History's Raider's - Dieppe Raid 1942 Pt.1
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Hate to have to inform you that Monty had very little to do with this,it was planned by Lord Mountbatten then had to be cancelled and re-scheduled,Monty's advice was that the operation should be cancelled as security and the element of surprise had been compromised, he was over ruled by the other commanders but do not let the facts get in the way of a comment.
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My grandfather was on that beach. He was shot several times by the Germans and ended up as a prisoner of war.
All Comments (25)
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Dont worry about your soldiers, the German nazi fighters are way better !
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My father was in the Essex Scottish Regiment 2nd Div. he passed away in 2007 at 83 yrs. He fought from 1939 until Victory day. Does anyone know where I can get more info or videos of the 2nd Div. My father suffered decades of nightmares (Post traumatic) yet never complained, he didn't talk much about his service. After the movie Saving Private Ryan he talked about some memories, enough for a great Eulogy at his funeral in california. Any help?
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@Number7smokesForEver Shit - just realized I was talking about the wrong war. Sorry - please just ignore my stupidity.
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@Number7smokesForEver Um, the Minister for Militia told the House of Commons in 1917 that only about 5% of the enlistees were French-Canadian. Where are you getting your numbers? Quebec only had around 2 million people at the time, and only 1 French-language battalion ever went to Europe. 40% of Quebec's 18-45 males would have been a lot more than that. In fact, the total Canadian contingent was only around 600 000 - someone would have noticed if 1 in 2 were Quebecois.
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@Number7smokesForEver Do we know the division of your statistic between Francophone Quebecers and Anglophone Quebecers, re participation. I understand at the time of the war there was a significant anglophone pop in Quebec? This might be helpful to know.
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@Lachausis monty was sent to Africa before the raid too.
Monty's screw-up!
Lachausis 1 year ago
@Lachausis
Hear, hear. Not his first and not his last - a much overrated commander who took his failings out on the infantry soldiers when things didn't go to plan.
Number7smokesForEver 1 year ago
... it was ment to be a disaster :(
In this raid there were 5 our squadrons 302nd, 303th, 306th, 309th and 317th. And a destroyer ORP "Ślązak", which shot down 4 German planes, together with a British destroyer sunk a German patrol boat, rescued a British pilot, officer and 19 Canadian soldiers.
VVojtekSoldierBear 1 year ago
Rear Admiral Nalecz-Tyminski was hailed as a hero in Canada after Dieppe and rightfully so. Strange thing about your figure of 19 Canadian soldiers rescued by Slazak though because Canadian sources indicate that as many as 85 Canadian soldiers could have been evacuated. The Canadians were very grateful because no-one did as much to attempt to rescue Canadians as the captain and crew of the Polish destroyer. Was Nalecz-Tyminski recognized for bravery by the Polish government? I hope so.
Number7smokesForEver 1 year ago
French-Canadians fighting in both wars were volunteers and should be recognized but their their contribution, proportionally was negligible. thems the facts. Quebec was not a supporter of either war. fine, but don't try to hop on the "we fought the nazis" bandwagon" now.
bagueley 1 year ago
@bagueley
Support for the wars was not as strong in Quebec - that is true but it can hardly be called negligible. During the Second World War around 40% of males between the ages of 18 and 45 in Quebec volunteered - that is only about 8% less than in other provinces. This still indicates a high level of support.
Number7smokesForEver 1 year ago