In The Footsteps Of The First Canadian Army by Angus Brown, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
In The Footsteps Of The First Canadian Army by Angus Brown, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

Coles

In The Footsteps Of The First Canadian Army by Angus Brown, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Angus Brown

Current price: $35.00
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Size: 0.37 x 11.28 x 2.105

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First Canadian Army was not only the largest field command of the Second World War for Canada, but it also was a major coalition formation with a number of units from different countries under General H. D.G. Crerar. Through the medium of text, art and photos this book traces the operations of First Canadian Army during the liberation of Northwest Europe: from the long prelude of garrison and training in the United Kingdom, to the beaches of Normandy and the killing fields of France, through the clearing of the Channel ports, into the horrible conditions of the Scheldt and the violent fighting in the German Rhineland, to the final freedom of the Dutch people in Holland. This narrative will help people to put these momentous events of the Second World War into geographical and historical perspective. Through it all, First Canadian Army slogged along in poor weather and slugged it out with a determined foe. This is the story of Canadians and compatriots who took their place in the line with bigger, more glamourous and better-known Allies. During my first three years of service with the Queen's Own Rifles in Calgary and Germany in the early 1960s, my two commanding officers, one company commander and one regimental sergeant-major had all gone ashore at Juno Beach on D-Day. My other company commander had flown a glider into Arnhem during Operation MARKET GARDEN. Even at twenty years of age, I was relatively familiar with their exploits, because it was easy to absorb a good deal 'by osmosis' through the considerable volume of Second World War recorded history dealing with the achievements of our regiments and battalions that made up First Canadian Army. In addition, movies and early television programming frequently dealt with unit-level operations and even smaller sub-units like commando operations, presumably due to the abundance of human-interest stories involving personal heroism in the thick of battle. Any soldier who went ashore during the D-Day landings on 6 June 1944 and served in the front lines of the subsequent operations through northwest Europe, culminating in the Allied victory in May 1945, more than once probably exclaimed, “Who is the idiot running this show who thought this one up!" - or words to that effect. And so we come to the operational level of command, rarely explained or described, due to the complexities associated with such an elevated level of decision-making. This is particularly true for Canadians, because we rarely have an opportunity to operate at such a level due to the modest size of our post-Second World War contributions to multinational coalitions, be they UN or NATO. | In The Footsteps Of The First Canadian Army by Angus Brown, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

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