|
The Liberation of
Coastal Ports, August 22nd - October 1st,
1944
In order to progress eastwards through
Europe, the Allies had to ensure a safe
supply route. This meant seizing as soon
as possible the seaports along the Channel
so they may ship in the equipment, vehicles
and supplies the men and the war machine
demanded in enormous quantities.
Vehicles
of the 4th Canadian Armoured Division
crossing pontoon bridge over the
Seine River near Elbeuf, France,
August 28th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Ken Bell. Department of National
Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-113662. |
|
Once the Falaise Gap was closed, General
Harry
Crerar received the order to move speedily
towards the Seine and capture Le Havre.
To the north, under command of the First
Canadian Army, I British Corps was marching
along the coast to Honfleur. On its flank,
II Canadian Corps was headed for Rouen.
On August 26th and 27th, after cleaning
up a pocket of fierce resistance in the
forest of the Londe, the 3rd and 4th Canadian
Divisions crossed the Seine near Elbeuf
and reached Rouen on the 30th.
In early September, II Canadian Corps was
moving speedily through northern France.
On September 1st, it was in Dieppe,
where hundreds of Canadians had been killed
two years earlier. Le Tréport was
liberated the same day and the troops crossed
the Somme River on September 3rd. The French
population, in cities and throughout the
countryside, greeted them with noisy enthusiasm.
I cannot possibly
convey the cumulative effect of passing
for hours through a liberated countryside,
with the wreckage of the beaten enemy-his
tanks and vehicles, his dead horses and
the graves of his dead men-littering the
roadside ditches, and the population,
free once more, welcoming the oncoming
troops with smiles and flowers and the
V-sign...
The scene in a liberated town is quite
extraordinary. The place, of course, is
festooned with flags. They always have
plenty of tricolours; but the Union Jack
and the Stars and Stripes are in short
supply, and had to be homemade for the
occasion. (I even saw some versions of
the Canadian Red Ensign, which would scarcely
have pleased the College of Heralds but
must have pleased a good many Canadians.)
Everyone seems to be in the street, and
no one ever seems to tire of waving to
the troops passing in their vehicles,
who likewise never tire of waving back
(particularly at the female population).
The young people wave and laugh and shout;
the children yell and wave flags; the
mothers hold up their babies to see the
troops, and wave their little paws too;
the old people stand by the roadside and
look happy; and the Army rolls through...
- Letter of a
Canadian officer to his family, September
2nd, 1944.
 |
|
Convoys of 2nd
Canadian Infantry Division speed
through Rouen, France, August
31st, 1944.
|
| Photo
by Harold G. Aikman. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-131346. |
|
The Canadians were not aware that on September
4th, Hitler had ordered to shore up the
defences of Calais, Boulogne, Dunkirk and
the Island of Walcheren, as he viewed Allied
presence in those cities as a major threat
to Germany. As a result, he was ready to
keep them under control at all costs.
In Boulogne, as early as September 5th,
the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division faced
a resolute garrison; the Canadians launched
their attack on the port city on the 17th
after days of intensive air raids. Battle
raged for six days until the remaining German
soldiers surrendered on September 22nd.
Some 9,517 prisoners were made.
During their four-year occupation of Calais,
the Germans had built solid defences along
the coast but did not consider the possibility
of a terrestrial attack. The city was therefore
vulnerable on the inland side and the 3rd
Canadian Division approached it from that
direction. After eight days, from September
25th to October 1st, 1944, the Canadians
finally overwhelmed the garrison of 7,500
who defended the town.
Between Boulogne and Calais, the batteries
on Cape Gris-Nez represented a serious threat
to navigation with their big-calibre guns
that could fire shells over a considerable
distance; they could even hit the British
coast. The 9th Infantry Brigade attacked
the position and silenced the guns on September
29th.
In September, while they were cleaning
up the coast, Canadian units came across
and destroyed several V-1 flying bomb bases.
They were glad to eliminate that scourge
which had been such a threat to Londoners,
with whom over years of training and waiting
in English bases, they had built many ties
of friendship.
 |
Prior
to the attack on Boulogne, Canadian
troops get in touch with the French
Maquis at La Trésorerie,
August 14th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Donald I. Grant. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-166396. |
|
|
In early October 1944, the Allies controlled
the harbours north of the Seine but the
supply issue was not yet solved: Dieppe,
Le Tréport and Ostende had been opened
but could not handle the high volumes that
Allied troops in Europe required. Le Havre,
Boulogne and Calais were not serviceable
having suffered major destructions. Further
north, Antwerp had been liberated by the
Allies on September 3rd, but the city was
located on the Scheldt River, some 80 kilometres
from the open sea and the river's mouth
was still under German control. The only
way to make sure that the supplies required
by the campaign in Europe could enter the
continent was to capture the Scheldt. This
was to be the mission of the First Canadian
Army.
The Battle of the
Scheldt, October 1st - November 8th, 1944
Corporal
S. Kormendy covers Sergeant H.A.
Marshall, a scout of the Calgary
Highlanders, as he moves over
open ground near Kapellen, Belgium,
October 6th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Ken Bell. Department of National
Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-131245. |
|
The Scheldt flows to sea by a very wide
mouth divided in two by a long peninsula
made of three separate islands, South Beveland,
North Beveland and Walcheren. Located in
the Belgian-Dutch border area, this is a
region of polders, low-lying fields conquered
over the sea and bordered by a network of
dykes and canals. The roads are built on
top of the four- or five-metre high dykes.
In this totally flat and wet countryside,
no one can move without being spotted. This
was where the First Canadian Army had to
fight and dislodge the German defences,
which knew nothing should be spared to protect
the access to Antwerp. Walcheren Island
to the north and Breskens to the south were
the two most solid positions.
Lieutenant-General Guy
Simonds commanded the attack of the
First Canadian Army against the Scheldt,
in replacement of General Harry
Crerar who was recovering from a bout
of dysentery. Before giving the signal for
the assault by ground troops, he ordered
aerial bombings to destroy the dykes and
flood Walcheren and some of the lowlands
south of the river's mouth.
On October 2nd, 1944, the 2nd Canadian
Infantry Division marched north from Antwerp
towards the entrance to South Beveland it
had to capture, and then onwards along the
isthmus. The division met with unbreakable
resistance near Woensdrecht and Hoogerheide.
On September 8th, German troops packed beyond
Korteven launched fierce counter-offensives.
Woensdrecht, a strategic point since it
was the key to the peninsula, remained in
German hands. Bloody fighting went on until
October 16th, as Canadian and German soldiers
fought for the access route to the peninsula.
On October 13th, the "Black Friday",
the Black Watch regiment was decimated for
a second time within four months, losing
145 men and all its commanders in an especially
violent and merciless engagement. On October
16th, the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry,
supported by the 10th Armoured regiment
and the whole artillery of the division,
fought its way up to the village of Woensdrecht
and held the mound that overlooks it. Thus
they were able to drive back counter-attacks
and retain the position, again at the cost
of many lives.
 |
|
A column of
Alligators passing Terrepin
amphibious vehicles on the Scheldt
River near Terneuzen, October
13th,1944. |
| Photo
by Donald I. Grant. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-114754. |
|
"A company reported
that they were attacked by a self-propelled
gun and that 9 platoon were being shelled
severely. Hand to hand fighting ensued
and one of our 6-pounders section fired
point blank at the enemy before the gun
was hit and put out of action
"
-
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry, War Diary,
15-17 October 1944
Meanwhile, the 3rd Division attacked an
enemy pocket that remained near Breskens.
The crossing of the Leopold Canal in the
night of October 6th to 7th proved a difficult
task. Once they reached the side under enemy
control, soldiers set up bridgeheads hardly
deeper than the canal's shores; the ground
was soaking wet and trenches filled up with
water as soon as they were dug. The whole
area was under enemy fire including shells
from big-calibre coastal defence guns more
than 15 kilometres away. Wounded men filled
the field care station. In spite of all
this, the 7th Brigade solidified its bridgehead
and moved on.
"During the
night A and B companies crossed the LEOPOLD
CANAL over a heavily shelled bridge constructed
by Royal Canadian Engineers. While moving
up from the bridge, 12 Platoon of B Company
were sent to assist a hard pressed platoon
of 1 Canadian Scottish Regiment in repelling
a determined enemy counter-attack
"
-
Royal Winnipeg Rifles, War Diary, 6-13
October 1944
On the other side of Breskens, the 9th
Brigade launched an amphibious assault during
the night of October 9th. Using Alligator
and Buffalo amphibious vehicles with tracks,
infantry units landed beyond the Braakman
cove, near Hoofdplaat, and caught the Germans
unaware as they did not expect an attack
from the Scheldt side. The Canadians were
able to set up a solid bridgehead with mortars
and heavy machine-guns before the enemy
could organize a serious response. For three
weeks, 3rd Division units harassed the German
troops on soaked and muddy grounds. Resistance
was finally broken in the Breskens pocket
and on November 3rd, at 0950, the following
entry was written down in the Division's
war diary: "Op Switchback now complete."
Someone added underneath "Thank God!"
The
7th Brigade is moving through
a village in the vicinity of Leopold
canal, October 18th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Donald I. Grant. Department
of National Defence / National
Archives of Canada, PA-137188. |
|
"Soon the beach
was a hive of industry. The great motors
roaring and these huge amphibious monsters
crawling like great reptiles from the
sea, out over the dyke and spitting flame
from their exhausts
"
-
North Nova Scotia Highlanders, War Diary,
6-13 October 1944
Woensdrecht captured, the 2nd Division
undertook to clean up South Beveland. On
October 24th, its units entered the isthmus
linking the island with the mainland. Two
days later, more troops crossed the Scheldt
in amphibious Buffaloes and landing crafts.
In South Beveland Canadian and British soldiers
were able to move forward without meeting
any serious opposition as the Germans were
by then trying to leave the island. On November
2nd, both South and North Beveland were
liberated.
The enemy's last post was Walcheren Island,
a real stronghold whose beaches were filled
with heavy artillery batteries. There was
only one road access, the Walcheren causeway,
a straight road, some 40-metres wide and
12-kilometres long. The causeway carried
the main road as well as a railway line
with only one track left. On both sides
only wide expanses of muddy marshes dotted
with reeds. The road afforded no protection
whatsoever. Of Walcheren Island proper,
only remained the peripheral heights, the
centre being completely flooded.
 |
Video
Scheldt-Mouth Housecleaning |
| Large
- 10.4 Mb |
Small
- 5.4 Mb |
Video
Scheldt-Mouth Housecleaning,
from Canadian Army Newsreel nr.46,
November 1944, 3 min 21 s .
National
Archives of Canada, 1973-0162..
|
|
The battle for the causeway started on
October 31st. The Black Watch, the Calgary
Highlanders and the Régiment de Maisonneuve
followed one another. A narrow bridgehead
was finally set up in the morning of November
2nd and the Régiment de Maisonneuve
held on to it desperately for several hours
until relieved. The Régiment de Maisonneuve
and the 5th Field Regiment, Royal Canadian
Artillery, were the last Canadian units
to take part in the Battle of the Scheldt.
British units relieved the Canadians; exhausted
troops were pulled back from the battlefield
to a rest area.
 |
A
gun-tractor skidded off the road
on the flooded island of Beveland,
October 28th, 1944. |
| Photo
by Ken Bell. Department of National
Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-131257. |
|
|
On November 1st, amphibious assaults were
made on Westkapelle, Flessingue and the
last pockets of German resistance fell on
November 7th after some violent fighting.
Walcheren Island was finally captured and,
once the river mouth was cleared of mines,
the Scheldt was opened to shipping. On November
28th, 1944, Antwerp harbour received the
first supply shipment. Canadians were not
present at the opening ceremony but the
first ship of the convoy was a Canadian
one, Canadian-made and bearing the historical
name Fort Cataraqui.
| Suggested
Reading: |
|
Terry Copp et Robert Vogel,
Maple Leaf Route: Scheldt,
1984
C.P. Stacey, The Victory
Campaign, Volume 3 of the Official
History of The Canadian Army in the
Second World War, 1960.
W. Denis Whitaker et Shelagh
Whitaker, Tug of Wa : The canadian
Victory that Opened Antwerp, 1984
|
|