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At 0500 on August 19th, 1942, the men from
the Royal Regiment of Canada were approaching
the beach of Puys, a small seaside village
two kilometres east of Dieppe. They were
already behind schedule and, as the sun
rose, their presence was detected. The Germans
took aim at the landing crafts that were
still ten metres from the shore. At 0507,
the first LCA
lowered its ramp. Canadian soldiers dashed
forward in the noise of machine-gun and
mortar fire that targeted them. They fell,
mowed down by bullets, hit by mortar shells.
Some tried to reach the seawall bordering
the beach, hoping to find shelter. They
were to be made prisoner after a few hours
of useless resistance.
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Dieppe's pebble
beach and cliff immediately
following the raid on August
19th, 1942. A scout car has
been abandoned.
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| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, C-029861. |
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A few kilometres away, to the left near
Berneval and to the right near Dieppe, Pourville
and Varengeville, other battalions landed,
more men were killed by machine-gun fire
and struck by mortar shells. Several platoons
managed to break through enemy defence lines
and closed in on their targets. Their determination
was no match for the formidable might of
the German army. Order was given to pull
back at 1100; Navy personnel did the utmost
to retrieve as many assault troops as possible.
The raid was over. As the tide rose, the
wounded who remained on the beach were carried
away by the waves with the dead.
Why Dieppe?
In 1942, the Combined Operations Headquarters
had good reasons for attempting a raid on
Dieppe: on the eastern front a decisive
battle was pitching the advancing German
troops against the resistance of the Red
Army and the Russian people. Stalin asked
Churchill and Eisenhower to help the USSR
by opening up a Western front in continental
Europe, to prevent Hitler from throwing
all the might of his armies against the
Soviets. As a result, Great Britain planned
a series of major raids against German defence
installations along the Channel. Only one
such operation was actually conducted: Dieppe.
The Allies' long-term goal was to get a
foothold on the continent and set up a bridgehead
from where ground forces could move into
Europe. But before it could attempt a large-scale
landing, the Combined Operations Headquarters
had to test some of its assumptions in real
action. Would it be possible to capture
a fortified seaport large enough to be used
afterwards by invading troops, and that,
without destroying its infrastructures?
Amphibious landing techniques had been successfully
tested in previous operations but how would
the new barges designed to carry tanks and
heavy artillery behave? There was a need
to test the complex combination of land,
naval and air manoeuvres required by a large-scale
invasion in real action conditions, in order
to check the efficiency of new equipment,
communication lines and chains of command.
The August 19th, 1942, raid was to answer
all those questions.
Dieppe was a seaside resort in Normandy,
built along a long cliff that overlooked
the Channel. The cliffs are cut by gaps
through which the Scie and Arques rivers
flow to the sea. The city boasted a medium-sized
harbour that carried a special significance
for French Canadians as it was a departure
point for ships sailing off to New France.
In 1942, the casino on the boardwalk had
been partially demolished by the Germans
to facilitate the defence of the coast.
They had set up two large artillery batteries
in Berneval and Varengeville. For the British
Commanders, Dieppe was also within the range
of the RAF's
Spitfires and Hurricanes based nearby at
Eastbourne, Sussex.
The raid was to unfold in two phases rapidly
following one another. During the first
phase, assault troops were to approach from
the flanks and launch a surprise attack
at daybreak, the main goal of which being
to neutralize the artillery positions at
Berneval and Varengeville. Half an hour
later a second, frontal assault was to be
conducted against Dieppe itself, to capture
the harbour and the German landing barges
that were moored there. Once other targets
further inland had been reached, Allied
troops were to withdraw to the beach and
board the ships waiting for them. The operation
was only a raid: the attackers were to destroy
several German installations and leave immediately.
The timing depended strictly on sunrise
and troops had to retreat before the high
tide. In order to benefit from the surprise
element, there would be no air bombings
the night before.
The Assault Troops
General Bernard
Montgomery chose the 2nd Canadian
Infantry Division for the raid. General
Andrew
McNaughton, who commanded the
First Canadian Army and General
H.D.G. Crerar,
commander of I Canadian Corps eagerly accepted
this opportunity for Canadian soldiers to
get some combat experience as they had been
stationed in Great Britain for two years
without having ever engaged the enemy in
a major operation. In Canada, public opinion
was starting to question this inactivity:
the time was ripe and Canadians soldiers
were roaring to go and make a name for themselves
like their predecessors of WWI did.
Major-General J.H.
Roberts, commander of the 2nd
Canadian Infantry Division, was at the helm
of the land forces. But neither Roberts,
nor McNaughton, nor Crerar took any part
in the overall planning of the operation,
codenamed Jubilee, having assisted
only with details. The plan had already
been designed by the Combined Operations
HQ when the Canadians were called in.
On August 19th, 1942, the ground forces
that were taking part in the raid included
4,963 men and officers from the 2nd Canadian
Division, 1,005 British commandos, 50 US
rangers and 15 Frenchmen. A fleet of 237
ships and landing barges, including 6 destroyers,
brought them near the seashore. In the air,
Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force
bombers and fighters took part in the operation.
Although some questioned the very concept
of a full frontal assault on a fortified
position, the British and Canadian strategists
wee in agreement with the military doctrines
that prevailed at the time and success was
likely.
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Part
of the assault fleet gathered
for Operation Jubilee. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-171080. |
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Canadian
Army units in the Dieppe raid
The Assault on the
Right Flank: Varengeville and Pourville
The raid was off to a great start on the
west flank: No 4 British Commando landed
in Varengeville. Climbing up the steep slope,
it attacked and neutralized its target,
a battery of six 15-cm guns. The commando
then withdrew at 0730 as planned.
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Landing
crafts of the assault troops taking
part in Operation Jubilee, Dieppe,
August 19th, 1942. On the left,
a smoke screen produced to conceal
them from enemy fire. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-183770. |
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At the same time, a little further left,
the South Saskatchewan Regiment was headed
towards Pourville, some four kilometres
west of Dieppe. The
LCA reached the pebble beach
at 0452, almost on time. The surprise was
real and the soldiers managed to leave the
landing crafts before the enemy could fire.
Unfortunately the landing crafts had somewhat
drifted and most soldiers of the battalion
found themselves west of the Scie River
rather than east of it. Because of that
apparently minor mistake, the regiment,
whose objective was the hills east of the
village, had to enter Pourville to cross
the river on the only bridge.
Before the Canadians had a chance to reach
that bridge, the Germans were in position,
blocking their progression with a wall of
machine-gun and antitank artillery fire.
Dead and wounded soldiers piled up on the
bridge. Lieutenant-Colonel Merritt, commanding
officer of the South Saskatchewan, stepped
forward, bare-headed, his helmet in his
hand, and shouted to his men: "Come
on over - there's nothing to it!" The
assault resumed but nothing could be done.
The South Saskatchewans and the Cameron
Highlanders of Canada, who joined them soon,
were unable to reach their target.
Close by, other troops from the Cameron,
under Major A.T. Law, moved inland towards
Petit Abbeville. Cut off from their battalion,
they were forced to retreat and be evacuated.
Merritt's courage allowed most of the South
Saskatchewans and Camerons to be evacuated
but a small rear-guard detached to hold
the Germans back, did not make it. Merritt
was awarded the Victoria Cross.
On the Left Flank:
Berneval and Puys
The situation on the left flank proved
to be a disaster even before the first landing.
An hour before the scheduled landing time,
the ships carrying the No 3 British Commando
encountered a German convoy with an armed
escort. Fierce fighting followed that disorganized
the manoeuvres of the landing crafts and
only seven out of 23 reached the Berneval
beach. The firing alerted the Germans who
met the Commandos with strong opposition.
Only one craft escaped the attention of
the enemy and 17 men and three officers
from No 3 Commando managed to land without
being seen. Edging their way through a gully,
an unbelievably bold movement, they got
near their target, a German artillery position
on the hill above Berneval. Unable to destroy
it, they took shots at it with such intensity
that for an hour and a half, the Germans
were unable to take aim at the Allied ships.
The Royal Regiment of Canada, plus three
Black Watch platoons and one artillery detachment,
experienced unbelievable bad luck on the
Puys beach. Their task was to neutralize
machine-gun and artillery batteries protecting
the Dieppe beach. Problems started during
the crossing of the Channel and the barges
arrived in disorganized waves, the first
ones already twenty minutes behind schedule.
By then, the darkness and smoke screens
that should have concealed their arrival
had been lifted and German defences were
on high alert. As soon as they reached the
shore, the men found themselves pinned against
the seawall and unable to advance otherwise
than in full view of the enemy. Since no
ship could get close without being targeted
and probably sunk, the survivors of the
Royals and Black Watch were forced to surrender.
Of the 556 men and officers of the Royal
Regiment of Canada who sailed for Dieppe,
over 200 lost their lives in action and
264 were captured, among them several wounded.
The Front Attack
on Dieppe
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Corpses on the
beach next to two Churchill
tanks of the 14th Armoured Regiment
(Calgary) stuck in pebbles.
Behind them, thick smoke coming
from LCT 5.
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| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada C-014160. |
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Meanwhile, before Dieppe, four destroyers
were pounding the coast as landing crafts
approached. At 0515, five RAF Hurricane
squadrons started bombing the coastal defences
and set a smoke screen to protect the assault
troops. Between 0520 and 0523, assault troops
from the Essex Scottish Regiment and the
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry landed on
the beach, dashing through barbed wire and
other obstacles littering the ground beneath
the seawall.
Poor timing proved fateful: the tanks of
the 14th Armoured Regiment scheduled to
arrive at the same time were late and, as
a result, the two infantry regiments had
to attack without artillery support. Landing
crafts were hit or destroyed before or after
the landing, making the retreat even more
problematic. Whole platoons were annihilated
as soon as they set foot on the beach. Hiding
behind the partly demolished casino, groups
from the RHLI and the Essex Scottish succeeded
in sneaking into town and fought gallantly.
They were, however, unable to neutralize
the enemy and to reach their assigned targets.
The Calgary Regiment tanks arrived soon
after the infantry: 29 got off the LCA
but two fell into deep water. Of the remaining
27, 15 made it across the seawall between
the beach and the boardwalk, as it was not
very high in places. Without engineers,
they were unable to eliminate obstacles
that blocked their way into the city and
were forced to return to the beach where
one after the other they got hit or bellied
in the beach shingle. Still able to fire,
the 14th Regiment's tanks protected the
infantry's retreat to the very end. The
tank crews paid a heavy toll for their gallant
behaviour as they were all made prisoners.
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Officer
and soldiers examining a Churchill
tank stuck on the beach in front
of the boardwalk after the battle,
its left track broken. Wounded
men lying on the ground are about
to be evacuated. Dieppe, August
19th, 1942. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada C-017293. |
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On HMS Calpe, Major-General Roberts
and Captain John Hugues-Hallet, commanding
officers of the ground and naval forces
respectively, had only a vague notion of
the actual situation. Following an ambiguous
message that could be understood to mean
the Essex Scottish had indeed entered the
city, Roberts ordered the reserve troops,
the Fusiliers Mont-Royal, to land in order
to exploit that gain. Under Lieutenant-Colonel
Dollard Ménard, the FMRs boarded
their 26 landing barges at 0700. They sailed
towards the beach at full speed but the
Germans hit them with heavy machine-gun,
mortar and grenade fire. Bullets bounced
off the sides of the crafts and many fusiliers
were hit even before landing. Unable to
resist such a powerful enemy, the FMRs were
decimated, only a few men managed to edge
their way between houses.
"The second
the boat scraped the beach, I jumped out
and started to follow the sappers through
the barbed wire. My immediate objective
was a concrete pillbox on top of a 12-foot
parapet about 100 yards up the beach.
I think I had taken three steps when the
first one hit me. You say a bullet or
a piece of shrapnel hits you but the word
isn't right. They slam you the way a sledgehammer
slams you. There's no sharp pain at first.
It jars you so much you're not sure exactly
where you've been hit-or what with."
- Lt-Col
Dollard Ménard, Fusiliers Mont-Royal
At 0900, Hughes-Hallett and Roberts had
to face the evidence: the Germans were still
in control of the hills and were firing
without mercy at the beaches. Orders were
given to evacuate at 1100. The landing crafts
sailed back towards the beaches under a
smoke screen cover and partially protected
by RAF fighters. Evacuation took place in
utter confusion as fighting was still going
on nearby. At 1220, the beaches could no
longer be reached even if men were still
there. HMS Calpe made a last attempt
at 1248 and headed for the shore with two
boats. The fleet then sailed back to England.
The Dieppe raid was over. Some 3,367 men,
including 2,752 Canadians remained on the
beach, dead or soon to be made prisoners.
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Canadian
prisoners escorted by German guards
marching through Dieppe, August
19th, 1942. |
| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada PA-200058. |
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The Dieppe story made instant headlines
worldwide. Unfortunately, the British Army's
press services did not mention the part
played by the 2nd Canadian Infantry Division.
It was several weeks before Canadian public
opinion realized what a failure Operation
Jubilee had been, and how many of
its own had died in action.
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| Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada PA-183775. |
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Lessons Learned from
Dieppe
Dieppe was a pathetic failure. Sixty years
later, it seems obvious that Jubilee was
a bizarre operation with no chance of success
whatsoever and likely to result in a huge
number of casualties. In August 1942, British
and Allied officers did not have yet the
knowledge and combat experience to make
a proper assessment of the risks of such
an operation. This catastrophe was useful
precisely in providing that knowledge which
was later to make victory possible.
The Dieppe fiasco demonstrated that it
was imperative to improve communications
at all levels: on the battlefield, between
the HQs of each unit, between air, naval
and ground forces. The idea of capturing
a well-defended seaport to use as a bridgehead
was dropped after August 19th, 1942. In
addition, the raid on Dieppe showed how
important it was to use prior air bombings
to destroy enemy defences as much as possible,
to support assault troops with artillery
fire from ships and landing crafts, to improve
techniques and equipment to remove obstacles
to men and tanks.
The true meaning of the sacrifices made
at Dieppe was made obvious two years after
this ill-fated date, when on D-Day the Allies
gained a foothold in Europe to free the
continent from Nazi aggression.
| Suggested
Reading: |
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John Campbell, Dieppe Revisited
: A Documentary Investigation,
London, 1993
Brereton Greenhous, Dieppe,
Dieppe, Montreal, 1993
Ernest Langford, Rendezvous
at Dieppe, Madeira Park, B.C.,
1992
Jack A. Poolton, Destined
To Survive : A Dieppe Veteran's Story,
Toronto, 1998
Pierre Vennat, Dieppe n'aurait
pas dû avoir lieu, Montreal,
1991
Denis W. and Shelagh Whitaker,
Dieppe : A Firsthand and Revealing
Critical Account of The Most Controversial
Battle of World War Two, Whitby,
Ontario, 1992
Denis W. and Shelagh Whitaker,
Dieppe : Tragedy to Triumph,
Toronto, 1992
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