Episode 169
Operation Market Garden with Gordon Corrigan & Philip Blood
At 3 o’clock in the afternoon on the 20th September 1944 in Nijmegen, Holland, men of the 504th regiment, US 82nd Airborne embarked in canvas rowing boats and began an amphibious assault that was one of the most heroic in military history. Facing the well defended objective on the north end of the Nighmegen bridge over the river Waal, 134 men were killed or wounded in the crossing, more than half the force, but the attack was a success and the bridge was captured. The road to Arnhem was the final jigsaw in Operation Market Garden. Or was it?
Joining me are two historians to discuss the operation as a whole, from the airborne forces tasked with capturing Eindhoven, Nijmegen and Arnhem, to XXX corps and the German troops facing them. Gordon Corrigan takes the allied side, and Philip Blood the German.
Episode Links
It Never Snows in September, Kershaw
Airborne Carpet, Farrar-Hockley
Aspects of History Links
Latest Issue out – Annual Subscription to Aspects of History Magazine only $9.99/£9.99
Aspects of History on Instagram
Check out Badlands Ranch: badlandsranch.com/AOH
Get in touch: history@aspectsofhistory.com