Battle of the Bulge: Siege of Bastogne | Frontlines Ep. 06 | Documentary

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

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  • @ftevids1715
    @ftevids1715 Рік тому +123

    When I was in bootcamp I heard about the Screaming Eagles. They are to be respected. They were/ are the proof for the need of special forces.
    I admire them because they do what I dont think I can.
    Our armed forces of WWII are the reason we are not speaking German nor Japanese.
    We need to give them thanks as well as those in service now.
    This Memorial Day give that thanks.

    • @bleepbleep5245
      @bleepbleep5245 Рік тому +6

      no no no
      ... Jesus is the reason you're not speaking German , Japanese or Ebonics

    • @brianwarden7250
      @brianwarden7250 Рік тому

      @@bleepbleep5245 It's the Russians who won the war in the west and the China was the end of Japan. Too bad common sense and childish evangelism has replaced historical fact and common sense.

    • @brianwarden7250
      @brianwarden7250 Рік тому

      Russia were the victors. They sacrificed 20 million and took 11 million germans with them. It's sad that common sense is an uncommon virtue.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +6

      @@bleepbleep5245 I thought God was on the German's side - I even read it on their belts! (Got Mitt Uns)

    • @stevenm3823
      @stevenm3823 Рік тому +5

      You can thank the Red Army for inflicting 85% of all the casualties suffered by the German Army in all of WWII....the Bulge battle was a mere skirmish compared to the titanic bloody battles on the Eastern Front...and Germany and Japan had zero ability to cross either the Atlantic or the vast Pacific and attack and occupy the U.S. so our English language was never under threat.

  • @juliapalmer2344
    @juliapalmer2344 Рік тому +318

    My Dad was with Patton in the 94th 376 division he was a Sgt and drove a wrecker. He had scrap metal in his forehead to the day he died from the battle of Ardennes. He respected Patton he was always right there fighting with them. Patton was a great General.

    • @NoNameNo.5
      @NoNameNo.5 Рік тому +18

      My grandfather was in the 317 infantry, outta Pennsylvania. He came home and had 8 children, I have his pocket bible, when my uncle passes on he will bequeath me a helmet my grandfather brought him. He lost his toes.

    • @johnwipf9499
      @johnwipf9499 Рік тому +32

      There are no generals like that now. We got soft kneed, hand-picked, drown nosed puppets.

    • @SamuelKinimi-cu7jb
      @SamuelKinimi-cu7jb Рік тому +3

      MP

    • @steveowens913
      @steveowens913 Рік тому +19

      PATTON was the best, hands down. He was like a great sports coach. He did his homework, had diligently studied wars and strategies. And he wasn't afraid to get dirty, leading the way.

    • @lawrencetomlinson761
      @lawrencetomlinson761 Рік тому +9

      ​@@johnwipf9499You go tell them, keyboard warrior.

  • @paultrumbull984
    @paultrumbull984 Рік тому +106

    THANK YOU, TO THE GREATEST GENERATION.

    • @paulraulin-c7j
      @paulraulin-c7j 8 місяців тому +5

      WITHOUT A FREAKING DOUBT

    • @badwizard1312
      @badwizard1312 7 місяців тому +5

      I agree but those who serve are the greatest of every generation.

  • @FT4Freedom
    @FT4Freedom Рік тому +31

    It's a blessing we have commenters who were actually at the battlefield. Amazing generation.

  • @sdgakatbk
    @sdgakatbk Рік тому +151

    I had an uncle who was in the 101st who died at Bastogne. This documentary gives me more of an idea of what he might have gone through. I wish my mom was still around to see this as it was her brother.

    • @TEXCAP
      @TEXCAP Рік тому +15

      I'm with you pal. I had an uncle that was killed outright at the Rhine River. He was in the Cobra King which was the first tank to relieve Bastogne at the Battle of the Bulge. It amazes me. These guys were over 5000 miles from home fighting for their lives as well as for the rest of us My mom is his last surviving sibling of 6. James G Murphy 3rd Army 4th Armored Division 37th Tank Battalion Texas.

    • @sdgakatbk
      @sdgakatbk Рік тому +8

      @@TEXCAP How old's your mom? My mom died about 5 years ago. She was the last of her generation in the family. One thing that was very cool was getting her to talk about family and her memories.

    • @TEXCAP
      @TEXCAP 11 місяців тому +6

      @@sdgakatbk She is 88 years old. I am the youngest nephew of his. Ironically, my brother was born in 61 in Germany and I was born in 65 in Japan. My father flew the F100 and F105 in the Cold War and then Vietnam.

    • @bobfranke2347
      @bobfranke2347 9 місяців тому +7

      My Dad's artillery battalion was absorbed into the Patton dash to Bastogne, and he related the severe cold, wrong clothing, severe frostbite and constant ice that slowed tank progress. Miserable.

    • @bobfranke2347
      @bobfranke2347 9 місяців тому +6

      Plus, he related German artillery chopped the tall tree cover which kept the ground warmer and better for defensive foxholes.

  • @ramoneortiz
    @ramoneortiz Рік тому +87

    My father was in the all-Puerto Rican 65th Infantry regiment. They were assigned to the 7th Army that protected General Patton’s southern flank while he headed north towards Bastogne. He was in Germany when the war ended in 1945.

    • @anate9
      @anate9 11 місяців тому +4

      My grand grandfather fought with germans😆

    • @dante0817
      @dante0817 10 місяців тому +5

      Extend my regards to your father.

    • @ramoneortiz
      @ramoneortiz 10 місяців тому +7

      @@dante0817 Thank you. He passed away in 2008 at the age of 91. He never spoke of his experience in WWII nor Vietnam. Most of the information I have was acquired by requesting his military records after his passing.

    • @patrickgrippo
      @patrickgrippo 9 місяців тому +6

      The 65th regiment ,fought in Korea as well .the dist rotation of that unit held off a Chinese rt. Army for three days in a man. Pass,I was told when I was stationed in that frozen place.
      .

    • @ramoneortiz
      @ramoneortiz 9 місяців тому +5

      @@patrickgrippo one of my uncles also fought in Korea with the 65th Infantry Regiment “Borinqueneers”. He shared many harrowing stories of their fighting there.

  • @johnmaloney7518
    @johnmaloney7518 Рік тому +35

    My dad , Master SGT. 4th Armored division, bronze star, as Daniel said, my dad told me that he could the shoot the enemy but not the weather. God Bless all that were there.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +4

      Some "authority" said you could always manage to dig in the ground. One time, I swear I remember getting sparks trying to dig in on a frozen hill.

  • @jimmieblue6262
    @jimmieblue6262 Рік тому +69

    My dad was in 101st airborne. Sergeant in Bastone. He never talked about it. He brought a brass plack back from Bastone that showed a schoolhouse with a bell tower in the background showing a paratrooper landing on the roof. And a German general and a American general and the American general saying nuts. My dad said the people of Bastone was so grateful to be liberated that they took shell casings and melted them down a made small placks about 7 inches round and gave them to the men.

    • @lanpartyanimal5215
      @lanpartyanimal5215 11 місяців тому +9

      @jimmeblue6262 the image on the plaque with the paratrooper hanging from the tower is actually commemorating the 101st's drop into Normandy in the early morning hours of D-Day on June 6th, 1944. It is of the paratrooper that got his parachute stuck on the church spire in the town of St. Marie Egliese and he was killed as a sitting duck by the Germans. If you go there today, there is a dummy dressed as a 101st paratrooper hanging from the church spire in remembrance.

    • @MarylynAdams
      @MarylynAdams 8 місяців тому +2

      Plaque not plack

    • @scotttafil7584
      @scotttafil7584 6 місяців тому +1

      Was your dad in band of brothers?? Well his caractor

    • @joec.7986
      @joec.7986 5 місяців тому +2

      I have one of those plaques from my father who was in the 101st. He was a 2nd lieutenant in the 327th Glider Infantry Regiment. Made it home raised 8 kids and never talked about the war. He passed in 2000 at 80 years of age. My brother, niece and myself are going to Bastogne next month to pay our respects to the troops that died at the battlefield. He also fought in pretty much the same battles as depicted in “Band of Brothers”. Normandy, Carentan, Market Garden, and Battle of the Bulge. He also was at Hitler’s Eagle Nest.

    • @kelrogers8480
      @kelrogers8480 4 місяці тому

      ​@@lanpartyanimal5215he was not killed. His name was John Steele and he went on to live many more years, dying in 1969.

  • @David-mp6vc
    @David-mp6vc 11 місяців тому +57

    What a honor to be a part of Pattons war machine. My uncle was an engineer is Pattons 3rd. My uncle was wounded just prior to the bulge. He lost an eye from an exploded hand grenade spending 2 years in Belgium recovering. Like so many he kept his role to himself until just before his passing.

    • @jimbo81553
      @jimbo81553 5 місяців тому +3

      My father Captain James H. Fields recipient of MOH, 4th Armored Division served under General Patton.

    • @cindymaceda2999
      @cindymaceda2999 4 місяці тому

      You sons and nephews of WW2 survivors should record what they told you so future generations will know the real price of freedom. Nowadays, voters are willing to give it all away to autocracy & demagogues.😮

    • @jonathanlewis6473
      @jonathanlewis6473 15 днів тому

      ​@@jimbo81553-salute

  • @arichster
    @arichster Рік тому +225

    I'm 66 years old and just saw a letter from my mother's "Beau" send the day before the end of the Battle of the bulge. I just learned it was the last day of his life. We can never take anything for granted and learning history ways to ensure that. Rest in peace Sydney.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 Рік тому +18

      my uncle was in the 28th...basically a National Guard outfit the Germans labeled "the bloody buckets" because of the red Keystone patch they wore...got wounded and was taken in and hidden by a local woman...since he was a bit of a ladies man...thin little mustache, and all...he got a good deal of teasing from us as to just how much of an ordeal that really was....

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 Рік тому +9

      Awww

    • @cfierle
      @cfierle Рік тому +4

      What is a "Beau"

    • @jessicamartinez3613
      @jessicamartinez3613 10 місяців тому +6

      ​@@cfierle A boyfriend

    • @juliapalmer2344
      @juliapalmer2344 4 місяці тому +2

      My father received a dear John letter when he was over in Europe. He didn’t marry my mom until he was 48 years old. His first love really burnt him.

  • @TheSaltydog07
    @TheSaltydog07 Рік тому +127

    "Tell Grandpa I'm over here with Patton. He likes him so much." From my Dad, written from Bastogne, December 1944.

    • @Gmoon917
      @Gmoon917 9 місяців тому +7

      Wow. Amazing history . Love listening to hero’s.

    • @percanatord3461
      @percanatord3461 3 місяці тому

      Awesome 😎

  • @judithcampbell1705
    @judithcampbell1705 Рік тому +65

    I'm friends with the great grandson 💙 of Patton. He was just as crazy as the Great General was. I respect the entire Patton line and feel privileged to know him. Thank you 💛 for this excellent documentary.

  • @thelonewolf4288
    @thelonewolf4288 Рік тому +254

    As a Belgian citizen the battle of the bulge always fascinated me because of the bravery from the Americans standing there ground even if they were outnumered and in poor conditions the weather the poor clothing the low amunition and the digging in fox holes while there battered by shelling its a miracle they won with alot of heart and courage RIP to the fallen soldiers after seeing what they went trough we shouln'dt complaint about anything and cherish our freedom

    • @gredw6733
      @gredw6733 Рік тому +17

      American soldiers said the people of Belgium were the best they encountered. My father-in-law was in the 28th Division artillery.

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому +13

      It's a shame the Germans behaved so beastly to Belgian civilians, even with their end so near.

    • @stevetravis5418
      @stevetravis5418 Рік тому +3

      AMEN

    • @kystars
      @kystars Рік тому +9

      I'm American and I also have always been intrigued by history. The Battle of the Bulge in Bastogne was one battle that the 101st was not really prepared for at the time. I remember my dad worked with a former member of the 101st that was there. He said for one thing, they were TRAINED to be surrounded. So to them it was not a frightening thing. My uncle was in the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. They are the US Army's elite unit. They did have some tanks, but not near enough from surrounding area's. They had some tank destroyers also that helped during the battle and confused the Germans. Yes they were outnumbered at all times. Patton meant well and did his very best to get there in time. My dad's friend who was in the 101st during that battle said, WE APPRECIATED Patton trying to get to us, but as it turned out we held our own. The weather broke just in time. You are a Belgian citizen, have you seen the movie BATTLEGROUND? This movie is black and white and was made with real members of the 101st Airborne that had been in that battle. It's a really very good movie and makes you even realize just how desperate the situation really was. The tragic massacre at Malmedy also took place during this time when the German commander Peiper shot US Prisoners. They hung him at the end of the war. But Watch BATTLEGROUND Great movie. Its available for purchase at some streaming sites.

    • @NoNameNo.5
      @NoNameNo.5 Рік тому +4

      That’s what we do!

  • @gregwilliams3210
    @gregwilliams3210 9 місяців тому +18

    Hands down the greatest purest military man in American History. Truly a reborn hero of the past.

  • @danielfield3580
    @danielfield3580 Рік тому +338

    My father was a 1st Sargent in the 101st Airborne. He very seldom talked about the war, but the conditions warranted commentary. They were in a war zone they were not properly dressed for. He said many of his men were suffering from frost bite on their feet. The wind went right through their clothing. He said his men were incredibly strong fighters, and considering their circumstances they were unbelievable. Very proud that they held out!

  • @micpic119
    @micpic119 Рік тому +65

    My uncle was wounded in this battle by a German mortar round. He survived and lived a long life.

  • @sgomez3047
    @sgomez3047 Рік тому +40

    The 101st were and are Badasses!
    God Bless you boys!

    • @joshpitts7256
      @joshpitts7256 8 місяців тому +1

      👍

    • @Crusader8284
      @Crusader8284 4 місяці тому +1

      506th PIR Easy Company.
      Talk about bad asses who always seemed to end up in middle of a desperate battle.
      ✌🏼❤️🇺🇲🪖

  • @oledahammer8393
    @oledahammer8393 Рік тому +79

    My Uncle was 82nd Airborne in D-Day and the Bulge...they were thrown in as well as the 101st! How he managed to survive both and get home defies imagination.

    • @kennethcurtis1856
      @kennethcurtis1856 11 місяців тому +5

      Dad was in the 7thAD as member of an 81mm crew. His brother was in the 82ndAB. They did not realize they were only a few miles apart until they traded 'war stories' after the war.

    • @TEXCAP
      @TEXCAP 3 місяці тому

      @@kennethcurtis1856 Didn't they send and receive letters from home. Surprised they didn't know this unless their mail was censored by the government.

  • @jackjacky8105
    @jackjacky8105 11 місяців тому +22

    all heroes , as a belgian I'm fascinated about the courage of all these men

  • @fasteddie9055
    @fasteddie9055 Рік тому +21

    Ike never panicked. He dispatched the 101st Airborne on trucks from their R&R Reims , France rest camps in the rear. Trucks were dispatched from terminals all the way back to Paris. When he met with the generals in Verdun he told them ''no long faces''. Be optimistic. Let's organize and beat the enemy who is ''out in the open''. Gen Patton quickly commented that he could be in position to attack in 48 hrs. His staff was already planning the attack. This scene is shown in the classic movie PATTON (1970). It's no doubt that this battle is a crucial part of American history. I was reading about it in my grammar school history books back in the 50s. I love Gen. McAullife's Irish moxie. He commented ''nuts'' when he heard about the German attack. Later his staff told him to use the word ''nuts'' to reply to a fugazy German surrender demand. That's how ''nuts'' became part of American military history.

  • @CliffordMesser-n9d
    @CliffordMesser-n9d Рік тому +18

    That's why they are called the greatest generation. I had two uncle's who fought in WW2 they were tough tough men.

  • @charlesmoeller-vu9nq
    @charlesmoeller-vu9nq Рік тому +36

    The Greatest Generation!!! I miss them. Until UA-cam I never realized this and as a young man I missed talking WW2 with them and missed my chance to tell them THANK YOU FOR YOU SERVICE.

    • @cfierle
      @cfierle Рік тому +5

      You are a good person.

    • @marcussmith3037
      @marcussmith3037 6 місяців тому +2

      I miss them too. Greatest generation

  • @obersturmfuhrer88
    @obersturmfuhrer88 Рік тому +48

    My grandfather was a Sargeant in the battle of the bulge. He was in a tank division. He told my brothers and I some really crazy stories when we were young. I respect these men so much even the axis powers. They were all fighters.

  • @choctawhatcheekid309
    @choctawhatcheekid309 Рік тому +188

    My uncle was with 101st at Bastogne, never talked much about the war. One of the few things I remember him saying about it was "you'd be surprised how fast you can dig a fox hole in frozen ground when someone is shooting at you".

    • @theflorgeormix
      @theflorgeormix Рік тому +5

      Adrenaline

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +6

      All I got was sparks when I tried to dig a foxhole in the frozen ground!

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +6

      that's what shifty powers said in the BoB docu

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +2

      @@bigwoody4704 I assume I wasn't the only one.
      I didn't notice any "shifty powers." What's that?

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +3

      @@edgarvalderrama1143 I was talking to the O.P. who said "you'd be surprised how fast you can dig a fox hole in frozen ground when someone is shooting at you". I saw an interview with Shfty Powers from the Band of Brothers years ago and that is what he said

  • @g.e.5723
    @g.e.5723 Рік тому +75

    Relying solely on THE movie, (which I've seen probably 25 times), you gotta believe that, (just as depicted), Patton rather smugly said, what was it, "I can attack with 3 divisions in 48 hours, my staff are drawing plans as we speak". What a badass.

    • @kennethdeanmiller7324
      @kennethdeanmiller7324 5 місяців тому

      Oh but "No one saw it coming!" I don't understand why they keep saying that. That was how the German's beat France so quickly earlier in the war.

    • @kelrogers8480
      @kelrogers8480 4 місяці тому

      And did he manage it within 3 days?

  • @maartenroellekens
    @maartenroellekens Рік тому +20

    One week ago i went to the war museum in Bastogne. Goosebumps from the beginning to the end.

    • @joec.7986
      @joec.7986 3 місяці тому

      I just went to Europe for the first time in 22 years. Made it a point to visit Bastogne. My father was there in the 327 GIR. My niece put the whole thing together and hired a private guide to take us to different sites around the battlegrounds. I recommend it! This guy was great and not only showed us different sites, but explained every battle like it just took place. Very interesting and answered a lot of questions I had.

  • @georgecoffman377
    @georgecoffman377 Рік тому +89

    I had the privilege to know a tank commander under Patton . He was a life long member of our American Legion and even though I was previously military his stories were so life like it made the hair on your neck stand up.

    • @SubRosaUSA
      @SubRosaUSA Рік тому +13

      I live just two blocks from an Army surgeon who was airdropped behind Allied lines to assist Patton in his move to relieve the 101st. The story he told me about being airdropped, raiding the liquor supply of an abandoned French town, swapping some of that liquor for boneless steak and turkey to take along to Patton's forward position headquarters, meeting Patton and being invited to dine with him BECAUSE he had brought all that meat was so vivid, it gave me chills. I had never heard a story so vivid, so real (complete with expletives) and so compelling - off the top of a 96 year old man. His memory was razor sharp of those experiences.

  • @dyerollamorganda5359
    @dyerollamorganda5359 Рік тому +52

    Patton was the best General the US Army ever had..

    • @rpbajb
      @rpbajb 8 місяців тому +5

      Hard to decide between him and Curtis LeMay.

    • @kaymuldoon3575
      @kaymuldoon3575 5 місяців тому +9

      My uncle served in Patton’s army. He fought in the battle of the bulge.

    • @jetholcomb1
      @jetholcomb1 5 місяців тому +6

      He should be a five star at least. I do believe they had him assassinated at the end of the war. You are correct he was an awesome general and the daddy of tank battle.

    • @kelrogers8480
      @kelrogers8480 4 місяці тому +1

      That is a matter of opinion. He had his strengths, and by God, he had his faults!

    • @周越智
      @周越智 4 місяці тому

      I agree that with you Completely!

  • @alcoholfree6381
    @alcoholfree6381 Рік тому +19

    40:30 Look at how old some of these German soldiers have become; a few look to be between 60-70 years old! I’m 70 and can’t imagine me marching out there!! My father was a B-17 bombardier; his plane was shot down on 12/24/1944. He parachuted from around 30,000 feet and he landed on a frozen field in Belgium; he couldn’t walk without crutches for 2 years due to injury to his left leg! This is a great documentary about the great American soldiers and their defeat of the nasty Nazis!! Thank God for all of their saving actions!!

    • @bleepbleep5245
      @bleepbleep5245 Рік тому

      legend has it your big mouth father shoot himself in a left leg for obvious reason
      ... dig him out and thank him for his service

    • @bleepbleep5245
      @bleepbleep5245 Рік тому

      "great American soldiers" haven't defeat a "nasty Nazis" you brainwashed burgerfoker

  • @fasteddie9055
    @fasteddie9055 Рік тому +28

    I think that Gen. Anthony ''Irish'' Mc Auliffe should have been awarded the Medal of Honor. His famous ''nuts'' reply is still very well known throughout the entire nation. His gallant remark has past the ''test of time'' in every sense of the term.

  • @olliemck60
    @olliemck60 Рік тому +22

    My father was with Patton, my uncle with Hodges, both in the Battle of the Bulge all they said is it was cold as hell, and the Germans were good soldiers and they sent them to hell.

  • @JohnDavis-yz9nq
    @JohnDavis-yz9nq Рік тому +99

    Best documentary I have ever seen about this battle. My father was with Patton. He was in a anti aircraft half track division.

    • @unitedwestand5100
      @unitedwestand5100 Рік тому +5

      LOL
      This is a terrible documentary.
      Possibly one of the worst, and inaccurate, I've ever seen

    • @JohnDavis-yz9nq
      @JohnDavis-yz9nq Рік тому +16

      @@unitedwestand5100 most accurate and the best one that I have ever seen. I saved it so that I can watch it again.

    • @unitedwestand5100
      @unitedwestand5100 Рік тому +4

      @@JohnDavis-yz9nq ,. Parts of both the 10th, and 9th ADs, the 705th Tank Destroyer Battalion
      35th and 158th Combat Engineer Battalions
      58th and 420th Armored Field Artillery Battalions
      755th and 969th Field Artillery Battalions of 8th Corps, were fighting in and around Bastogne before the 101st got there.
      Also, the 101st was not then, or now, an elite division.

    • @TheDoctor1225
      @TheDoctor1225 Рік тому +12

      @@JohnDavis-yz9nq Good for you. It's amazing that someone who hated this "inaccurate" documentary had to take the time to post the same thing over and over and over ad nauseum instead of just posting their opinions once and moving on. Must REALLY be bored, or a troll.

    • @JohnDavis-yz9nq
      @JohnDavis-yz9nq Рік тому +14

      @@TheDoctor1225 i really enjoyed this documentary because it showed the everyday life of the men that were there. This person that posted about the inaccuracies doesn’t really know because this person was not there. I will believe the inaccuracies when I hear it from a combat veteran that was there. Thanks for your comment.

  • @beckyelliott2871
    @beckyelliott2871 Рік тому +21

    John Davis- so was my dad, Howard Elliott. I don’t know how you guys managed to live thorough that hellish time, but THANK GOD you did!

  • @sinisterknight9696
    @sinisterknight9696 Рік тому +23

    Fresh snow absorbs sound too. Cuts your warning time of hearing an attack in half or more. Standing in a forest after fresh snowfall is weird. It’s like being in an isolation chamber

    • @MrReymoclif714
      @MrReymoclif714 Рік тому +3

      I live in Vermont! Yup!!

    • @frankkolton1780
      @frankkolton1780 7 місяців тому +1

      "My" deer hunting grounds are in the middle of 1.5 million acre, thick boreal forest. After big snowstorms the forest looks like a wedding cake, all the trees heavy with snow. One morning like that I took three shots at a buck, instead the ear ringing "BOOM, BOOM, BOOM of the high powered hunting rifle, it sounded like a hushed "foot, foot, foot. My hunting buddy who was a couple of hundred of yards away said my shots sounded like misfires. I did get my deer and was able to put meat in the freezer.

  • @Dave-in-France
    @Dave-in-France Рік тому +35

    Very interesting, credible documentary of this substantial and savage battle. A huge "Thank you" to all who were present and did their bit.

  • @phil20_20
    @phil20_20 Рік тому +525

    Stop saying no-one saw it coming: Patton saw days ahead of time. That's why he was prepared to march up there. These type of situations always involve the bad choices of a few leaders, not conventional wisdom.

    • @johncarpenter3801
      @johncarpenter3801 Рік тому +33

      Ike recognized the counter-offensive immediately.

    • @GatorNick
      @GatorNick Рік тому +10

      🎯

    • @NicJackson83
      @NicJackson83 Рік тому +3

      What was the bad decision?

    • @paulcombee2209
      @paulcombee2209 Рік тому +43

      My uncle Leroy was General Pattons mail carrier
      He served in the Generals 3Rd Army .After Pattons untimely death My uncle was detailed to serve as security police officer at the Nuremberg Trials ..He was only 17 in the beginning and 19 years old going on 40 when he was transferred .

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому +10

      What did paton have, a crystal ball? He didn't "see" anything.

  • @jolie1327
    @jolie1327 Рік тому +65

    My relatives from North Dakota and Wisconsin were in Bastogne and they told me growing up with -40 at night and walking to school in -20 and wind made it possible for them to prevail in the fight, but it was so very difficult. Yes, it does get that cold and brutal in those states. All of my dear ones are now buried in veterans cemeteries. I miss them very much-they had so much courage and perseverance. When we talked they told me the Europeans were so courageous and the soldiers believed they were fighting for freedom.

    • @gregginter5867
      @gregginter5867 Рік тому +5

      My SW Wisconsin grand-father spent 3 days w/others in a bomb crater near Bastogne! He woke for yrs after the war screaming as he relived those harrowing moments in his nightmares!

    • @johnlawler4241
      @johnlawler4241 Рік тому +1

      My mother’s uncle once read a book about Germany.

    • @DouglasRichardson-er4ky
      @DouglasRichardson-er4ky 11 місяців тому +1

      ... I grew up in Madison WI, I moved AWAY from the Midwest as soon as I could that weather made me tough but not stupid 😉 RIP 🥀 to your tough as nails relatives 🫡💜🇺🇸 ... best wishes from warm, sunny, arid Sonoran desert Buckeye Arizona 🌵🤠🐎🇺🇸

  • @johnharris6655
    @johnharris6655 Рік тому +58

    Once again Montgomery nearly loses the war only to be saved by Patton.

  • @georgeince4136
    @georgeince4136 Рік тому +55

    My father was in the artillery during the bulge. He had the greatest respect for the members of the 101st and the others there.

  • @terryeustice5399
    @terryeustice5399 Рік тому +10

    This was a great documentary on this battle. Thank you so much.
    💯👍🇺🇸

  • @edgarvalderrama1143
    @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +70

    My father was not there, not even my grandfather. I was there ! (last 7 months all over Europe but starting with Von Rundstedt in the Ardennes. 5th Div Patton's 3rd Army. Was lucky in never having to retreat but did suffer a hairy German counterattack after a river crossing.
    Hard for me to believe and I've had doubters of my comments, too.
    It doesn't make me sore, as I can't believe my own life. (I can't even believe "reality"
    After the war I experienced two years of "Wild Westing" in Mexico's "Hot Country." (Daily trash truck pickup of previous night's casualties in communal farm)
    97 yrs

    • @parsnip82
      @parsnip82 Рік тому +9

      Thank you for your service, Edgar Valderrama. Congratulations on being part of the Greatest Generation.

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому +5

      I'm glad you came home. Thank you for commenting. As a young grunt in VN, I used to think are least I'm not at Iwo, Dday, Bulge or Chosin, so I felt lucky.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +2

      @@stevek8829 "War is (always) hell!"

    • @richardjohnson1261
      @richardjohnson1261 Рік тому +6

      God bless you, sir. And thank you for your service.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +1

      @@richardjohnson1261 Thanks.

  • @williamkrusejr1846
    @williamkrusejr1846 Рік тому +20

    They are great Heroes thank you for telling their story it's well worth hearing

    • @joflory133
      @joflory133 Рік тому +2

      My dad was at the bulge he even mentioned a frozen cow

  • @duncanidaho2097
    @duncanidaho2097 Рік тому +33

    Great video.
    My dad was a US Army infantry PFC and fought in Okinawa and the Philippines, not at the Bulge. This story of the valor of these fighting men has always fascinated me.
    What pops out at me here is the breakdown of the intel guys and the army brass in lack of any preparation or awareness. Wreaks of egos of generals and commanders in the S2and G2 shops, who cling to pre conceived notions and because of their rank, they stick to it. And don’t encourage anyone below them to think outside the box.
    The Krauts already attacked through the Ardennes 4 years prior.
    And just a shoutout to our great combat engineers who figured the routes of attack and moved around blowing bridges which caused no end of frustration and delay to the Hun.

    • @marrenrue7731
      @marrenrue7731 Рік тому +4

      Don't forget 1914 and i believe 1870 too

    • @olliemck60
      @olliemck60 Рік тому +5

      war is hell wherever it is, hope your dad made it through! mine did thankfully.

    • @shepherdgirl9397
      @shepherdgirl9397 Рік тому +6

      My father was one of those brave combat engineers - he commanded a bridge building and blowing up unit who entered the war in Belgium and helped create a way for Patton’s tanks to get out of the Battle of the Bulge and get to Germany. Sadly , he never once discussed the war . I learned these things from my mother after his death. Okinawa and Philippines were hell. Here’s to our fathers !🍻

    • @duncanidaho2097
      @duncanidaho2097 4 місяці тому

      @@olliemck60Yes thanks. Although wounded at Okinawa, he made it home.
      Looking back, I believe that he suffered from PTSD. According to my mom, he changed. Drank heavily at times and their marriage fell apart. During his service, she worked as a ticket agent for Southern Pacific RR at Union Station in LA (they were from Idaho).
      Just as an aside, he broke the tip of his trusty KaBar knife in the neck of a Japanese soldier trying to crawl into his foxhole at night. He brought the knife home and ground a new tip on it and gave it to me when I was in Boy Scouts. Weathered leather sheath and all.

    • @duncanidaho2097
      @duncanidaho2097 4 місяці тому

      @@shepherdgirl9397That’s a great story, glad your dad made it back.
      They didn’t know how to treat soldiers with PTSD back then. So many of those poor lads returned home, souls damaged. I think beck then they called it “combat fatigue.”
      The horrific things they went through and saw.

  • @setts3
    @setts3 5 місяців тому +7

    I'm proud to be a combat veteran Paratrooper. Paratroopers are all the same friend and foe a like, and are are proud to have EARNED the RIGHT to earn jump wings. We we will never give up and will fight with whatever we've got, usually only that what with what jumped with. Salute Brothers.

    • @donaldaxel
      @donaldaxel 5 місяців тому

      The violent clip at the beginning are also fillers, and it is sad that it works.
      If it does something good to have all the explosions coming close, one after the other, it must be to remind younger generations that their older generations had experienced a world which looked like modern shooter gaming or worse.
      But as documentary of the situation before the Battle of the Bulge, it is just nonsensical.

  • @keithranker3908
    @keithranker3908 Рік тому +37

    What the historian said is true, but the Panzer Lehr division commander, listening to a local farmer, led his main unit down a paved toad towards Bastogne. Unfortunately for him, that road became dirt , which quickly became almost impassibly under all of that German traffic. That delay gave the Americans the extra day or so they needed to prepare Bastogne’s defenses. The German division cdr, a bachelor, was charmed for several hours by a captured American Army nurse, diverting his attention at a time when he needed to be moving his division along.

  • @meltx5371
    @meltx5371 Рік тому +30

    My great uncle was in this battle, Last name Vest lived into his 90s

  • @thomasallan8113
    @thomasallan8113 Рік тому +26

    I visited the Battle of the Bulge museum in Bastogne recently well worth visiting. My uncle was in this battle as an artilliary officer with Patton.

  • @kennethsanders963
    @kennethsanders963 10 місяців тому +5

    By far the greatest depiction movie I've seen is "band of brothers" staring Tom Hanks. 101 st. airborne stood their ground and fought with bravery, courage, and pure guts. I am a veteran of 101 st light infantry (PP1) .I am proud of them and my regiment .

  • @Johnny-um6sd
    @Johnny-um6sd Рік тому +17

    Patton ) was one of the best generals in history) America needs another general like patton) a WINNER)

    • @richardmyers5035
      @richardmyers5035 Рік тому +2

      I think we had one. Stormin Norman,

    • @DouglasRichardson-er4ky
      @DouglasRichardson-er4ky 11 місяців тому +1

      ... our armed forces are still the best in the world the tip of the spear 🫡💜🇺🇸

  • @MW-bi1pi
    @MW-bi1pi 11 місяців тому +3

    Overall excellent Documentary with one glaring inconsistency. My Dad was in 35th Tank Battalion, Combat Command A, 4th Armored Division. First contact with the 101st Airborne was made by Combat Command R's Lt. Boggess in the Sherman Tank named Cobra King. This is what REALLY happened; 4th Armored Combat Commands A,B, and R for reserve, were fighting north in a trident with CCB on the left, CCA in the center and CCR under Col. Creighton Abrams on the far right. They were all stuck by heavy, dug in German resistance. CCB and CCA attacked to fix the enemy in place while CCR on the far right disengaged suddenly and swung around all the way to the left of CCB, like in a sweep around the left end in Football. They were able to find the southern road into Bastogne and relieve the town. That particular tactical maneuver was an extremely complicated move of genius and skill rarely if ever equaled before or since. The 4th Armored was trained by General John 'Tiger Jack' Wood, whom Gen. Patton always said could "out Patton, Patton".

  • @paulcombee2209
    @paulcombee2209 Рік тому +19

    My dad was drafted but had a was decorved to have a heart condition , Making him unsuitable for service ,and he was sent back home .and about every other one of his Sr year class mates that were drafted with my dad died in the battle of the bulge ..This bothered my dad all his life ..💔

  • @johnkochen7264
    @johnkochen7264 Рік тому +41

    The entrenching tool could be used as a shovel or a pick but it was also handy for braining someone if you are out of ammo or in hand-to-hand combat.

  • @johns5263
    @johns5263 Рік тому +20

    I still have my great grandpa's machete and shovel from WW2 and I also have I believe it's a 72mm tank shell I also wore his long johns from the war and let me tell you, those cotton long johns were the best I've ever wore. Honored to call him family. Went into France, Italy and North Africa and was hit by friendly fire and had shrapnel in his back until he died in 2016 at the age of 99 and a day before his 100th bday. Miss ya poppy. "Sure shot" is what his military badge said.

    • @marsdenk.6162
      @marsdenk.6162 Рік тому +1

      🙏🙏

    • @cameronkedas3375
      @cameronkedas3375 Рік тому +1

      my great grandpa was a paratrooper in World War II. He was in the 82nd Airborne and parachuted into Sicily and the Salerno Beachhead.
      He was transferred from the 82nd to the 101st Airborne after his unit was withdrawn from Italy and jumped into Normandy on D-Day and Market Garden in Holland. He also served at Bastogne. After the war had ended, he volunteered for railway service in Europe until 1947 in the Army Service Forces. I am also in the same Native American tribe (Choctaw) as 1Sgt. Jake McNiece who was the leader of the “Filthy Thirteen”/ 1st demolition section of the HQ company, 3rd Battalion, 506th Regiment, 101st division. They were the 101st troopers who wore warpaint and Mohawks on Normandy. He jumped into Normandy and Holland until he voluntarily joined the pathfinders where he jumped into Bastogne and as an observer with the 17th Airborne in Operation Varsity

  • @Freiheit-qj5qd
    @Freiheit-qj5qd 2 місяці тому +1

    My Opa was a Major with the German Pioneer Infantry (engineers in ENG). The one man the OKW feared was Patton. He had the fortune of Serving Rommel, Surviving Stalingrad and Translating for Patton. At the End of the war he had respekt for all 3. No More wars between brothers.

  • @alananderson5202
    @alananderson5202 Рік тому +42

    My uncle was on a howitzer during the Battle of the Bulge. He said that they went through mountains of shells.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 Рік тому

      singular probing attacks by the Germans was their undoing as the artillery just shifted to meet the threat...tanks don't like to be on the receiving end of plunging fire....

    • @brianfitzpatrick1183
      @brianfitzpatrick1183 Рік тому +9

      My father was on a 155mm howitzer during the battle. He said pretty much the same thing. Plus the cold, he talked about the cold

  • @markwilliford4567
    @markwilliford4567 Рік тому +10

    Visited Fort Clark, Texas (1.5 hours West from San Antonio. Patton was Stationed there. Fascinating insights into his younger years. Fort is in Bracketville, Texas.

  • @robertcaccavalla6469
    @robertcaccavalla6469 Рік тому +8

    This is a great body of historical information. It is very significant and depicts the amount of everything significant to what America truly is.

  • @UkrainianPaulie
    @UkrainianPaulie Рік тому +21

    Remember no 101st veteran ever said they needed to be " rescued" by Patton. Being a retired Paratrooper myself, I am reminded of the WW2 paratrooper saying. "We're surrounded. Those poor bastards".

    • @nicoleking772
      @nicoleking772 Рік тому

      Paratroopers are supposed to be surrounded.
      Patton relieved the 101st. They dint need no rescuing

    • @josephmclaughlin9404
      @josephmclaughlin9404 Рік тому +5

      Troopers have a job to do but so did the infantry. Patton’s great strength in my opinion, was preparation and total commitment although I was not there I am sure that the 101st welcomed the presence of 3rd Army troops. One outfit did not win the war.

  • @joeorlando8226
    @joeorlando8226 Рік тому +10

    My Godfather was a Sniper in Patton's fighting 45th Division. He fought at the Bulge. His Division and Tank Army were sent from Southern France up to the Bulge to rescue the 101st Division.

  • @darthcheney7447
    @darthcheney7447 Рік тому +15

    Brings a tear to the eye.

  • @joehowarth8093
    @joehowarth8093 Рік тому +13

    Jim “Pee Wee” Martin….what a soldier and hero!! Rest easy Jim…

  • @raywhitehead730
    @raywhitehead730 Рік тому +12

    General Troy Middleton, defending Bastogne, had a Very long and Brilliant career! From fighting and commanding from Mexico, to WW1 France, North Africa, Sicilly, Italy, Normandy, Germany. Nowadays, little noticed. One the US best. He ended up a four star! Same as Patton.

  • @kevinkranz9156
    @kevinkranz9156 Рік тому +43

    PATTON WAS AN AMAZING MAN AND GENERAL AMEN 🙏

    • @felixmbandandayitabi4536
      @felixmbandandayitabi4536 Рік тому

      Patton was a racist and anti sémite psychopath. He was a good, not a great, general.

    • @curtblake5219
      @curtblake5219 Рік тому +4

      He was a No Bullshit General!!!

    • @cameronkedas3375
      @cameronkedas3375 Рік тому +3

      @kevinkranz9156
      Yes he was, no doubt about it. But the few things that tainted his reputation and career in the military which is when he hit two soldiers at Sicily. Look it up if you want more information or don’t believe me.

    • @allencollins6031
      @allencollins6031 Рік тому +3

      ​@@cameronkedas3375yes that was unfortunate. Maybe he had a little fatigue going on himself. Who knows.

    • @RobertButts-ll1gd
      @RobertButts-ll1gd 5 місяців тому

      Rumor has it he was killed or rather targeted

  • @OvertonMcGehee
    @OvertonMcGehee Рік тому +11

    This is a good documentary, but it focuses on the 101st Airborne troops and fails to mention the other units that were also there and that were so key to the defense of Bastogne, in part because they had artillery and tanks, which the 101st did not. They were:
    Combat Command B of the 10th Armored Division
    CCR of the 9th Armored Division
    705th Tank Destroyer Battalion
    35th and 158th Combat Engineer Battalions
    58th and 420th Armored Field Artillery Battalions
    755th and 969th Field Artillery Battalions of 8th Corps
    The 101st were amazing, of course, and had already distinguished themselves at D-Day and Market Garden. They accomplished a miracle at Bastogne, and General McAuliffe of the 101st was in command, But the soldiers of the 101st were not alone in that victory. Almost half of the 23,000 American defenders of Bastogne were from the other 8 units involved in the defense of Bastogne.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +2

      Yes i forget the artillary unit but they played their hand magnificently.Kept moving around from the center and any lines getting attacked could be reached quickly. Any where jerry attacked could be met with shelling. The Germans later said they thought there was much more Artillary than there really was. Had the Wehrmacht bought an attack on all fronts @ Bastogne instead of one sector at a time things may have been different

    • @gregmiell3037
      @gregmiell3037 Рік тому +1

      Thanks. I did not know this.

    • @jeffenglish9344
      @jeffenglish9344 Рік тому +2

      6th Armored Division…..

    • @reidvanness5429
      @reidvanness5429 11 місяців тому +1

      My father was in the ninth armoured

    • @timolson9224
      @timolson9224 5 місяців тому

      My father was in Combat Command B with the 10th Armored. He passed away in 1984.

  • @user-fd6fl1vu8v
    @user-fd6fl1vu8v Рік тому +13

    Patton was so brilliant!!!

  • @MWcrazyhorse
    @MWcrazyhorse Рік тому +21

    "We fought the wrong enemy".
    -General Patton.

  • @davidburrow4584
    @davidburrow4584 Рік тому +15

    My Dad was there, these guys are heroes, freedom is not cheap. Now look what this generation has done

    • @jdlamb4212
      @jdlamb4212 11 місяців тому

      What did you do??

  • @danlindeke2561
    @danlindeke2561 Рік тому +14

    When asked "What unit?", soldier said ,"I'm with Patton!.

  • @CraigBaughan-mg3hf
    @CraigBaughan-mg3hf Рік тому +9

    The Bulge came about after American divisions, caught in the folds of the Seigfreid Line retreated, General Eisenhower committing all of the airborne forces to make a stand. It was a bitter cold day in the middle of January 1945, and the paratroopers, having given their blankets to the wounded, shivered, packed like sardines in the foxhole. There was a canteen cup full of water on a shelf which began to shake. The sky turned as dark as late evening and a deafening roar scared the men. Was it the end of the world? A volcano? It was the U.S. Army Air Corps, with six or seven flights of the 16,000 aircraft committed to the Bulge, flights stacked over flights, telescoping over Model's communications lines, catching the enemy in the open with no antiaircraft or fighter cover. Repeated in two weeks, the enemy was routed, not to advance again. I knew one of the paratroopers in that foxhole.

  • @Clipsww2_
    @Clipsww2_ 5 місяців тому +2

    I love this documentary. Thank you for your service!

  • @mudcatz3564
    @mudcatz3564 Рік тому +63

    "No member of the 101st has ever said they needed to be rescued..." Resupplied, certainly but they held the line. 10th Armored and subordinate units included, yes, but that line didn't break despite the odds. That, my friends, is the United States Army.

    • @DonMeaker
      @DonMeaker Рік тому +3

      Airborne units are trained to be surrounded. If anything, it must have been a comfort to have armor and more than usual amount of artillery.

    • @mudcatz3564
      @mudcatz3564 Рік тому +4

      DonMeaker, agreed. Definitely agreed. And they pulled this off woefully short of supplies going in. The right stuff indeed!

    • @andyboog2010
      @andyboog2010 Рік тому +7

      Finally someone mentioned the 10th armored. They do not get enough credit for their role in this battle. My grandpa was in the 10th and it always pissed him off that they are rarely mentioned. He was a machinist and had a mobile shop that drove right there with the movement.

    • @mudcatz3564
      @mudcatz3564 Рік тому +3

      Richard Anderson, I wholeheartedly agree.10th Armored was vital to the defense and, yes, the 101st got all the press. The more I've studied this engagement, the more I've become convinced that the miracle of Bastogne lay in that disparate units were thrown into the cauldron and worked as a unified unit despite what their shoulder patches said.
      All respect and salutes to your grandfather. Such us the stuff that unsung heroes are made.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +1

      @@andyboog2010 If I remember correctly, the 5th Div. collective opinion was that the Tenth Armored was second only to our favorite Fourth Armored.

  • @KennethLeary-q1p
    @KennethLeary-q1p Рік тому +6

    I have many friends whose Fathers and Grandfathers who fought in the Battle of the Bulge.
    They said that Germans were tough,as usual,and it was the coldest they had ever been.
    But they atuck it out and then things got easier when the skies cleared and our mighty Air Force destroyed the Germans.

  • @1003196110031961
    @1003196110031961 Рік тому +24

    They weren’t called the greatest generation for nothing.God bless them all.

  • @Frankyc1953
    @Frankyc1953 Рік тому +7

    My Father was part of the Airgroup that participated on Christmas Day. From what I can tell, the Germans inflicted severe damage, with a high American death toll. A very nasty couple of weeks....

  • @ianraybetron4300
    @ianraybetron4300 Рік тому +6

    It's the same fighting spirit of the 101st Airborne...that the Ukrainian Army have now...no wonder that they are now the world's no. 1 army...

  • @davidvanbrunt4233
    @davidvanbrunt4233 11 місяців тому +2

    My uncle was at BotB, a truly great man and nice guy...miss you uncle Red !!!

  • @randywarren7101
    @randywarren7101 Рік тому +17

    Why does everyone seem to think the 101st Airborne Division was rescued? They consider themselves relieved, as they called themselves," The Battered Bastards of the Bastion of Bastogne!"

  • @teedtad2534
    @teedtad2534 Рік тому +6

    Both Americans and Germans fought in the WORSE conditions!! Unbelievable fighting will with LESS man power the Americans had! Brave men!

  • @janiceduke1205
    @janiceduke1205 Рік тому +23

    "They've got us surrounded again, the poor bastards." Creighton Abrams.

  • @mjc11a
    @mjc11a Рік тому +19

    Completely unnecessary to blur the images. Utterly disgusting and insulting to those men who were there. My father was one of them.

    • @MrReymoclif714
      @MrReymoclif714 Рік тому +2

      Insulting to the Intelligence of all Americans!

  • @kristinsreese
    @kristinsreese Рік тому +44

    Blurring the atrocities of war is an insult to everyone that was wounded and/or killed.

    • @danahatch9140
      @danahatch9140 Рік тому

      Blame UA-cam, not this channel. Because I'm sure this channel and all the others that constantly get bitched at for this horrible offense, are aiming to insult those who were killed or wounded. Geez.

    • @sethmorgan8258
      @sethmorgan8258 Рік тому +17

      But UA-cam will show the murder of a police officer with no problem totally uncensored.

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Рік тому

      True. Especially the atrocities committed by Eisenhower (smothering to death German P.O.W.'s in train cars, TWICE!) and the Allies.

    • @soldier_of_yahusha4751
      @soldier_of_yahusha4751 Рік тому +12

      Amen. Our generation and every generation needs to see the atrocities of total war. To realize what the men and women of the world were willing to sacrifice.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +1

      If also strikes me as offensively stupid.

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt Рік тому +13

    Patton saw it coming.

  • @dougmoore5252
    @dougmoore5252 Рік тому +4

    Very complete and accurate description of 101 strategy and tactics. Thank you

  • @littlemac844
    @littlemac844 11 місяців тому +2

    This is a fantastic video and recount of The Battle of The Bulge. I am an avid Historian. This is very detailed. Fantastic job

  • @RobertSmith-gl5vs
    @RobertSmith-gl5vs Рік тому +18

    Patton was that type of a General, never give up, fight, go forward, don’t hesitate, and he led his army….other Generals are in the rear, cautious, undecided, that is why the battle of the bulge occurred…….

    • @brianwarden7250
      @brianwarden7250 Рік тому

      It was about an intel fracture and lack of supplies more than anything. This was about common sense becoming an uncommon virtue not at all about battleground leadership.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +3

      "His guts, our blood" is what the infantry said - but more as a matter of fact than with resentment.

    • @joanmaccarone6061
      @joanmaccarone6061 Рік тому +1

      So very true, at one point Eisenhower held needed tires..

    • @veritas41photo
      @veritas41photo 6 місяців тому +1

      Patton attended the Virginia Military Institute for one year before transferring to West Point. Anyone who went to VMI (in those days) learned about Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson's story as a general whose primary military strategy was, once you have the upper hand on the battlefield, pursue the enemy relentlessly until you KILL THEM ALL. No mercy! Maybe Patton used this himself...

  • @markusrobinson3858
    @markusrobinson3858 8 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for this superb account of the Battle of Bastogne. The one dissonant chord in this wonderful documentary is the very last remark "and by some the greatest of all time." That is sadly a remark that does disservice to all of the other utterly heroic American military campaigns in its illustrious history. Consider for example the heroic self-sacrificial charge of the 1st Minnesota on the second day at Gettysburg. All 262 men of the 1st Minnesota executed a bayonet charge against 1,500 Confederate troops of Wilcox's Alabama brigade. Recognizing that the Union center was about to be broken at Cemetery Ridge, and knowing he needed time to bring up reserves, Major General Winfield commanded the 1st Minnesota's Colonel William Colvill "Colonel! Do you see those colors? Take them!" The 1st Minnesota charged and bought Winfield time to bring up the reserves. Their sacrifice? Only 47 men of the 1st Minnesota (and Colonel Colvill was not one of them) were alive to hear the command "Fall Back!" Are then not as heroic as the brave men of the 101st?

  • @johnhaggart9376
    @johnhaggart9376 Рік тому +6

    I served in The Airborne. We absolutely had the entrenching tool.

    • @Stats2BackIt
      @Stats2BackIt Рік тому +1

      My dad still has his he was 4th ID and later 75th Rgt back in the 80s lol

  • @JCaroleClarke
    @JCaroleClarke Рік тому +16

    Bastogne was the Gettysburg of this fight. The 1st Brit Parachute, the 82nd & 101st American Airborne had to hold that critical town until relief could arrive. They were like Gen. Buford's Union cavalry waiting for General Reynolds (Patton). This was Hitler's last gasp so everything banked on this thrust into Belgium. At the Verdun meeting Patton said he could have 3 armored divisions up there in 2 days. Everyone there knew that it was a 4-day trek in that winter weather. What Patton told nobody was that he had started those divisions 2 days before. Two days later they entered the Bastogne perimeter. My father was a lieutenant with an armored infantry unit of the 4th Armored Division. Patton remembered history.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому +1

      I remember the 5th Div. thought of the 4th Armored as incomparable; in a class of its own.

    • @kennethcurtis1856
      @kennethcurtis1856 10 місяців тому +1

      Have you read the complete battle for St. Vith? St. Vith took the brunt of the initial German onslaught.

    • @lawrencemyers3623
      @lawrencemyers3623 7 місяців тому

      I'm sorry, but you're confusing Operation Market-Garden with the Bulge.
      The British 1st Airborne was decimated at Arnhem and wouldn't go on another operation til the Spring of 1945, going to Norway to disarm and round up surrendering German troops. The 82nd wasn't at Bastogne, but was miles to the north around Werbomont taking on the 1st SS and 2nd SS Panzer Divisions. The 101st of course was at Bastogne, but they were far from alone. Combat Command B, 10th Armored Division, CCR 9th Armored, 705th TD Battalion, Team Snafu (remnants of the 28th Infantry Division) plus numerous artillery units were also part of the garrison.
      Great book to read on the Bulge: "A Time For Trumpets" by Charles MacDonald. MacDonald was there as an infantry company commander with the 2nd Division, was later the Army's Deputy Chief Historian and wrote a number of books on WW2, including a memoir which is considered a classic.

    • @lawrencemyers3623
      @lawrencemyers3623 7 місяців тому

      ​@@kennethcurtis1856: I agree. The fighting around St. Vith is definitely overlooked. All most folks remember (if they remember at all) is the surrender of the 422nd and 423rd IRs on December 19th, giving the impression that the defense collapsed like the proverbial house of cards. There's far more to the story than that.

    • @JCaroleClarke
      @JCaroleClarke 7 місяців тому

      I know about Market Garden - one lone road from bridge to bridge. When writing the above I trusted my memory of a map I'd seen. It's possible I put the 82nd too close to Bastogne to be considered as being part of that fight. But I do still feel there are comparisons to the expectations felt at Gettysburg. Nothing is ever exact. But thank you for being so exact.@@lawrencemyers3623

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect Рік тому +2

    This is a SPECTACULAR documentary! (big thanks for it!). How come I didn't see it before??

  • @GatorNick
    @GatorNick Рік тому +5

    Documentary is fantastic. Absolutely fantastic

  • @coryhoggatt7691
    @coryhoggatt7691 Рік тому +3

    The comment at 51:00 that the Germans had attacked through the Ardenne Forest once before neglects the fact the the road network runs NE to SW, which supported their attack into France but seriously hampered their attack into Belgium.

  • @billywird
    @billywird Рік тому +11

    We have of course been caught with our pants down many times during our history. The saving grace is we rise to the occasion and find a way to come out on top. Many mistakes are made by people not listening and not only did the Allies make their mistakes but the Axis powers did the same. Nothing is set in stone, but the determination of those who were locked in situations like the Bulge. Fortunately we prevailed and it took the last gasp out of the German army. We might not have had the best equipment but we had the best support from the country to out produce the Axis powers. And this was the last Constitutionally declared war that the United States was involved in and it shows that this country was all in for this conflict and was going to see it to a close. The men and women that were involved in this are people we can all be proud of.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Рік тому

      My quasi-serious theory is that all things being more or less equal, the side that makes the most serious mistakes loses.
      I'll admit this is obvious, but don't most analysis favor strategy, tactics, discipline and things like maneuverability, productivity and morale, etc. etc?

  • @cmguy777
    @cmguy777 Рік тому +4

    Great documentary. Thanks.

  • @davidmummery5956
    @davidmummery5956 Рік тому +5

    No member of the 101st airborne to their dying days has ever said they needed Patton to relieve them from anything.

    • @gredw6733
      @gredw6733 Рік тому +1

      They said they appreciated being relieved, but that they NEVER needed to be rescued!

  • @KennethLeary-q1p
    @KennethLeary-q1p Рік тому +1

    Now a day,there are combat boots for our troops that are impervious to cold,heat and water.
    All the poor Dudes who served in previous wars suffered greatly.My respect to them.Brave Warriors.

  • @legendarychessmatch
    @legendarychessmatch Рік тому +6

    One of the best general in WW2

  • @Mike-01234
    @Mike-01234 Рік тому +4

    The weather is what turned the tide once it cleared P-47's and P-51's could get in the air and tear into the German lines. Plus, the fact that spotting planes could go up and direct artillery fire. WW2 airpower was the key to winning showed how tanks could not defeat aircraft they were the land version of a battleship. Today we see the same thing in Ukraine drones used to take out tanks.

  • @patrickhite3026
    @patrickhite3026 9 місяців тому +8

    Lost an uncle in Battle of the bulge..Ace Jewel Collier..RIP

    • @jonyeager318
      @jonyeager318 5 місяців тому +1

      Sorry for your family's loss. I had a boss years ago that I respected very much and he was fortunate enough to be a survivor of the battle and he didn't share everything but enough that I understood and gave me the greatest respect for all our veterans and especially WWII...

    • @craigcote706
      @craigcote706 3 місяці тому

      Sorry about your loss.

  • @lwpathi4296
    @lwpathi4296 Рік тому +5

    My farther is doing main role this operation but he is none sung hero..💪

  • @hottubrabbits4763
    @hottubrabbits4763 Рік тому +12

    I can't imagine what those men endured in brutal, freezing conditions with no way to get warm and low on food, as well as ammo. I seriously wonder if the current generation of servicemen and women could face that challenge and prevail. The soldiers in WWII had grown up during the Great Depression and had known hardship their whole lives, and were just unbreakable.

    • @FT4Freedom
      @FT4Freedom Рік тому +5

      Hard times bring up strong men.