Arnhem. Pic courtesy of Greg Pullin |
Arnhem liberated by XXX Corps after two days of Market Garden (the re-fight)
A Rapid Fire battle report by David Davidson
On the Reconciliation Day long weekend, Peninsula Wargames Group refought the battle of Arnhem with a team of 13 players – and changed history.
Initiated
with simultaneous landings of three parachute divisions (the US 101st,
82nd and British 1st Airborne divisions), at around 13h00
on 17th September, the
original XXX Corps timetable called for them to relieve Arnhem by 15h00 on 19th
September, and in our epic
refight, fought with almost 5000 20mm figurines on an approximately 1:15 figure
scale, XXX Corps managed to accomplish this almost to the hour, with the first
Shermans rolling over the road and rail bridges at 17h00 on 19th
Sept, changing history by probably shortening WWII and possibly advancing eastwards the eventual position of
the East/West German border for the subsequent Cold War. The map shows the Allied plan.
The Allied plan
( http://www.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6f/Market-Garden_-_Karte_Plan.png/347px-Market-Garden_-_Karte_Plan.png) |
Historically, tenacious German resistance, continual counter-attacks, the destruction of the bridge at Son, and the German defence of Nijmegen (forcing an epic river assault by 504th PIR, immortalized by Robert Redford in “A Bridge too Far”), imposed severe delays on XXX Corps. Despite the heroic defence of the road bridge by Col Frost’s 2nd Paras, the bridge was firmly in German hands by 21st September, and the operation finished on 25th September with the night-time evacuation over the Rhine of the remainder of 1st Airborne from Oosterbeek.
The campaign has always been one of the
most controversial of WWII, and did not do Monty’s reputation much good (aided
by his unwise comments about it being largely successful). In recent years,
some historians (such as Steven
Ambrose) have increasingly questioned whether the plan was ever viable at all;
PWG’s epic refight provides an interesting counter to this. Had things gone
slightly differently in reality, it could indeed have prised open a passageway
into Germany for the Western Allies, who historically had to wait until Spring
1945 to cross the Rhine.
The game was fought using Colin Rumford’s Rapid Fire Campaign Guide, “Operation Market Garden September 1944” (published in 1999) over six linked tables, most 8’ by 6’, using the maps provided in that source; see below. The first covered the initial break-out of XXX Corps, from Joe’s Bridge over the Meuse-Escaut canal to Eindhoeven and the Son bridge over the Wilhelmina canal. The second, mainly the 101st’s area of operation, ran from the Son bridge to Veghel and the Suid-Willems Canal. The third, on the junction between the 101st and 82nd, covered the Veghel to Grave area and the river Maas. The fourth ran from the Maas at Nederasselt to Nijmegen and the bridges over the Waal, and was the 82nd’s main area of operation. The fifth was “the Island”, the area between the large rivers Waal and Lower Rhine. The 6th table was a massive 24’ by 8’, representing the area from the initial British landing zones to Arnhem.
Several key points distinguished our
refight from the actual historical course of events. Firstly, the Germans were
only permitted to blow the Son bridge -
provided they held both ends at a certain time (as they did historically)
- but no others. (In reality, the
Nijmegen bridge was wired, but the charges failed to detonate, and the Arnhem
rail bridge was blown up.) In the refight, very aggressive attacks by the 101st
got to the Son canal bridge in time to prevent its destruction, permitting XXX
Corps to roll over it (historically, a bridge had to be build overnight). Secondly,
the 82nd Airborne commanders, accepting high casualties in the
initial assault, stormed Nijmegen on 17th September, quickly occupying
both ends of the road bridge; again, this avoided the necessity of the
historical riverine assault, permitting XXX Corps to keep rolling with
essentially no interruptions. Thirdly, XXX Corps stayed focused on moving north
as rapidly as possible; even a very large German counter-attack on 19th
September aimed at the Son bridge did not substantially distract its progress.
(XXX Corps mounted an effective defence with sufficient but not overwhelming
force, using its massed artillery to eventually break up the German attack,
which for a while appeared menacing). In Arnhem, a small British force was
destroyed by the Germans, as historically, but in the re-fight the British commanders had protected
their drop zones (the maps were captured by the Germans as in real life) so
that the 2nd lift came in with few losses, and the 1st
Airborne was well into Arnhem when the Germans conceded as XXX Corps arrived in
Arnhem.
The game ran in real life from Saturday 15th
December to Monday 17th December; each game bound represented an
hour of the actual campaign, and indeed we played around three days of gaming
in three real-time days.
The cast was the following:
Allied:
XXX Corps: Anthony van Dijk and Dean
Hinzelmann (with the assistance of the American players as the game progressed
and XXX Corps found itself stretched over 4 or 5 tables).
101st Airborne: Tim Cruise and
Mike Schubert.
82nd Airborne: David Davidson
and Andrew Glen
1st Airborne: Quinton Brickhill
and Michael Karsten.
German:
David Hamp-Adams (Joe’s Bridge to
Eindhoeven & Son bridge to Veghel tables)
Graham Arbuckle (Nijmegen garrison)
Lindsay Hall (Arnhem garrison and reinforcements)
Michael Karsten (Assisted David H-A around
Eindhoeven and the Son briege before seeing the writing on the wall and playing
1st Airborne!)
Greg Pullin (Germans reinforcements in
Nijmegen area)
Bobby Stathoussis (Germans in Arnhem area;
9th SS recce)
The game was planned by our Chairman,
Michael Karsten, who as noted above managed to play on both sides!
A typical drop zone (LZ 0 of 82nd in this case)
|
A bridge not quite far enough this time round, despite the best efforts of the Luftwaffe... |
Anyone for tennis? Or a jog? The Hotel Hartenstein under new management |
XXX Corps and 82nd Airborne link up |
Traffic is bad this morning....allow some extra time for your commute (near Nijmegen)
|
... as XXX Corps arrive across the rail bridge. Captain America provided moral support throughout the game. |
Arnhem. Pic courtesy of Greg Pullin |
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