The
Battle of Arnhem was a famous Second World War military engagement fought in and
around the Dutch
towns of
Arnhem
, Oosterbeek
, Wolfheze
, Driel
and the
surrounding countryside from the 17–26 September 1944.
After
sweeping through France
and Belgium
in the
summer of 1944, the Allies were
poised to enter the Netherlands. Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery favored a single
thrust north to the River
Rhine
, allowing the British 2nd Army to bypass the
German Siegfried Line and attack the Ruhr. To this end the Allies launched
Operation Market Garden on 17
September.
Paratroopers were dropped in
the Netherlands to secure key bridges and towns along the Allied
axis of advance.
Furthest north the British 1st Airborne Division,
supported by men of the Glider
Pilot Regiment and the Polish 1st Independent
Parachute Brigade, landed at Arnhem to secure bridges across
the Lower
Rhine
. Initially expecting a walkover, British
XXX Corps planned to reach the British
airborne forces within two to three days.
The British forces landed some distance from their objectives and
were quickly hampered by unexpected resistance – especially from
elements of the
9th
SS and
10th SS
Panzer divisions.
Only a small force was able to reach the
Arnhem road
bridge
while the main body of the division was halted on
the outskirts of the city.
Meanwhile XXX Corps was unable to advance north as quickly as
anticipated and failed to relieve the airborne troops according to
schedule. After four days the small British force at the bridge was
overwhelmed and the rest of the division became trapped in a small
pocket north of the river where they could not be sufficiently
reinforced by the Poles or XXX Corps when they arrived on the
southern bank, or by the
RAF's
resupply flights. After nine days of fighting the shattered remains
of the airborne forces were withdrawn in
Operation Berlin.
With no secure bridges the Allies were unable to cross the Rhine
and the frontline stabilized south of Arnhem. The 1st Airborne
Division had lost nearly three quarters of its strength and did not
see combat again.
Background
By
September 1944 Allied forces
had successfully broken out
of their Normandy bridgehead
and pursued
shattered German forces across northern
France and Belgium
.
Although Allied commanders generally favoured a broad front policy
to continue the advance into Germany and the Netherlands,
Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery proposed a bold plan
to head north through the Dutch
Gelderland, bypassing the German
Siegfried line defences and opening a route
into the German industrial heartland of the
Ruhr. Initially proposed as a British and Polish
operation codenamed Comet, the plan was soon expanded to involve
most of the
First Allied
Airborne Army and a set piece ground advance into the
Netherlands, codenamed
Market
Garden.
Montgomery's plan involved dropping the
US
101st Airborne Division to capture
key bridges around Eindhoven
, the 82nd
Airborne Division to secure key crossings around Nijmegen
, and the British 1st Airborne Division, with the
Polish 1st Independent Parachute Brigade attached, to capture three
bridges across the Rhine at Arnhem. The
British Second Army, led by
XXX Corps would advance up the ‘Airborne
corridor’, securing the Airborne Division's positions and crossing
the Rhine within two days. If successful the plan would open the
door to Germany and hopefully force an end to the war in Europe by
the end of the year.
British plan

The planned British landings and
defence at Arnhem.
With the
6th Airborne Division
still refitting after
Operation
Tonga, the task of securing the Rhine Bridgehead fell to the
1st Airborne Division under the command of
Major General Roy
Urquhart. The division was made up of three brigades of
infantry (two parachute, one glider borne), supporting artillery
and anti-tank batteries and substantial
Royal Engineer units, as well as supporting
elements such as
Royal Army
Service Corps and
Royal
Army Medical Corps units. Most of the division had seen action
in
North Africa and
Sicily, particularly the
1st Parachute Brigade
and
1st
Airlanding Brigade. This was however the first time the
division had fought together as a complete unit.
The division was also substantially reinforced by the addition of
1,200 men of the Glider Pilot Regiment, providing Urquhart with the
equivalent of two battalions of infantry for the operation. Smaller
additions included a Dutch commando team and American
communications teams. Urquhart also had the 1st Independent Polish
Brigade under his command, who would also be joining the British in
the operation to seize the bridges.
The Division was required to secure the road, rail and
pontoon bridges over the Lower Rhine at
Arnhem and hold them for two to three days until relieved by XXX
Corps. From the beginning however, Urquhart was severely restricted
in how he could prepare and deploy his troops for the upcoming
battle. The (US)
IX Troop
Carrier Command were limited in their availability - with two
more major drops taking place at the same time, there were
insufficient carrier aircraft available to fly the entire division
to the Netherlands in one lift. Additionally Major General
Williams, commander of IX Troop Carrier Command decided that it
would only be possible for one air lift per day, meaning it would
take three days to deliver the entire Division and Polish Brigade
to the area.
A limited amount of areas suitable for glider
landings and a reluctance from troop command to fly too near to
Arnhem, exposing them to flak from Deelen
airfield
after the
drop, meant that Urquhart was forced to pick drop zones (DZ) and landing zones (LZ) up to 8 miles from Arnhem
itself, on the north side of the river. With the need to
secure the bridges, towns and drop zones for subsequent supply
drops, the 1st Airborne would need to defend a perimeter of some 18
miles whilst waiting for XXX Corps.
Urquhart decided to land
Brigadier
Gerald Lathbury's 1st Parachute Brigade
and Brigadier
"Pip" Hicks' 1st Airlanding
Brigade on the first day of the operation. The Airlanding
Brigade plus
Royal Artillery,
Royal Engineer and medical units and
Divisional HQ would land on LZs 'S' and 'Z' and move to secure the
drop zones and landing zones for the following days drops, whilst
the three battalions of the parachute brigade would arrive at DZ
'X' and follow three separate routes into Arnhem to secure the
bridges. The
2nd
Battalion, under the command of Lt Colonel
John Frost would follow the riverside
roads to the centre of Arnhem (codenamed the
Lion route)
and secure the main road and railway bridges, as well as a pontoon
bridge between the two. The
3rd Battalion of Lt
Colonel Fitch would head through Oosterbeek to Arnhem
(
Tiger route), assist in the capture of the road bridge
and take up positions in the east of the town. Lt Colonel Dobie's
1st Battalion
would follow
Leopard route north of the railway line to
occupy high ground north and north west of Arnhem. The whole
advance would be led by a troop of Reconnaissance jeeps from the
1st Airborne Reconnaissance Squadron, under
Major Frederick Gough
on
Leopard who would attempt a
coup de main on the road bridge. On the second
day Brigadier
'Shan'
Hackett's 4th
Parachute Brigade would arrive at DZ 'Y', accompanied by extra
artillery units and remaining elements of the Airlanding Brigade on
LZ 'X'. Hackett's three battalions would then reinforce the
positions north and north west of Arnhem. On the third day, the
Polish Parachute Brigade would be dropped south of the river at DZ
'K'. Using the road bridge they would reinforce the perimeter east
of Arnhem, linking up with their own artillery who would be flown
in by glider to LZ 'L'. 1st Airlanding Brigade would fall back to
cover Oosterbeek on the western side of the perimeter and 1st
Parachute Brigade would fall back to cover the southern side of the
bridges. Once XXX Corps had arrived and advanced beyond the
bridgehead, the
52nd
Infantry Division would be flown into Deelen airfield to
support the ground forces north of the Rhine. The remaining units
of the division would follow XXX Corps on land in what was known as
the
sea tail. The whole operation would be re-supplied by
daily flights by No's. 38 and 46 Group RAF who would make the first
drop on LZ 'L' on day 2, and subsequent drops on DZ 'V'.
Intelligence
Because of poor intelligence the British were told to expect only
limited resistance from German reserve forces. A serious challenge
to their operation was not expected and many men believed that
their work would lead to the ending of the war. Some, anticipating
a period of occupation in Germany, packed leisure equipment in
their kit or in the sea tail. The optimistic mood prior to the
operation would have tragic consequences however. Browning's
intelligence officer, Major
Brian
Urquhart (no relation to Roy Urquhart), obtained information
from the
21st Army Group in Belgium
and
Dutch resistance that German
armour was present around Arnhem. This was backed up with
aerial reconnaissance that he ordered
to be flown. Browning however was dismissive and ordered his chief
medical officer to have Urquhart sent on sick leave. In fact
SHAEF was aware that there were almost
certainly two
Panzer divisions at
Arnhem but with the operation looming chose to ignore them. Such
information would have been gleaned from
ULTRA
intercepts that the Allied Airborne Army was not privy to and
therefore could not act upon themselves.
German forces
The Allied drive toward Antwerp on Monday 4 September had caused a
rout of German reserve troops in Holland, nicknamed ‘
Mad Tuesday’. However the Allied pause at the
Dutch border gave the Germans time to regroup and re–organize,
although it would make subsequent attempts to clarify the exact
German forces opposing the Allies extremely difficult.
Feldmarschall Walter Model, commander of
Army Group B had moved his headquarters to
Arnhem and was re–establishing defences in the area and
co-ordinating the reorganisation of the scattered units so that by
the time the Allies launched Market Garden there would be several
units opposing them. To the west of Arnhem was
Kampfgruppe Von Tettau, a force equivalent
to seven battalions made up of all manner of German units
(including
Wehrmacht,
Luftwaffe,
Kriegsmarine, rear echelon and
Waffen-SS troops) under the command of
General Hans
von Tettau at
Grebbeberg. This
included the SS
Non-commissioned officer school
SS Unteroffizier schule Arnheim and the
16th SS
Training Battalion under the command of
SS Sturmbannführer Sepp Krafft whose unit would play a crucial role
in the opening phases of the battle. Within Arnhem itself the town
garrison was under the command of Major-General Friedrich
Kussin.
Additionally
Obergruppenführer Wilhelm Bittrich's II SS Panzer Corps, comprising the remains
of
Walter Harzer’s 9th
SS Panzer Division and
Heinz
Harmel’s 10th SS Panzer Division, had
moved into the area north of Arnhem to refit and reorganise.
Although
badly mauled after escaping the Falaise Pocket
the Corps was made up of seasoned veterans and made
available significantly more forces to the Germans than the allies
had been led to expect. The divisions were also specially
trained in anti–airborne operations. During their formation, the
divisions had undergone month-long anti airborne exercises whilst
waiting for their heavy equipment and spent the last 15 months
studying the best reactions to parachute attack in classroom and
field exercises. The 9th Division had a
Panzergrenadier brigade, a reconnaissance
battalion, an artillery battalion, two batteries of
self-propelled guns and a company of
tanks. Exactly how many men were available after the withdrawal
from Normandy is unclear. Some sources suggest that the 9th had up
to 6,000 men, others suggest that the combined total of the 9th and
10th was only between 6,000–7,000 men.
There were also Dutch units allied to the Germans present at
Arnhem. These formations recruited from Dutch nationals (mainly
criminals, men wishing to avoid national service or men affiliated
with the
Nationaal-Socialistische
Beweging) and were incorporated into the German Army.
At Arnhem
the Dutch SS Wach Battalion 3 was attached to Kampfgruppe Von
Tettau and the 3rd Battalion, 34th SS
Volunteer Grenadier Division Landstorm Nederland training at
nearby Hoogeveen
was quickly attached to Harzer’s 9th SS Panzer
Division when they arrived at the battle on 20
September.
As the battle progressed more and more forces would become
available to the Germans.
Adolf Hitler,
stunned by the attack, agreed that the defence of Holland should
receive absolute priority and over the course of the battle
reinforcements would stream in – from Wehrkreis VI, the Wesel
area and
General Friedrich
Christiansen's Armed Forces Command
Netherlands. Model arranged for units to be sent
straight to the units in action in order to avoid long winded
logistics, and rushed in specialist
street fighting and machine gun battalions.
Each day of the battle the German military strength increased
whilst the British supplies diminished. By Thursday 21st, the fifth
day of the battle, German forces outnumbered the British by 3:1 and
continued to increase.
Battle
Day 1 - Sunday 17 September

First infantry movements, 17
September.
The first lift was preceded by intense bombing and strafing raids
made by the British
2nd Tactical
Air Force and the American
8th and
9th Air Forces. These targeted the
known
flak guns and German garrisons and
barracks across the area. Meanwhile the first lift suffered only
light losses as the aircraft and gliders flew from UK bases to the
target area. The first arrivals were the
21st Independent Parachute
Company at 12.40 pm, who marked the landing zones for the
gliders and parachutists in advance of the main landings. The
landings were largely unopposed and the battalions formed up in
good order ready to carry out their tasks by 2.45 pm. Whilst the
Airlanding Brigade moved into defensive positions around the
landing zones, the 1st Parachute Brigade prepared to head east
toward the bridges, with Lathbury and his HQ Company following
Frost on
Lion route. Although some jeeps of the
reconnaissance squadron were lost on the flight over, the company
formed up in good strength and moved off along
Leopard
route.
The Germans were unprepared for the landings and initially thrown
into confusion.
Model, erroneously assuming that the
paratroopers had come to capture him, fled his headquarters at the
Hartenstein hotel in Oosterbeek and went to Bittrich's headquarters
east of Arnhem at Doetinchem
where he took personal control of the
battle. The 10th SS Division was sent south to respond to
the American landings at Nijmegen and defend the "island" - the
polder between the Lower Rhine and
Waal rivers,
whilst the 9th would defend Arnhem. The 9th SS was at that point
making preparations to return to Germany and Harmel was in Berlin
trying to secure more men and supplies for his unit. He was
instantly ordered to return to Arnhem whilst his division began to
prepare its forces for battle.
Obersturmbannführer Ludwig Spindler, commander of the 9th SS
Armoured Artillery Regiment, quickly organised a small
battlegroup (
Kampfgruppe Spindler was
initially only 120 men but would incorporate 16 separate units over
the course of the battle). In the late afternoon he was ordered to
advance west to Oosterbeek and establish a blocking line to prevent
the British from reaching Arnhem centre. Meanwhile the Division's
Reconnaissance Battalion under the command of
Hauptsturmführer Viktor Gräbner was ordered south to
Nijmegen, crossing the Arnhem bridge at dusk. Initially however, no
units were ordered to secure the bridge itself. Arnhem Garrison
commander Major-General Kussin was killed by men of the 3rd
Parachute Battalion as he sped towards his headquarters, and his
death led to a breakdown in command and responsibilities. It was
not until late in the afternoon that the Reconnaissance Battalion
of 10th SS Division were ordered to secure the bridge. At the time
of the landings only one organised unit was in place to oppose the
allied advance toward the bridges – the
16 SS
Training Battalion camped in Wolfheze - and their commander
Sepp Krafft acted quickly to establish a blocking screen west of
Oosterbeek.
The Allied advance quickly ran into trouble. The reconnaissance
squadron was
ambushed by the northern flank
of Krafft's blocking line and withdrew. The 1st and 3rd Parachute
Battalions were also stalled by Krafft's defences and spent the
rest of the day skirting his line. The 3rd Parachute Battalion went
south and halted in Oosterbeek for most of the night whilst 1st
Parachute Battalion went further north but hit Spindler's forces
and was unable to reach the Arnhem-Ede road of
Leopard
route. Instead Dobie decided to abandon his plan and help Frost at
the bridge and the battalion headed south into Oosterbeek
overnight. Only the 2nd Parachute Battalion was largely unopposed,
bypassing the defences that did not as yet reach down as far as the
river. They were slowed by cheering Dutch civilians and did not
reach the bridges until late in the day. The railway bridge was
blown by German engineers as the Allies approached it and the
pontoon bridge was missing its central section. At dusk the men of
A Company under Major
Digby
Tatham-Warter observed Graebner's force cross the bridge. Most
of the battalion and various other supporting units, including two
jeeps of Goughs squadron, four
6
pounder Anti–Tank guns, Brigade HQ (but without Lathbury), and
Royal Engineers (in total numbering about 740 men), moved into
Arnhem centre as night fell and owing to the oversight in German
orders were able to secure the undefended northern end of the road
bridge.
Lieutenant Jack Grayburn led an attempt to
secure the southern end of the bridge but was unsuccessful, and a
later attempt using a
flame thrower
only succeeded in setting the freshly painted girders of the bridge
alight. However, the British were able to make good their position
and quickly repulsed the 10th SS Reconnaissance Battalion and other
German units when they arrived to secure the bridge.
Meanwhile the Airlanding Brigade moved quickly to secure the
landing zones. The 2nd Battalion,
South Staffordshire Regiment
moved into Wolfheze, the 1st Battalion,
The Border Regiment secured DZ 'X',
deploying its companies around the DZ and in Renkum, and the 7th
Battalion
King's Own
Scottish Borderers moved to secure DZ 'Y'. Here they ambushed
the Dutch SS Wach Battalion as it headed toward Arnhem from Ede.
Units of the Airlanding Artillery and Divisional HQ headed into
Wolfheze and Oosterbeek where medical officers set up a Regimental
Aid Post at the home of
Kate ter
Horst.
The allied advance was severely hampered by poor communications in
these crucial initial phases. The paratroopers'
radio sets range was instantly limited by the
wooded terrain and as the battalions advanced they lost contact
with Divisional HQ at the landing zones. Over the coming nine days,
radio communication within the division, with Browning's HQ at
Nijmegen, with XXX Corps and with the United Kingdom would be
intermittent and unreliable, severely hampering the British units.
Carrier pigeons were even used to
make contact with England. Partly
as a consequence of this limitation, Urquhart decided to follow the
1st Parachute Brigade and make contact with Lathbury. He found the
Brigade HQ on
Lion route but was informed Lathbury himself
was visiting the 3rd Battalion. Urquhart followed him there but
subsequently would not be able to return to Divisional HQ for two
days.
Day 2 - Monday 18 September

The 2nd lift advances into Arnhem
where it encounters the German blocking line, 18 September.
As the second day dawned the 9th SS Panzer Division continued to
reinforce the German blocking line. Krafft's unit withdrew
overnight and joined Spindler's line, coming under his command.
Spindler's force was now becoming so large as more men and units
arrived at the new front, that he was forced to split it into two
subdivisions - Kampfgruppes Allworden and Harder. The defensive
line now blocked the entire western side of Arnhem and had closed
the gap exploited by Frost alongside the river the previous
evening.
Overnight the British 1st and 3rd Parachute Battalions had skirted
as far south as 2nd Parachute Battalion's original route into the
city, hoping to follow them into Arnhem centre. They approached the
German line before light and for several hours attempted to fight
through the German positions. Spindlers force, being continually
reinforced, was too strong to penetrate and by 10am the British
advance was stopped. A more co–ordinated attack followed in the
afternoon, but it too was repulsed. Urquhart attempted to return to
his Divisional Headquarters at Oosterbeek but became cut off and
was forced to take shelter in a Dutch family's
loft with two fellow officers. Lathbury was injured and
also forced into hiding.
At the road bridge, German forces of the 9th SS Division had
quickly surrounded Frosts battalion, cutting them off from the rest
of the division. At around 9am, the 9th SS Panzer Reconnaissance
Battalion headed back toward Arnhem from south of the river, having
concluded that it was not needed at Nijmegen. Though aware of the
British troops at the bridge, it attempted to cross by force. In
the resultant two hour battle it was beaten back with heavy losses,
including its commanding officer Viktor Gräbner. German attacks
carried on around the British perimeter for the rest of the day but
the British continued to hold.

At the landing zones Brigadier Hicks was informed that in
Urquhart's and Lathbury's absence, he was acting divisional
commander. He was also told to send one of his units — the South
Staffordshire Battalion (which was not complete and was awaiting
its full complement of men in the second lift) – to Arnhem to help
with the advance to the bridge. The South Staffords departed in the
morning and linked up with the 1st Parachute Battalion in the late
afternoon.
German forces began to probe the 1st Airlanding Brigade defences
throughout the morning. Units of Kampfgruppe Von Tettau attacked
the Border's positions; men of the SS NCO school overran Renkum and
Kriegsmarine troops engaged the British all day as they withdrew.
Small amounts of fighting broke out around LZ 'X' but not enough to
seriously hamper the glider landing there. At DZ 'Y' the Dutch SS
Wach Battalion became heavily engaged with the King's Own Scottish
Borderers, threatening to hamper the arrival of the second lift.
The communications breakdown meant that it was impossible to warn
the aircraft. Equally, there was no way for the division to know
that the 2nd lift had been delayed by ground
fog
in England. Thus the arrival of the 4th Parachute Brigade under
Brigadier Hackett and several more troops of artillery at the drop
zones was several hours overdue. When the parachutists did arrive
after 3pm they dropped under fire. Several were killed as aircraft
and parachutists were shot down and the
heath-land they were landing on caught fire.
Nevertheless the arrival of a full brigade overwhelmed the Dutch
who were routed and surrendered in droves.
Despite the setbacks the units assembled with only slight
casualties but the changing circumstances at Arnhem meant that
their roles were quickly changed. The 11th Parachute Battalion and
the rest of the South Staffords were immediately despatched to
Arnhem to assist in the attempt to break through to the bridge,
where they linked up with the 1st and 3rd Parachute Battalions
after dark. Hicks' decision to send the 11th Parachute Battalion to
Arnhem (thus weakening the 4th Parachute Brigade) dismayed Hackett,
who remonstrated with Hicks to no avail. However he was given
command of The King's Own Scottish Borderers who were moving toward
LZ 'L' to secure it for Tuesday's landing. The 10th and 156th
Parachute Battalions moved north of the railway line to take up
their planned defensive positions north west of Arnhem but the
leading elements of 156th Parachute Battalion made contact with the
main 9th SS blocking line after dark and withdrew for the
night.
Shortly after the second lift arrived the first supply drop was
made onto LZ 'L'. Although most supplies arrived only a small
amount could be collected as the area was not under full British
control. The poor radio communication meant that it was not
possible to alert the RAF and unsecured drop zones would be a major
problem in the days to come.
Day 3 - Tuesday 19 September

With the arrival of the South Staffords and 11th Parachute
battalion at the 1st and 3rd Parachute Battalion's positions west
of Arnhem, the British hoped to have sufficient troops to break
through to Frost's position at the bridge. Lieutenant Colonel Dobie
of 1st Parachute Battalion planned to attack before first light but
an erroneous report suggesting that the bridge had fallen led to
the attack being cancelled. By the time the report was corrected
first light was not long away but with reinforcement at the bridge
the priority, the attack had to proceed. The advance began on a
narrow front with the 1st Parachute Battalion leading, supported by
remnants of the 3rd Parachute Battalion, with the 2nd South
Staffordshires on the left flank and the 11th Parachute Battalion
following behind. As soon as it became light the 1st Parachute
Battalion was spotted and halted by fire from the main German
defensive line. Trapped in open ground and under heavy fire from
three sides, the 1st Parachute Battalion disintegrated and what
remained of the 3rd Parachute Battalion fell back. The 2nd South
Staffordshires were similarly cut off and save for about 150 men,
overcome by midday. The 11th Parachute Battalion, which had thus
far not been heavily involved, was now overwhelmed in exposed
positions while attempting to capture high ground to the north. The
South Staffords similarly attempted to secure high ground but were
driven off. With no hope of breaking through, the 500 remaining men
of these four battalions retreated westwards in the direction of
the main force, away in Oosterbeek. As they approached Oosterbeek
they were met by Lieutenant Colonel
Sheriff Thompson, of the 1st Airlanding
Light Artillery Regiment, who formed most of the men into a
defensive screen under Major
Robert
Cain half a mile forward of his artillery positions.
The
battle gave Urquhart the opportunity to escape his position and he
was able to return to Division HQ at the Hotel
Hartenstein
in Oosterbeek, where for the first time he was able
to learn the extent of the German forces facing them.
In Britain, ground fog again frustrated reinforcement. 35 gliders
of the 3rd lift carrying the Polish glider borne elements were
delayed in taking off and the whole parachute brigade failed to
take off at all. This would have serious consequences on the ground
when the delayed gliders arrived.

North of the railway line the 156th and 10th Parachute Battalions
became engaged with the German defensive line as they attempted to
seize the high ground in the woods north of Oosterbeek. Both
battalions' advances were blunted against the well defended German
positions and by early afternoon they had not advanced any further
than their original positions. Urquhart, realising the need to
assume a more defensive stance and prevent the two battalions being
cut off north of the railway, ordered them to fall back to Wolfheze
and Oosterbeek. Making a fighting withdrawal with the Germans of
Kampfgruppe Krafft closely pursuing them, the units fell back
across LZ 'L' , defended by the King's Own Scottish Borderers who
were awaiting the arrival of the Glider borne elements of the
Polish Parachute Brigade. Heavy fighting ensued as the gliders
arrived in the middle of the retreat and Polish losses were heavy.
All four Allied units streamed south and west toward the road
crossings over the steep railway
cutting at Oosterbeek and Wolfheze
and gathered in ad–hoc units in the woods on the south side, where
most of them spent the night. Some German units followed them
across the railway and an SS battalion reached Wolfheze where it
was strafed by its own air force.
In the afternoon the RAF flew its first major resupply mission,
using 164 aircraft to fly in 390 tons of supplies to the British.
The Germans - who had been expecting resupply efforts - had moved
five flak batteries into the area specifically to attack these
flights and as the RAF came into view they succeeded in shooting
down 10 aircraft. Despite the bravery of the pilots (
Flight Lieutenant David Lord received the
Victoria Cross posthumously), the Airborne
forces only recovered 31 tons of supplies. The dropzone - Supply DZ
'V' was still in German hands (the British would never reach this
SDZ during the battle) and the no message had reached Britain to
explain this.
At the bridge, Frost's forces continued to hold but without supply
or reinforcement their position was becoming weaker. The Germans,
realising that infantry attacks were unlikely to remove the
stubborn defenders, began to systematically destroy the houses the
British were in using tanks, artillery and
mortar. In the absence of any Allied air
cover, the Luftwaffe were able to make strafing runs on the British
occupied houses as well.
Day 4 - Wednesday 20 September

The British battalions break off their
engagements and withdraw into the Oosterbeek perimeter, 19–21
September.
By now the division was too weak to attempt to reach Frost at the
bridge. Of the nine infantry battalions, only one (1st Battalion,
The Border Regiment) still existed as a unit, the rest were badly
mauled or scattered. Urquhart made the difficult decision to form a
defensive perimeter around Oosterbeek, abandoning the 2nd Parachute
Battalion. By securing the Driel
Ferry
Crossing, Urquhart hoped to hold out until XXX Corps could
reach them and establish a new bridgehead over the Rhine using the
ferry crossing platforms.
The eastern side of Osterbeek was fairly stabilised after the
retreat of the previous day, with numerous ad–hoc units under
company commanders defending the approaches to the town. Major
Richard Lonsdale had taken command
of the outlying units that had retreated from Arnhem the previous
day, and their positions weathered heavy German attacks before
falling back to the main divisional perimeter at Oosterbeek. This
sector was later designated Lonsdale Force and would remain the
main line of defence on the south eastern perimeter. The Border
Regiment held most of the western edge of the town, with scattered
units filling the gaps to the north. As more units fell back to the
new defensive area they were re-organised to establish a thumb
shaped perimeter using the Rhine as its southern base.
The mixed units at Wolfheze began to fall back in the morning but
several were surrounded and captured, including one party of 130
men. 150 men of 156th Parachute battalion led by Hackett himself
became pinned down and took cover in a hollow some 400m west of the
Oosterbeek perimeter. The men broke out in the late afternoon, with
90 men making it to the Border Regiment's positions.
The afternoon's supply drop was little better than the previous
day's. Although a message had reached Britain to arrange a new
dropping zone near the Hotel Hartenstein, some aircraft flew to LZ
'Z' where all their supplies fell into German hands. At Oosterbeek
the Germans had used British marker panels and flares to attract
the aircraft to their positions and the aircraft were unable to
distinguish the exact dropping zones. Ten of the 164 aircraft
involved were shot down around Arnhem for only 13 percent of
supplies reaching British hands.
At the bridge, Frost was finally able to make radio contact with
his divisional commander and given the difficult news that
reinforcement was doubtful. Shortly afterwards at about 1.30 pm,
Frost was injured in the legs by a mortar bomb. Command passed to
Major Gough but by late afternoon the position was becoming
untenable. As fire took hold of many of the buildings in which the
wounded were being treated, a two-hour truce was organised in the
late afternoon. The wounded (including Frost) were taken into
captivity. Overnight a few units managed to hold out for a little
longer and several groups tried to break out toward the Oosterbeek
perimeter but by 5am on Thursday morning all resistance at the
bridge had ceased. In the final hours of the struggle a radio
message was sent from the bridge. It was not picked up by the
British but was heard by the German forces, who recalled that it
ended with the sentences: "Out of ammunition. God Save the
King."
Day 5 - Thursday 21 September
Throughout the morning the Germans mopped up British survivors and
stragglers in hiding around Arnhem bridge. It took several hours to
clear the bridge of debris allowing German armour to cross and
reinforce Nijmegen. Crucially, the British had held the bridge long
enough to allow Nijmegen bridge to be
captured by the 82nd
Airborne. With the resistance at the bridge crushed, the
Germans had more troops available to commit to the Oosterbeek
engagement, although this changed suddenly in the afternoon.
Two days late, the parachute infantry battalions of
Stanisław Sosabowski's 1st
(Polish) Parachute Brigade were able to take off in England. 114
C-47s took off but 41 aircraft turned back after Troop Carrier
Command decided it would be too dangerous to land if the aircraft
were up too long. The remainder pressed on — they did not have the
correct transmission codes and did not understand the messages. One
of the few messages to get out of Arnhem warned the Poles that DZ
'K' was not secure and to land instead on the
polder east of Driel where they should secure the
Heveadorp ferry on the south bank of the Rhine. The Poles dropped
under fire at 5pm and sustained casualties but assembled in good
order. Advancing to the river bank they discovered that the ferry
was gone - the ferryman had sunk it to deny its use to the
Germans.
The arrival of the Poles relieved the pressure on the British as
the Germans were forced to send more forces south of the Rhine.
Fearing an attack on the southern end of the road bridge or the
Nijmegen road, a battalion of the 34th SS Volunteer Grenadier
Division Landstorm Nederland, Machine Gun Battalion 47 and other
Kampfgruppes headed across the river overnight.

British prisoners at Arnhem
Bridge.
They are unshaven after four days of fighting - water was
scarce during the battle.
At Oosterbeek the defensive positions were consolidated and
organised into two zones. Hicks would command the western and
northern sides of the perimeter and Hackett, after some rest, the
eastern front. The perimeter was not a complete defensive line but
a collection of defensive pockets in houses and foxholes
surrounding the centre of Oosterbeek, with the divisional
Headquarters at the Hotel Hartenstein at its centre. The perimeter
was roughly 3 miles around and was defended by approximately 3,600
men. Despite the Germans' best efforts, the line would remain
roughly unchanged for the next five days, although Germans of the
Hermann Göring NCO School attacked the Border positions on the west
side near the Rhine, forcing them to abandon strategically
important high ground overlooking Oosterbeek. The biggest boost to
the besieged British was being able to make contact with forward
artillery units of XXX Corps. Radio contact was made with
64th Medium Regiment, Royal
Artillery who were able to drop heavy and accurate shellfire on
German positions around the perimeter. The radio link to the
battery's Headquarters was also used as the main line of
communication to XXX Corps. So important was the shellfire provided
by 64 Medium Regiment that afterwards Urquhart lobbied
(unsuccessfully) for the Regiment to be able to wear the airborne
Pegasus badge on their uniforms.
The British had witnessed the Polish drop but were unable to make
contact by radio so a swimmer was sent south of the Rhine. The
British planned to supply rafts for a river crossing that night as
the Poles were desperately needed on the northern bank.
The Poles
waited on the southern bank, but by 3am no rafts were evident and
they withdrew to Driel
to take up
defensive positions.
Day 6 - Friday 22 September
Overnight the Germans south of the river formed a blocking line
along the railway, linking up with 10th SS to the south and
screening the road bridge from the Poles. The Polish were well dug
in at Driel however, and German armour was unable to manoeuvre off
of the main roads to attack them. Hopes were raised when three
armoured cars of XXX Corps'
Household
Cavalry managed to skirt the German defences on the island and
link up with Sosabowski's force. These were followed after dark by
tanks of the
4th/7th Royal
Dragoon Guards and infantry of the 5th Battalion
Duke of Cornwall's Light
Infantry. Behind them the rest of the
43rd Wessex Division was making its way
up a narrow corridor.
In Oosterbeek heavy fighting continued around the perimeter.
Intense shelling and snipers increased the number of casualties and
the aid posts in the hotels and houses of the town. Bittricht
ordered that the attacks were stepped up and the British bridgehead
north of the Rhine destroyed and at 9am the major attacks began
with the various Kampfgruppes of 9th SS attacking from the east and
Kampfgruppe von Tettau's units from the west. There were only small
gains but were followed by simultaneous attacks in the afternoon
when the Germans made a determined moves on the northern and
eastern ends. To the north they succeeded in briefly forcing back
the King's Own Scottish Borderers before they counter attacked and
retook their positions. Urquhart realised the futility of holding
the tactically unimportant tip however and ordered the units in the
north to fall back and defend a shorter line. To the east, the
remains of 10th Parachute Battalion were nearly annihilated in
their small position on the main Arnhem road, but the Germans
failed to gain any significant ground.
Two of Urquhart's staff officers swam the Rhine during the day and
made contact with Sosabowski's HQ. It was arranged that six rubber
boats should be supplied on the northern bank to enable the Poles
to cross the river and come into the Oosterbeek perimeter. That
night the plan was put into operation, but the cable designed to
run the boats across broke and the small oars weren't enough to
paddle across the fast flowing river. Only 55 Poles made it over
before light and only 35 of these made it into the perimeter
Day 7 - Saturday 23 September

British forces move through a ruined
building in Oosterbeek.
Spindler was ordered to switch his attacks further south and try to
force the British away from the river, thus isolating the British
from any hope of reinforcement and allowing them to be destroyed.
Despite their best efforts they were unsuccessful, but the constant
artillery and assaults continued to wear the British defences down
further.
A break in the weather allowed the RAF to finally fly combat
missions against the German forces surrounding Urquharts men.
Hawker Typhoons and
P 47 Thunderbolts strafed German positions
throughout the day and occasionally diced with the Luftwaffe over
the battlefield. The RAF attempted their final resupply flight from
the UK on the Saturday afternoon, but lost eight planes for little
gain to the Airborne troops. Some small resupply efforts would be
made from Allied airfields in Europe over the next two days but to
little effect.
South of the river the Poles prepared for another crossing. That
night they awaited the arrival of assault boats from XXX Corps, but
these did not arrive until after midnight and many were without
oars. The crossings started at 3am, with fire support from the 43rd
Wessex Division. Through the remaining hours of darkness only 153
men were able to cross - less than a quarter of the hoped for
reinforcement.
Day 8 - Sunday 24 September

Two troopers dug in near Oosterbeek on
18 September, showing the woodland fought in on the western side of
the British perimeter.
In the morning Horrocks visited the Polish positions at Driel to
see the front for himself.
Later he hosted a conference attended by
Browning, Major-General Ivor Thomas of the 43rd (Wessex) Division
and Sosabowski at Valburg
. In a controversial meeting in which
Sosabowski was politically outmanoeuvred, it was decided that
another crossing would be attempted that night. When the Germans
cut the narrow supply road near Nijmegen later that day though, it
seems Horrocks realised the futility of the situation and plans
were drawn up to
withdraw the
1st Division.
In Oosterbeek the situation was becoming more desperate. Hackett
was wounded in the morning and had to give up the eastern command.
The RAF attempted some close support around the perimeter which
just held, but shelling and sniping increased casualties by the
hour. The aid stations were home to some 2,000 men, both British
and German as well as Dutch civilian casualties. Because many of
them were actually in the front line in homes taken over earlier in
the battle, the odd situation was created where casualties were
evacuated forward rather than rearwards. Without evacuation the
wounded were often injured again and some posts changed hands
between the British and Germans several times as the perimeter was
fought over.

Throughout the fighting around Oosterbeek there had been short
localised truces around the aid posts to allow the wounded to reach
them, but by Sunday the situation needed a more serious
arrangement. Colonel Graeme Warrack, the senior medical officer
asked permission to arrange a
truce - a
request that Urquhart agreed to. Warrack was taken to see Bittrich
who similarly agreed and offered Warrack as many supplies as he
could carry. Between 3pm and 5pm a general ceasefire went into
effect around the perimeter and about 450 stretcher cases and
walking wounded were evacuated from
the perimeter, the Germans using jeeps and ambulances to take
serious cases straight to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Arnhem where
British, German and Dutch medical staff worked side by side.
That night the Allies on the south side of the river attempted
another crossing. The plan called for 4th Battalion
The Dorset Regiment and the 1st Polish
Parachute Battalion to cross at 10pm using boats and
DUKWs. Sosabowski was furious at having to give up
control of one of his battalions and thought the plan dangerous,
but was silenced. The boats failed to arrive until 1am and several
had been destroyed or lost en route, so a last minute change of
plan mean that only the Dorsets would cross. The small boats
without skilled crews, the strong current and poor choice of
landing site on the north bank meant that of the 315 men who
embarked, only a handful reached the British lines on the other
side. The DUKWs and most boats landed too far downstream and at
least 200 men were captured.
Day 9 - Monday 25 September
Overnight a copy of the withdrawal plan was sent across the river
for Urquhart's consideration. Despite the obviously frustrating
content, Urquhart knew there was little other choice and radioed
Thomas at 8am to agree to the plan on the condition it went ahead
that night. Meanwhile the Airborne forces would need to endure
another day in their perimeter. More men were evacuated from the
aid posts throughout the day but there was no official truce and
this was sometimes done under fire.
At 10am the Germans began their most successful assault on the
perimeter, attacking the southeastern end with infantry supported
by newly arrived
Tiger tanks. This
assault pushed through the defenders' outer lines and threatened to
isolate the bulk of the division from the river. Strong counter
attacks from the mixed defenders and concentrated shellfire from
south of the river eventually repelled the Germans.
Urquhart formulated his withdrawal plan on the successful method
used in the evacuation of
Gallipoli during the
First World War. The northernmost units
would fall back first, moving through the more southerly groups who
would then follow behind. The Glider Pilots would organise the
routes to the river and the whole operation would be covered by an
intense artillery barrage from XXX Corps. South of the river the
evacuation was organised and staffed by men of the Royal Engineers
of 43rd Division and
Royal
Canadian Engineers, using rafts and storm boats. In order to
prevent the Germans from learning about the operation, the plan was
not announced until the afternoon and some men (mainly wounded)
would remain to lay covering fire through the night. Men were
ordered to muffle their boots and weapons to help them bypass known
German incursions into the perimeter. Some men took the opportunity
to shave before withdrawing, providing quite a morale boost.
By 9pm heavy rain was falling which helped disguise the withdrawal.
The heavy bombardment commenced and the units began to fall back to
the river. Half of the engineers' boats were too far west to be
used (43rd Division mistakenly believing the crossing points used
by the Dorsets the previous night were in British hands), slowing
the evacuation process. The Germans shelled the withdrawal,
believing it to be a resupply attempt. At 5am the operation was
ceased lest the coming light enable to Germans to fire onto the
boats more accurately.
2,163 Airborne men, 160 Poles, 75 Dorsets and several dozen mixed
other men were evacuated but about 300 were left on the northern
bank when the operation was ceased and 95 men were killed
overnight.
Throughout the morning of 26 September the Germans pressed home
their attacks and finally linked up from both sides at the river.
It was not until about noon that they realised the British had
actually withdrawn. Later in the day they rounded up about 600 men,
mostly the men in the aid stations and those left on the north
bank, as well as some pockets of resistance that had been out of
radio contact with division Headquarters and did not know about the
withdrawal.
Aftermath
Arnhem was a victory for the Germans (albeit tempered by their
losses further south) and a major defeat for the British army. The
Allies withdrew from the southern bank of the Rhine and the front
stabilised on "the island" between the Rhine and Waal rivers.
Although the Germans counterattacked in October they were repulsed
and subsequently the front line in the Netherlands would not move
until after the winter. However the bridgeheads across the Maas and
Waal served as an important base for subsequent operations against
the Germans on the Rhine and the
strike into Germany.
Many military commentators and historians believe that the failure
to secure Arnhem was not the fault of the airborne forces (who had
held out for far longer than planned), but of the operation as a
whole.
John Frost noted that "by far the worst
mistake was the lack of priority given to the capture of Nijmegen
Bridge" and was unable to understand why Browning had ordered
Brigadier General James Gavin of the US 82nd Airborne Division to
secure the Groesbeek
Heights before Nijmegen Bridge. In
his analysis of the battle,
Martin
Middlebrook believed the "failure of Browning to give the 82nd
US Airborne Division a greater priority in capturing the bridge at
Nijmegen" was only just behind the weakness of the air plan in
importance.
Likewise, in his assessment of the German perspective at Arnhem,
Robert Kershaw concluded that "the battle on the
Waal at Nijmegen proved to be the decisive event" and
that Arnhem became a simple matter of containment after the British
had retreated into the Oosterbeek perimeter. After that it was
merely "a side-show to the crisis being enacted on the Waal". Heinz
Harmel asserted that "The Allies were stopped in the south just
north of Nijmegen – that is why Arnhem turned out as it did." Gavin
himself commented that "there was no failure at Arnhem. If,
historically, there remains an implication of failure it was the
failure of the ground forces to arrive in time to exploit the
initial gains of the [1st] Airborne Division".
The air plan was a major weakness in the events at Arnhem itself.
Middlebrook believes that the refusal to consider night drops, two
lifts on day 1, or a coup-de-main assault on Arnhem bridge were
"cardinal fundamental errors"; and that the failure to land nearer
the bridge threw away the airborne force's most valuable asset –
that of surprise. Similarly Frost believed that the distance from
the Drop zones to the bridge and the long approach on foot was a
"glaring snag" and was highly critical of the "unwillingness of the
air forces to fly more than one sortie in the day [which] was one
of the chief factors that mitigated against success."
The Allies failure to secure a bridge over the Lower Rhine spelled
the end of Market Garden. While all other objectives had been
achieved, the failure to secure the Arnhem road bridge over the
Rhine meant that the operation failed in its ultimate objective.
Field Marshal Montgomery claimed that the operation was 90 per cent
successful and the Allies did possess a deep salient into German
occupied territory that was quickly reinforced.
Milton Shulman observed that the operation
had driven a wedge into the German positions, isolating the 15th
Army north of Antwerp from the First Parachute Army on the eastern
side of the bulge. This complicated the supply problem of the 15th
Army and removed the chance of the Germans being able to assemble
enough troops for a serious counterattack to retake Antwerp.
Chester Wilmot agreed with this,
claiming that the salient was of immense tactical value for the
purpose of driving the Germans from the area south of the Maas and
removing the threat of an immediate counterattack against Antwerp.
Kershaw views the situation differently, observing that the north
flank of the west wall was not turned and the 15th Army was able to
escape. Dr. John Warren of the American Historical Division of the
USAF believed that the Allies now controlled a
salient leading nowhere.
John Waddy is of the
belief that the strategic and tactical debate of Market Garden will
never be resolved.
Although a disaster for the British 1st Airborne Division, their
fight north of the Rhine is considered an example of courage and
endurance and one of the greatest feats of arms in the Second World
War.
Allied losses
The battle exacted a heavy toll on the 1st Airborne Division from
which it would never recover. Three quarters of the unit were
missing when it returned to England, including two of the three
brigade commanders, eight of the nine battalion commanders and 26
of the 30 infantry company commanders. Some 500 men were still in
hiding north of the Rhine, and over the coming months many of these
were able to escape – initially in
Operation Pegasus New recruits, escapees
and repatriated POWs joined the division over the coming months,
but the division was still so much weakened that the 4th Parachute
Brigade had to be merged into the 1st Brigade, and the division as
a whole could barely produce two brigades of infantry. Between May
and August 1945 many of the men were sent to Denmark and Norway to
oversee the
German surrenders
there but on their return the division was disbanded.
The Glider Pilot Regiment suffered the highest proportion of fatal
casualties during the battle (17.3% killed).
The regiment was so
badly depleted that during Operation Varsity
RAF pilots were used to fly many of the
gliders. As glider operations were phased out after the war
the regiment shrunk and was eventually disbanded in 1957.
The Poles withdrew to Nijmegen where they helped defend the
airborne corridor before returning to England in early October.
Shortly afterwards the British began the process of making
Sosabowski and the Polish Brigade a
scapegoat for the failure at Arnhem, perhaps to
cover their own failings. On 17 October Montgomery informed
Alan Brooke,
Chief of the Imperial
General Staff that he felt the Poles had fought very badly and
that he did not want them under his command. A month later,
Browning wrote a long and highly critical letter of Sosabowski for
Brookes deputy. In it he accused Sosabowski of being difficult,
unadaptable, argumentative and "loth to play his full part in the
operation unless everything was done for him and his brigade".
Browning recommended that Sosabowski be replaced and in December
the Polish government in exile duly dismissed him in a move likely
made under British pressure. Although it may be fair to say that
Sosabowski was difficult to work with, his scapegoating is judged
as shameful by many historical commentators.
Brian Urquhart, who had done so much to warn
his superiors about the dangers of Arnhem and later became
Undersecretary-General
of the United Nations, described the British general's actions
as "grotesque and shameful"
Axis losses
German casualty figures are less complete than Allies, and official
figures have never been released. A signal possibly sent by II
Panzer Corps on 27 September listed 3,300 casualties (1,300 killed
and 2,000 injured) around Arnhem and Oosterbeek. Robert Kershaw's
assessment of the incomplete records identified
at least
2,500 casualties. In the
Roll of Honour: Battle of Arnhem 17-26
September 1944, J.A. Hey of the
Society of Friends of the
Airborne Museum, Oosterbeek identified 1,725 German dead from
the Arnhem area relating to the time of the battle. All of these
figures are significantly higher than Model's conservative estimate
of 3,300 casualties for the entire Market Garden area of battle
(which included Eindhoven and Nijmegen).
Arnhem
Dutch records suggest that at least 453 civilians died during the
battle, either as a result of Allied bombing on the first day or
during the subsequent fighting. After the battle the residents of
Arnhem and its surrounding towns and villages were forcibly evicted
from their homes, allowing the Germans to turn the north bank of
the Rhine into a heavily defended line. Residents were not allowed
to return home without a permit and most did not return until after
the war. The Dutch homes were then systematically looted, with the
spoils being sent to bombing victims in Germany. The Germans
continued to fight Allied forces on the plains between Arnhem and
Nijmegen, so to prevent its use the road bridge that the 1st
Airborne had fought so hard for was destroyed by the Allies. On 7
October it was bombed and destroyed by
B-26 Marauders of
344th Bomb Group,
USAAF. The buildings of Arnhem were heavily shelled by
the Allies over the next few months and suffered further when the
city was eventually
liberated in
April 1945.
Honours and memorials
Despite being the last great failure of the British Army, Arnhem
has become a byword for the fighting spirit of the British and has
set a standard for the Parachute Regiment. Montgomery claimed that
"in years to come it will be a great thing for a man to be able to
say: 'I fought at Arnhem'", a prediction seemingly borne out by the
pride of soldiers who took part, and the occasional desire of those
who didn't to claim that they were there.
Within days of Operation Berlin the British returned to a heroes'
welcome in England. A list of 59 decorations was quickly published
for the 2000 men who had returned and an investiture ceremony for
the division was held at Buckingham Palace in December. Decorations
for the 6000 who had not returned were not published until
September 1945 and numbered only 25.
Five of the British participants in the battle were awarded
Britain's highest award for gallantry, the
Victoria Cross. Four were members of the
Airborne forces and one was from the
RAF. They
were:
The British and Commonwealth system of
battle honours recognised participation in
fighting at Arnhem in 1956, 1957 and 1958 by the award to 6 units
of the battle honour
Arnhem 1944.
After the liberation of Holland the Grave Registration units of 2nd
Army began the task of identifying the British dead. They were
buried together in a field that is on permanent loan to the
Commonwealth War
Graves Commission just north of Oosterbeek.
There are nearly
1,800 graves in what is now known as the Airborne
Cemetery
, three quarters of whom were killed during the 1944
battle. As of 2003 there are still 138 men unaccounted for
and even now human remains, equipment and weaponry are still dug up
in the farmland around the city.
In Germany the battle was treated as a great victory and afterwards
no less than eight men were awarded the
Knight's Cross of the Iron
Cross. The German dead were gathered together to be buried in
the
SS Heroes Cemetery near Arnhem.
After the war they
were reburied in Ysselsteyn
.
The shattered Arnhem road bridge was briefly replaced by a
succession of
Bailey bridges before
being rebuilt in the same style as the original.
It was renamed John
Frostbrug
(literally John Frost Bridge) on 17 December
1977.
On 31 May 2006 HM
Queen Beatrix of the
Netherlands conferred two honours on the Polish forces who fought
at the battle. The Polish 1st Independent Airborne Brigade was
awarded the Dutch
Military
William Order for gallantry and Stanisław Sosabowski was
posthumously awarded the
Bronze Lion. In
February of that year an appeal was launched to raise funds so that
a memorial to General Sosabowski and the brigade could be erected.
The memorial was unveiled in September 2006 in a ceremony that
sought to undo the injustice of 1944.
The Hotel
Hartenstein, used by Urquhart as his Headquarters, is now the home
of the Airborne
Museum
. Several other memorials were built in
Arnhem and Oosterbeek, and an
annual
parade is held in the area. A memorial near the museum reads:
"To the People of Gelderland; 50 years ago British and Polish
Airborne soldiers fought here against overwhelming odds to open the
way into Germany and bring the war to an early end. Instead we
brought death and destruction for which you have never blamed us.
This stone marks our admiration for your great courage remembering
especially the women who tended our wounded. In the long winter
that followed your families risked death by hiding Allied soldiers
and Airmen while members of the resistance led many to
safety."
In popular culture
The progress of the battle was widely reported in the British
press, thanks largely to the efforts of two
BBC
reporters (
Stanley Maxted and
Guy Byam) and three journalists who
accompanied the British forces. The journalists had their reports
sent back almost daily - ironically making communication with
London at a time when Divisional Signals had not. The division was
also accompanied by a three man team from the
Army Film and Photographic
Unit who recorded much of the battle - including many of the
images on this page.
Only two years later a
war movie about the
battle was released in Britain.
Theirs is the Glory featured some
original footage and used 120 Arnhem veterans as extras in many of
the other scenes. This was followed in 1974 by the publication of
Cornelius Ryan's book
A Bridge Too Far, which did
much to bring the battle to a worldwide audience and then by
Richard Attenborough's film of the same name in 1978, which
used Frost and Urquhart as military consultants.
The battle has also been the subject of several games, including
board wargames such as
Advanced Squad Leader A
Bridge Too Far and
real-time
strategy computer games including
V for Victory: Market
Garden,
Close Combat 2,
Codename: Panzers and
Company of
Heroes: Opposing Fronts. The battle has also been depicted
in levels of
video games such as
Call of Duty: Roads
to Victory and
Medal of Honor:
Frontline.
See also
References
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- Ryan, p430
- Kershaw, p224
- Middlebrook, p403
- Waddy, p169
- Middlebrook, p340
- Evans, p16
- Kershaw, p244
- Middelbrook, p339
- Evans, p15
- Evans, p14
- Middlebrook, p377
- Waddy, p170
- Middlebrook, p409
- Waddy, p137
- Waddy, p147
- Waddy, p148
- Middlebrook, p349
- Middlebrook, p346
- Waddy, p173
- Middlebrook, p410
- Kershaw, p266
- Evans, p18
- Middlebrook, p398
- Waddy, p174
- Middlebrook, p411
- Middlebrook, p414-417
- Middlebrook, p417
- Ryan, p495
- Waddy, p155
- Middlebrook, p383
- Middlebrook, p380
- Waddy, p155
- Middlebrook, p419-420
- Middlebrook, p419
- Middlebrook, p422
- Waddy, p160
- Ryan, p515
- Waddy, p156
- Middlebrook, p424
- Waddy, p140–141
- Middlebrook, p427
- Waddy, p161
- Middlebrook, p421
- Middlebrook, p429
- Middlebrook, p428
- Ryan, p519
- Middlebrook, p431
- Middlebrook, p433
- Middlebrook, p434
- Waddy, p166
- Kershaw, p301
- Middlebrook, p432
- Kershaw, p301
- Kershaw, p314
- Middlebrook, p1
- Ryan, p541
- Badsey, p86
- Kershaw, p303
- Kershaw, p303
- Middlebrook, p442
- Frost, preface p13
- Frost, p242
- Middlebrook, 444
- Gavin, p121
- Middlebrook, p443
- Frost, preface p12
- Kershaw, p303
- Ryan, p537
- Shulman, p. 210
- Wilmot, p.523
- Ryan, p532
- Waddy, p9
- Ambrose, p138
- Waddy, p10
- Middlebrook, p445
- Middlebrook, p446
- Middlebrook, p447
- Middlebrook, p439
- Middlebrook, p436
- Middlebrook, p448
- Middlebrook, p462-464
- Waddy, p167
- Middlebrook, p441
- Ryan, p539
- Kershaw, p339
- Kershaw, p311
- Middlebrook, p449
- Evans, p21
- Middlebrook, p1
- Middlebrook, p451
- Middlebrook, p446
- Rodger, p. 251
- Waddy, p190
- Middlebrook, p469
- Steer, p141
- Frost, p235
- Middlebrook, p450
- Frost, preface p16
- Middlebrook, p68
- Middlebrook, p164
- Frost, p251
- Goldman
Bibliography
- [NB: Book has no page numbers]
External links