The Army that got away: The German 15. Armee in the summer of 1944
This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the epic struggle against Germany in the West during the summer of 1944. The prevailing story in books and television documentaries always follows the same incomplete sequence: first, we have Operation Overlord (D-Day); next, there is the fighting in Normandy, resulting in the breakout. And finally, we get Operation Market Garden.
What happened between Normandy and Market Garden is glossed over in a few paragraphs, at best. This period which saw the Allies racing east and the German troops in the West on the brink of collapse, found the German 15th Army under General Von Zangen trapped against the Channel coast following the capture of Antwerp on 4 September 1944.
The history of this army has never been told. This is ironic because, at the time, 15. Armee figured prominently in the minds of Allied commanders in the weeks following the breakout from Normandy. Similarly, the German High Command had only one question: how do we save Von Zangen’s army and stop the Allied avalanche? It seemed impossible for soldiers on foot or with horse-drawn transport against a highly mobile opponent. Nevertheless, the army made it out of the pocket largely intact and lived to fight another day.
The Army that got away tells the day-to-day story of an army whose survival hugely impacted subsequent operations, especially Market Garden. Readers of the authors’ books will know that the text is based on primary sources only and that Allied units and their actions are also discussed in great detail. The story of how the army managed to get away, but also how it initially took part in the battle for Normandy, is now told in full for the very first time, and a major gap in the story of World War Two is finally addressed. This book follows the formula of their previous two books, ‘Autumn Gale’ and ‘Kampfgruppe Walther’ and so will be of interest to modellers and fans of military history alike.
There will be only one limited print run
Book Data
Authors: Jack Didden and Maarten Swarts
ISBN: 9789080039392
Language: English
No of Pages: 528
No of Photos: 900+
No of Maps: 100+
Physical: Hardcover, 280x220mm, portrait
Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- The Lull before the Storm (15 February 1942 – 5 June 1944)
- Into battle (6 June – 20 June 1944)
- An army in waiting (21 June – 25 August 1944)
- New Masters and a New Threat (25 – 28 August 1944)
- Supercharge (29 August 1944)
- Grave Danger (30 August 1944)
- Disaster on the Somme (31 August 1944)
- Into the breach (1 September 1944)
- A golden opportunity? (2 September 1944)
- Operation Sabot (3 September 1944)
- Antwerp, the Turning Point (4 September 1944)
- Change of Plan (5 September 1944)
- Break Out! (6 September 1944)
- Fall Back! (7 September 1944)
- The end of a phase (8 September 1944)
- Firming up (9 – 11 September 1944)
- Slowing down (12 – 16 September 1944)
- New Assignments (17 – 23 September 1944)
- Conclusions
- Sources
- Appendix I 15. Armee Order of Battle 1943-1944
- Appendix II 15. Armee changes in Order of Battle
- Appendix III Divisions
- Appendix IV Security Units
- Appendix V The Scheldt Crossings
- Separate texts:
- The Army Headquarters in Tourcoing (Chapter 1)
- The Montes-Gassicourt bridgehead (after Chapter 3)
- The French Resistance (after Chapter 7)
- The Flying Bomb Threat (after Chapter 8)
- The Pocket at Mons (after Chapter 9)
- German Forces in Antwerp (Chapter 11)
- Frogmen in the Night (after Chapter 11)
- The Channel Ports (after Chapter 14)
- The Channel Guns (after Chapter 14)
- The Air Effort over the Wester Scheldt (Conclusions)
- The peregrinations of an artillery unit (Conclusions)
- Allowing an army to escape (after Conclusions)