2,617 burials here – Navy 3, Army 2,424, Air Force 190 – of which 2,338 are Canadian, 268 British, 2 Australian, 1 New Zealand, 1 Netherlands and 7 other Allied. THE GROESBEEK MEMORIAL The Groesbeek Memorial commemorates 1,062 soldiers (957 British, 103 Canadian, and 2 South African) who fell during the campaign in North West Europe from the crossing of the Seine in August 1944 to the end of the War in Europe. Standing on one of the highest points in the Netherlands the Memorial commands extensive views across the battlefields. Page E5