The Tigers of Bastogne

£14.99 GBP
Voices of the 10th Armoured Division in the Battle of the Bulge. By Michael Collins & Martin King. The gallant stand of the 101st Airborne Division at Bastogne has long become part of historical and media legend. But how many students of the war realise there was already a U.S. unit holding the town when they arrived?

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Description

Voices of the 10th Armoured Division in the Battle of the Bulge.

By Michael Collins & Martin King.

The gallant stand of the 101st Airborne Division at Bastogne has long become part of historical and media legend. But how many students of the war realise there was already a U.S. unit holding the town when they arrived? And this unit-the 10th Armoured Division-continued to play a major role in its defence throughout the German onslaught.

In The Tigers of Bastogne, authors King and Collins finally detail the travails of this young armoured division, which had only arrived in Europe that fall, yet found itself subject to the full brunt of Manteuffel's Fifth Panzer Army in the Ardennes. At first overwhelmed, and then falling back to protect the vital crossroads, the 10th Armoured was reinforced (not "saved") by the Screaming Eagles, and its men and tanks went on to contribute largely to America's victory in its largest battle of the war. The 10th Armoured had only arrived in Europe that September, as part of Patton's Third Army, and their divisional motto, 'Terrify and Destroy', was somewhat belied by the onslaught of Nazi panzers that burst across no-man's-land on December 16.

Instead their nickname, 'The Tiger Division', became fully earned, as they went on the defensive at Bastogne, surrounded by an entire German army, yet refused to concede a single inch of ground not earned with blood.

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The Tigers of Bastogne

£14.99 GBP

Voices of the 10th Armoured Division in the Battle of the Bulge.

By Michael Collins & Martin King.

The gallant stand of the 101st Airborne Division at Bastogne has long become part of historical and media legend. But how many students of the war realise there was already a U.S. unit holding the town when they arrived? And this unit-the 10th Armoured Division-continued to play a major role in its defence throughout the German onslaught.

In The Tigers of Bastogne, authors King and Collins finally detail the travails of this young armoured division, which had only arrived in Europe that fall, yet found itself subject to the full brunt of Manteuffel's Fifth Panzer Army in the Ardennes. At first overwhelmed, and then falling back to protect the vital crossroads, the 10th Armoured was reinforced (not "saved") by the Screaming Eagles, and its men and tanks went on to contribute largely to America's victory in its largest battle of the war. The 10th Armoured had only arrived in Europe that September, as part of Patton's Third Army, and their divisional motto, 'Terrify and Destroy', was somewhat belied by the onslaught of Nazi panzers that burst across no-man's-land on December 16.

Instead their nickname, 'The Tiger Division', became fully earned, as they went on the defensive at Bastogne, surrounded by an entire German army, yet refused to concede a single inch of ground not earned with blood.

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