Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Ardenne tour

StraightEight

One of the Regulars
Messages
267
Location
LA, California
This year we saddled up in a '64 Citroen ID-19 and took a tour of the Bulge area of the Ardennes on the way to the War and Peace Show in the UK. Here are some pictures.

DSC_3253.jpg

Sherman tank turrets indicate where the 101st Airborne stopped the advance of the 47th Panzer Lehr during its encirclement of Bastogne. This one is on the south approach to the ville.
DSC_3252.jpg

Houffalize, where Montgomery and Patton linked up in the closing days of the Battle of the Bulge.
DSC_3287.jpg

The Tiger II at La Glieze. After it was knocked out, the U.S. army used it for bazooka target practice and to see if the shells would piece the armor. They didn't. In July of '45, a Mrs. J. Geenen-Dewez suggested the Tiger be moved up in front of city hall for display, where it has remained ever since.
DSC_3305.jpg

DSC_3341.jpg

La Glieze in December, 1944. The Germans left 132 vehicles behind in this tiny hamlet.
DSC_3321.jpg

DSC_3342.jpg

The battle for Stoumont, where Kampfgruppe Peiper's advance was finally stopped, in part by the first use of AA guns by the U.S. in horizontal combat. On December 19, '44, the gun of Pvts Kenneth Humphry and Alfonso Marinaro took out the lead Panther from 100 yards where the road splits around the old church. A second AA gun down by the railroad station took out two more, blocking the road and turning back Peiper's advance. It was the beginning of the end for the northern German flank of the Bulge.
DSC_3345.jpg

Here's the view that Humphry and Marinaro saw, well, minus the Citroen and a few other details.
DSC_3349.jpg

Battle damage still visible in a building in Trois-Ponts, where a bridge was blown before Peiper could get across, forcing him north toward La Glieze and eventual doom.
 

StraightEight

One of the Regulars
Messages
267
Location
LA, California
DSC_3353.jpg

The road taken by Peiper toward La Glieze.
DSC_3276.jpg

Further south, Ft. Shoenenbourg in the Maginot Line. The battle for Schoenenbourg started on May 14, 1940. The fort fired 3840 shells in its own defense. The French government surrendered on June 25 but the fort was never taken and only handed over to the Germans by order of the French military command in July.
P1030482.jpg

100 feet underground. Two miles of interconnected galleries. 46,000 cubic yards of concrete. 3.6 acres of floor space, 6 combat blocks, just one of the 45 large forts (grand ouvrages) in the Maginot Line.
P1030438.jpg

Explosive chargers were packed into the wall here to be detonated and collapse the tunnel in case the fort was being taken.
P1030477.jpg

Retracting gun turrets outside the fort.
P1030483.jpg

Joe's Bridge near Lommel, Belgium, the site of the first bridge captured during Operation Market Garden in September, 1944. It was so named for Joe Vandeleur, commander of the Irish Guards (played by Michael Caine in A Bridge Too Far), the lead unit in the British advance up Hell's Highway.
P1030554.jpg

The largest WW2 cemetery in western Europe is the German cemetery at Lommel. More than 39,000 are here.
P1030561.jpg

A Sherman at Leopoldsburg, from which XXX Corps launched the ground offensive. Across the street is the site of the former Cinema Splendid, where Gen. Horrocks famously said: "This will be a tale you will tell your grandchildren, and mightily bored they will be!"
P1030571.jpg
 

Metatron

One Too Many
Messages
1,536
Location
United Kingdom
Thanks, good thread! 'The Tiger II at La Glieze. After it was knocked out, the U.S. army used it for bazooka target practice and to see if the shells would piece the armor. They didn't.' The armour on that thing is unreal.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,288
Messages
3,033,085
Members
52,748
Latest member
R_P_Meldner
Top