Battle of Walcheren Causeway

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Battle of Walcheren Causeway
Part of Battle of the Scheldt
Date31 October 1944 – 2 November 1944
Location
Walcheren Island, Scheldt estuary
51°30′11″N3°42′18″E / 51.50306°N 3.70500°E / 51.50306; 3.70500 (Walcheren Island)
Result Indecisive
Belligerents
Canadian Red Ensign (1921-1957).svg  Canada
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Flag of Germany (1935-1945).svg  Germany
Commanders and leaders
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg William Jemmet Megill Flag of Germany (1935-1945).svg Gustav-Adolf von Zangen
Units involved
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg 52nd Infantry Division
Canadian Red Ensign (1921-1957).svg 5th Infantry Brigade
Flag of Germany (1935-1945).svg 15th Army
Strength
unknown unknown
Casualties and losses
160 killed & wounded 60+ killed

The Battle of Walcheren Causeway (Operation Vitality) was an engagement of the Battle of the Scheldt between the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade, elements of the British 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division and troops of the German 15th Army in 1944. It was the first of many conflicts on and around Walcheren Island during the Scheldt battles. It was also the second major battle fought over a terrain feature known as the Sloedam during the Second World War.

Contents

Background

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After the breakout from Normandy by the Allied armies, beginning August 13, 1944, the German forces held on stubbornly to the French and Belgian English Channel ports. This forced the Allies to bring all supplies for their rapidly advancing armies from the artificial harbor they had constructed off the beaches of Normandy, and from Cherbourg. Because of its port capacity Antwerp became the immediate objective of the British 21st Army Group commanded by Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery. While Antwerp fell to Montgomery on September 4 no supplies could be landed there until the German forces holding the lower reaches of the Scheldt, between Antwerp and the North Sea, were removed.

Tactical importance

A feature known as the Sloe Channel separated the island of Walcheren from the South Beveland isthmus. A narrow causeway connected the two, known to the Dutch as the Sloedam (it literally dammed the Sloe Channel) and in English as the Walcheren Causeway. The causeway carried a rail line from the mainland onto the island and to the port of Vlissingen (or Flushing, as it was known in English). A paved road also ran the length of the causeway, which was about 40 metres (130 ft) wide and a kilometre (0.6 mile) long. On either side of this causeway, which was elevated only a few metres (feet) above sea level, marsh, mud-flats and deep water all hindered movement between Walcheren and South Beveland.

Prelude

Walcheren2.gif

As the Allies had to secure a port of the capacity of Antwerp before they could contemplate the invasion of Germany itself, the Battle of the Scheldt involved bitter fighting. [1]

By 31 October 1944, all land surrounding the Scheldt estuary had been cleared of German control except for Walcheren Island, from where coastal batteries commanded the approaches to the waterway. These guns prevented the Allies from making use of the port facilities of Antwerp to alleviate their logistical concerns.

The island's dykes had been breached by attacks from RAF Bomber Command: on 3 October at Westkapelle, with severe loss of civilian life; on 7 October at two places, west and east of Vlissingen; and on 11 October at Veere. This flooded the central part of the island, forcing the German defenders onto the high ground around the outside and in the towns.

The 2nd Canadian Infantry Division had marched west down the South Beveland isthmus and by 31 October had cleared all German opposition from South Beveland. Walcheren Island was connected to South Beveland by a narrow causeway, 40 metres wide and 1600 metres long.

Plans to employ assault boats over the Sloe Channel were thwarted by muddy conditions unsuitable for water craft. The Calgary Highlanders had been selected for this amphibious operation, as they had received stormboat training in the UK in anticipation of an opposed water crossing of the Seine River, which invasion planners had predicted would be necessary approximately 90 days after the landings in Normandy. In the event, the ground was too boggy to employ the boats, and the Highlanders were utilized as conventional infantry in a landward attack directly over the causeway.

Battle

Royal Hamilton Light Infantry carriers move through Krabbendijke Light Infantry carriers move through Krabbendijke on the Beveland Causeway.jpg
Royal Hamilton Light Infantry carriers move through Krabbendijke

"C" Company of The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada took heavy casualties on the afternoon and evening of 31 October 1944 in an attempt to "bounce" the Causeway. [2] [ page needed ] During their attack, the existence of a deep crater on the causeway was discovered; this crater had been blown by German engineers as an anti-tank obstacle. It was later utilized by the Canadians as a company command post during the battle as it developed.

"B" Company of The Calgary Highlanders were ordered forward just before midnight and were similarly stopped halfway down the causeway.

A new fireplan was drawn up and Major Bruce McKenzie's "D" Company inched forward under intensive gunfire, reaching the west end, and securing it, at dawn on 1 November. [3]

German counter-attacks were heavy and prolonged, and included the use of flame weapons on the Canadians. At one point, all Calgary Highlander officers in one company were wounded or killed, and the brigade major, George Hees took command of a company.

Company Sergeant Major "Blackie" Laloge of the Calgary Highlanders was awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal for his actions at Walcheren Causeway, at one point throwing back German hand grenades before they could explode among his men. [4] [ page needed ]

Two platoons of Le Régiment de Maisonneuve took over the bridgehead on Walcheren Island on 2 November, but were forced back onto the Causeway. A battalion of Glasgow Highlanders were ordered to pass through, but they also were unable to expand the bridgehead on the island. [5]


Aftermath

Landings by British Commandos of the 4th Commando Brigade eventually sealed the fate of the German defenders on Walcheren Island, attacking from seaward at Flushing and Westkapelle. The battle for the causeway itself had been a costly, and ultimately unnecessary, diversion. [6] [ page needed ]

The 2nd Canadian Infantry Division went into reserve in the first week of November, moving into the Nijmegen Salient for the winter. The Calgary Highlanders suffered 64 casualties in the 3 days of fighting at Walcheren Causeway. Le Régiment de Maisonneuve had one man killed and 10 wounded. The Black Watch suffered 85 casualties in the period 14 October to 1 November 1944, the bulk of them suffered on the causeway. [6] [ page needed ]

Legacy

Lieutenant Colonel Mike Vernon, CD, Commanding Officer of The Calgary Highlanders, ponders the monument to the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade (GPS: 51.502181, 3.705059) LColVernonatWalcheren10June2010.JPG
Lieutenant Colonel Mike Vernon, CD, Commanding Officer of The Calgary Highlanders, ponders the monument to the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade (GPS: 51.502181, 3.705059)

Other battles

Brief fighting had occurred in the vicinity of the causeway and Arnemuiden in May 1940 during the German invasion of the Netherlands. [9]

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References

  1. Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War, v.6 Triumph and Tragedy, pp. 190–95, 200–5
  2. Black Watch War Diary
  3. Bercuson, David Battalion of Heroes: The Calgary Highlanders in World War II
  4. Farran, Roy History of the Calgary Highlanders 1921–1954
  5. Stacey, C.P. Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War. Volume II: The Victory Campaign, page 405
  6. 1 2 Copp.
  7. "Regimental Monuments". Calgary Highlanders. Archived from the original on 9 November 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  8. "Memorial Monuments Sloedam 'The Causeway'". www.tracesofwar.com. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  9. The Dutch book Slagveld Sloedam gives details of all the Walcheren Causeway battles.

Bibliography

Further reading

Brooks, Richard (21 June 2011). Walcheren 1944 : storming Hitler's island fortress. Botley, Oxford: Osprey Pub. Co. ISBN   978-1-84908-237-2.