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Major
General Stanislaw Sosabowski and Operation Market Garden
May 31st 2006 Queen Beatrix
presented the 1st Polish Parachute Brigade the "Militaire Willemsorder"
and General Sosabowski the "Bronzen Leeuw". These medals are
rewarded because of the actions of the polish airborne during Operation
Market Garden in 1944 click here
for full story
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Official news made public :
The decision on the medal for General
Sosabowski and the Polish Parachute Brigade
has been made public.
Decided is that the Brigade will get the
highest decoration 'Militaire Willemsorde'
(the highest decoration of Holland) and General Sosabowski
will get the 'Bronzen Leeuw' (Bronze
Lion).
Sosabowski's grandson reckons this is the
start , they can now start work in the
UK to get recognition for the work the Poles did at Driel .
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by Stan Sosabowski
It was Montgomery's master plan
to shorten the war by six months by bypassing the Sigfried line. It
involved securing ALL the key bridges over the Rhine the Maas the Waal
and a number of canals using elite American British and Polish Airborne
forces backed up on land by the swift advance of an armoured brigade.
The most important bridge, the gateway
to the industrial heartland of Germany, was the 600m long Arnhem bridge
over the Lower Rhine a mere 64 miles due north of the front line.
The deciding factors would be surprise,
and feeble German resistance and the very fast link up with the Sherman
tanks of XXX Corps.
A very big mistake on all three counts.
It was to be the
largest airborne troop landing in history. The
First Allied Airborne Army was composed of two Corps.
The US Corps comprising the 82nd and
101st Airborne and the British Corps with the 1st and 6th Airborne
Divisions, the 52nd Lowland Division and the Polish Parachute Brigade.
General Breton was overall C in C while 'Boy' Browning led the British
Corps from a safe distance away. Urquart was the actual battle
commander of the British and Polish forces.
As the day
approached General Sosabowski became increasingly anxious. From the
start he had been vehemently opposed to the whole idea and had made
his objections abundantly and in fairness, abrasively clear at staff
meetings and at a last minute private meeting with Browning. His
protests were of no avail and made him even more unpopular with
Browning who after the battle would get his own back on this
troublesome thorn in his side.
"Market
Garden" began early on Sunday morning September 17th with
1400 bombers carpet bombing numerous military targets.
Then at 9.45, 2023 transport
planes many towing gliders, took off from 26 airports in England
and made their tortuously slow way to the Low Countries. Above and
below and as far as the eye could see this aerial armada was
protected by 1500 American and British fighter planes; Mustangs,
Mosquitoes, Tornadoes and the like, making a total of 5000 allied
planes in the air at one go. It was a truly awe-inspiring sight,
wave after wave of aeroplanes hour after hour after hour.
Soon in the region of 20,000
allied soldiers would find themselves on the ground fighting to
seize their allotted objective and keep their bit of the corridor
open until the arrival of the tanks of the Irish Guards led by
Horrocks.
The Americans with objectives
close to the front line had a bit of luck and made it all look
rather easy.
The 101st Airborne under Maxwell
D. Taylor just failed to save the Son bridge near Eindhoven but
which for the most part remained intact. Link up with XXX corps
occurred a day later on the 18th.
Further north the 82nd under Gavin
with his 7500 men also fared very well and took three of their
four designated bridges around Nijmegen on the first day. Link up
with XXX Corps occurred four days later when the Nijmegen viaduct
was captured intact.
However still further north around
Arnhem Sosabowski's worst fears were being realised. Some 5200 of
Urquart's men (The 1st Airborne Division) had landed and the
outlook seemed bright.
Then, hell was
unleashed.
All communications equipment was
inoperative. On top of this, only Frost's 2nd battalion was able
to advance swiftly along a small road running along the bank of
the Lower Rhine and take the north side of the bridge. The south
side proved impossible.
Day 2 Monday
the 18th, more reinforcements were dropped but General Urquart
had gone missing and was presumed dead!
Frost in the mean time had
begun his desperate lonely loosing fight at his end of the
bridge - few reinforcements and fierce German counter attacks
recapturing lost houses. Over the next 2 days the situation
began to deteriorate. The allied forces around Oosterbeek were
encircled and their perimeter had begun to shrink. Many
dropping zones were in enemy hands. But already on day 4
Wednesday the 20 th, XXX Corps had reached Nijmegen barely 17
km away from Arnhem well behind schedule but certainly in time
to change the course of events.
There they rested and waited
for orders. Incomprehensible!
It was also on that day that
Browning first received news about the tragic situation the
British forces were in.
Day 5.
Thursday 21st, weather conditions allowed the dropping of
further reinforcements but by then Frost's group had been
overwhelmed on the fated bridge. His incredibly brave stand
had not been in vain. He had prevented any panzer
reinforcements from crossing the bridge. XXX Corps had
meanwhile received orders to continue their advance!
Sosabowski's Polish Parachute Brigade was dropped on the
south side of the river at Driel nearly opposite to where
the main British forces were. They had effectively ceased as
a fighting unit bottled up in a cauldron 3 km by 1500 m and
shelled continuously from three sides for days. But there
was no immediate way of helping Urquart [see his comments]
no way to ford a 400m wide fast flowing river under German
observation and fire power. Even the RAF masters of the air
had refused repeatedly to help their comrades in need.
Day 6.
Friday 22nd.Advance reconnaissance from XXX Corps linked
up with Sosabowski but 2 Sherman tanks were knocked out by
Polish mines of all things. The first attempt to cross the
Rhine late that night failed miserably. Only 50 soldiers,
made it.
Day 7
Urquart's laconic radio telegram to Browning reads thus:
"under continuous attack from infantry artillery
tanks and flamethrowers. HQ under fire. Situation
unchanged but defense weaker. Still no communication
with our forces on the south side. Today's supplies drop
a failure. Little ammunition no food no water - everyone
is filthy. Moral is high but the constant battering is
taking its toll. We are holding out in the hope of
better days". What incredible courage! British
stiff upper lip at its very best! At 0100 hours the
Poles tried once again using American pontoons but under
the continuous German barrage incur heavy losses and
only 200 manage to join their British comrades.
Day 8
Sunday 24th. German artillery continued hammering the
British and the supplies drop once again failed. After
a staff meeting with Horrocks it was decided [ hic?]
that the third traverse attempt was to be lead by a
battalion? of the Dorset's. Trucks arrived with boats
without oars followed by 6 amphibious craft soon to be
stuck in the mud. The Germans had by now got used to
this turkey shoot. By daybreak only 100 men had made
it.
Day
9 Monday 25th. Operation Berlin! Defeat and retreat
back across the cursed river to the welcoming Poles.
Out of the 10,000 men who originally went in, only
2,000 made it back.
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