Battle of Ortona
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Battle of Ortona | |||||||
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Part of Italian Campaign (World War II) | |||||||
![]() Canadian Armour Passing Through Ortona, by Dr. Charles Fraser Comfort. Canadian War Museum (CN 12245). |
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Combatants | |||||||
1st Canadian Infantry Division | 3rd battalion, 3rd Regt, German 1st Parachute Division | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Major General Chris Vokes | Generalleutnant Richard Heidrich | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
? | ? | ||||||
Casualties | |||||||
Canadian
1375 dead |
German
? |
Italian Campaign |
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Invasion of Sicily – Invasion of Italy – Armistice with Italy – Winter Line – San Pietro – Anzio – Monte Cassino – Gothic Line |
The Battle of Ortona (December 20, 1943 to December 27, 1943) was a small yet extremely fierce battle fought between German Fallschirmjäger (paratroops), and assaulting Canadian forces from the 1st Canadian Division. It was considered among Canada's greatest achievements during the war.
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Taking place in the small Adriatic Sea town of Ortona, with its tiny peacetime population of 10 000, the battle was the site of what were perhaps the deadliest close quarter combat engagements of the entire war. Some dubbed this "Little Stalingrad".
Ortona was a town of strategic importance due to its deep-sea port. It was also well surrounded by cliffs on the east and north, and deep ravine on the west. This made Ortona almost impregnable, the only option for an assault would be from the south, which offered the only entrance point. Ortona also constituted part of the "Winter Line", and the Germans were ordered to "fight for every last house and tree".
The Canadians faced a unit from the German 1st Parachute Division. These soldiers were battle-hardened after years of war, and were ordered by Hitler to defend Ortona at any cost. The Germans had placed various barricades and left rubble strewn throughout the narrow sidestreets surrounding the Piazza Municipale. The only available route for the Canadian tanks was through the Corso Vittorio, which was booby trapped; traps would serve the Germans with deadly efficiency during the 8 days of bitter fighting.
The Germans also concealed various machine guns and anti-tank emplacements throughout the town, making virtually any street a deathtrap to the advancing Canadians. The house to house fighting was vicious and the Canadians made use of a new tactic: "mouse-holing".
This tactic involved using weapons such as the PIAT (or even cumbersome anti-tank guns) to breach the walls of a building. The soldiers would then throw in grenades and assault through the mouseholes, clearing the ground floors and making their way up, where both adversaries struggled in brutal close quarters combat. Mouseholing was also used to pierce through walls into adjoining rooms, sometimes catching enemy troops by surprise. The tactic would be used repeatedly as assaulting through the streets meant certain death for the Canadian troops. Later, in a particularly deadly incident, a German demolished an entire house packed with Canadian soldiers; only one soldier survived. The Canadians retaliated by demolishing another building on top of 2 German platoons, wiping them out.
After 8 days of fighting, the attrited German troops who lacked reinforcements finally surrendered the town and retreated. The Canadians suffered 1374 dead in the fighting in and around Ortona, almost 25% of all Canadians killed during the Italian Campaign.
Lessons
The battle is referenced in USMC Training Manual MCWP 3-35.3 Military Operations on Urbanized Terrain (MOUT)
"Ortona (1943). In this Italian town, determined resistance by a battalion of the elite German 3rd Parachute Regiment against Canadian Army attackers demonstrated the difficulty of overcoming a well-prepared defense. The Canadians were unfamiliar with urban combat and had to develop urban fighting techniques during the battle. After the town was largely destroyed and the defender had extracted a high cost in time and casualties from Canadian forces, the German parachute battalion withdrew. (Length of battle: 6 - 13 days) (Casualties: estimated in the hundreds)"
Trivia
The 'Ortona Toast' found its origin during this battle. The custom of toasting to the 'health of the regiment' (i.e., the Royal Canadian Regiment) with a mixture of dark rum, water, and brown sugar served in a white china cup was first observed on December 21, 1943 which marked the sixtieth anniversary of the Royal Canadian Regiment.[3]
[edit] Images
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Zuehlke, Mark (1999). Ortona Canada's Epic WWII Battle. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 1-55054-557-4}
- ^ Zuehlke, Mark (1999). Ortona Canada's Epic WWII Battle. Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 1-55054-557-4}
- ^ http://thercr.ca/customs_traditions/ortona_toast.htm
[edit] External links
- The Battle of Ortona - Complete overview, video / audio and a large picture gallery.
- CdnMilitary.ca Battle of Ortona website for Veterans Week 2004
- CBC history on the Battle of Ortona
- Canadian Encyclopedia Entry
- How the Enemy Defended the Town of Ortona (U.S. intelligence report)
- Juno Beach center: Ortona
- canadiansoldiers.com article on Ortona