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Company "B" of the Seaforth Highlanders
moving along a mined coastal path December 21st, 1943; Ortona
can be seen in the distance.
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| Photo
by Frederick G. Whitcombe. Department of National Defence /
National Archives of Canada, PA-152749. |
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Battle of Ortona |
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| Large
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Small
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Video
Battle of Ortona, from Canadian Army Newsreel 24, 1944,
7 min 15 s. National Archives of Canada, 1973-0162. |
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General Montgomery
believed that the Germans would retreat north of Ortona, in an area where
the terrain provided good natural defence positions; and that the coastal
city would therefore be an easy prey. Things did not turn out that way
On December 20th, the 2nd Brigade arrived near Ortona; the following day
the Loyal Edmonton Regiment got as far as Piazza Vittoria at the entrance
of the town. In front of them, the corso Vittorio Emanuele leading to
the Piazza Municipale, the heart of the city. Narrow side streets were
blocked by barricades and rubble left by the Germans. The wide-open corso,
the only street that tanks could use was booby-trapped. The Canadian infantry
had to clear its way through houses on the side before moving forward,
a dangerous and difficult task.
The Canadians were facing a unit from the 1st Parachute Division, well-rested,
well-trained and well-equipped troops, and ideological fanatics. Fighting
was fierce. The Germans had planted mines, time bombs, and other booby-traps
throughout the abandoned housesand amid the rubble. Machine gun positions
and antitank artillery were concealed behind walls and among the ruins.
Canadian soldiers used their short-ranged 6-pounder guns to take down
walls or roofs where paratroopers might be hiding.
When shells could not pierce the thick stone walls, gunners aimed for
the windows and the shells bouncing inside the houses caused terrible
destruction.
Canadian infantrymen moved from house to house without ever showing up
in the streets. Using pickaxes and explosives, they pierced the upstairs
walls between buildings, dashing forward through smoke and dust, pouncing
down on their opponents. Grenades thrown by the Germans would fall back
on them before exploding. The tanks moved slowly along, providing ammunition
and evacuating the wounded.
Why would the Germans defend with inordinate fierceness - matched only
by the determination of the
Canadian
troops moving anti-tank gun into position during street fighting
in Ortona, 21 December 1943.
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| Photo by Terry F. Rowe.
Department of National Defence / National Archives of Canada,
PA-107935. |
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Canadians - a small coastal town of little strategic value? Throughout
the world, the showdown made the headlines and Ortona became a household
word: "This is Matthew Halton from the CBC, speaking from Italy
". Canadian radio war correspondents made this bloody episode world-famous.
Ortona became a symbol, as important as Rome. To capture the city or to
keep it, it all became a matter of national prestige.
Fighting raged for days. The Loyal Edmonton Regiment and the Seaforth
Highlanders Regiment were relentless and suffered heavy casualties. At
Christmas, against all expectation, the Seaforth Highlanders fusiliers
were treated to a real holiday dinner in the Church of Santa Maria di
Constandinopoli.
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Soldier firing 6-pounder anti-tank gun at
the end of a street in Ortona, Italy, 21 December 1943.
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| Photo by Terry F. Rowe.
Department of National Defence / National Archives of Canada,
PA-141671. |
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"The setting for the dinner was complete,
long rows of tables with white tablecloths, and a bottle of beer per
man, candies, cigarettes, nuts, oranges and apples and chocolate bars
providing the extras. The C.O., Lt.-Col. S. W. Thomson, laid on that
the Companies would eat in relays... as each company finished their
dinner, they would go forward and relieve the next company... The menu...
soup, pork with apple sauce, cauliflower, mixed vegetables, mashed potatoes,
gravy, Christmas pudding and mince pie... From 1100 hours to 1900 hours,
when the last man of the battalion reluctantly left the table to return
to the grim realities of the day, there was an atmosphere of cheer and
good fellowship in the church. A true Christmas spirit. The impossible
had happened. No one had looked for a celebration this day. December
25th was to be another day of hardship, discomfort, fear and danger,
another day of war. The expression on the faces of the dirty bearded
men as they entered the building was a reward that those responsible
are never likely to forget
During the dinner the Signal Officer...
played the church organ and with the aid of the improvised choir, organized
by the padre, carols rang out throughout the church."
- Seaforth Highlanders Regiment, War Diary,
December 25th, 1943
Tanks
of the Régiment de Trois-Rivières driving along
the corso Vittorio Emanuele towards the Piazza Municipale, December
23rd, 1943. |
| Photo by Terry F.
Rowe. Department of National Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-114029. |
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Meanwhile, shells and machine gun fire could be heard not far from the
church. Through dust and the acrid smell of cordite, the Loyal Edmonton
soldiers were involved in one of the fiercest battle so far. They were
relieved in small
groups to go get some Christmas dinner. As to the Italians, for there
were still civilians in town, mostly elderly people and children, the
atmosphere was one of anxiety and fear.
"What a strange clutter of humanity it was.
There were some five or six Canadian soldiers, there were old women
and there were children innumerable. A painter of genius-Goya, perhaps-might
have done justice to the scene. I felt no verbal description could do
so. In the half-darkened room the pasta for the midday meal was simmering
over the fire in the corner. Haggard, prematurely aged women kept emerging
shyly one after another from some inner chamber where an old man, the
grandfather of the numerous children, was dying... Another old man was
uttering maledictions against Mussolini. Then his wife surprisingly
produced a jeroboam of Marsala and half a dozen glasses and moved around
among the soldiers, filling and re-filling their glasses. The children
clambered around the Canadian soldiers and clutched at them convulsively
every time one of our anti-tank guns, located only half a dozen paces
from the door of the house, fired down the street in the direction of
one of the remaining German machine-gun posts. Soon each one of us had
a squirming, terrified child in his arms. And the old lady went on distributing
Marsala."
- Christopher Buckley, Road to Rome,
1945.
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| The
battle over, the population resumes its daily activities
in a city in ruins; a young woman hanging clothes to dry
amid the rubble, January 13th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Terry F. Rowe. Department of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-114040. |
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On December 27th, the Princess Patricias were ordered to join in, together
with a support squadron from the Régiment de Trois-Rivières.
The battle for Ortona was already drawing to an end. German paratroopers
could
not keep on fighting without relief and on December 28th, they abandoned
the city to the Canadians. The victory was a costly one: the Loyal Edmonton
Regiment had 172 casualties, including 63 killed; the Seaforth Highlanders
103, including 41 killed. Taking into account losses by support units,
the total number of Allied casualties reached 650 officers and men of
all ranks.
| Suggested Reading: |
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N.M. Christie, Hard-Won Victory: The Canadians at Ortona,
1943, 2001.
Mark Zuehlke, Ortona: Canada's Epic World War II Battle,
1999.
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