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Building and Breaking the Atlantic Wall

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Title: Building and Breaking the Atlantic Wall


1
Building and Breaking the Atlantic Wall
  • Evan Pierce Dec 3, 07 Wim

2
What Was The Atlantic Wall
  • The Atlantic Wall was a defense fortress made of
    Pillboxes, Artillery, Troops, and other
    obstacles.
  • Built to defend Nazi Germany from the Allied
    invaders on the western front.

3
Building the Atlantic Wall
  • Nazi Officials wanted reinforcement on the
    Western Front.
  • In December of 1941 orders were given to
    construct the Neue Westwall
  • This task was taken on by Fritz Todt and Albert
    Speer of the Todt Organization

4
Building the Atlantic Wall
  • Construction went from 1942 until 1944
  • The wall was made of reinforced concrete bunkers
    up to thirteen feet thick, barbed wire, and
    landmines.
  • The wall reached from Norway to the
    French-Spanish Border.
  • Nazi Propaganda would later change the name to
    the Atlantik Wall and said it was impregnable

5
The Defenders
  • Task was to guess were the Allied Army was going
    to land.
  • Narrowed down entire coast line to areas that
    were near deep water ports.
  • Hitler bet the invasion would be at
    Pas-de-Calais. Shortest distance from London, so
    put V-rockets at the site to make the allies land
    there.

6
The Defenders
  • Were exhausted old men (average age of 35) who
    joined the army in fear.
  • Poorly trained artillery soldiers rushed into
    service.
  • Battle hardened veterans who were brain washed
    and thought they could win.
  • Over 60,000 German soldiers were captured on the
    eastern front retrained to fight against Stalin
    but forced to fight at Normandy

7
The Defenders
  • German Leaders included Field Marshall Gerd von
    Rundstedt, Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, Friedrich
    Dollmann and Adolf Hitler.
  • German infantry divisions included the 716th,
    352nd, 91st, 709th, 243rd, 711th, 30th,
  • German armored divisions included the 21st SS
    Panzer, 12th SS Panzer, 1st SS Panzer, and the
    17th SS Panzer.

8
Gerd Von Rundstedt
  • The top German Army leader of the West.
  • Disagreed with the entire idea of the Atlantik
    Wall. Just some Propaganda for the home front
  • Believed that the invaders should be allowed to
    come to shore and be held up at rivers and
    bridges.
  • Thought that the German soldiers would put up a
    better fight away from Allied Naval Guns

9
Erwin Rommel
  • Disagreed with how Hitler controlled the Panzer
    Divisions, the wall and its use for propaganda,
    and how Hitler did everything in general.
  • Said that the Key to the invasion was to make the
    Allies crawl back from the sea.
  • Sent by Hitler to reinforce the wall
  • Reinforced the wall using six million land mines,
    erecting Belgian gates, and built Rommelspargel
    (Rommels Asparagus). He also flooded fields to
    slow down airborne troops.

10
Rommels Build Up
11
Panzers
  • Where under the direct command of Adolph Hitler.
  • Under his command due to many blunders and
    request of who should have command and where the
    panzers should be committed

12
The Invaders
  • Included American, British, Canadian, French
    Resistance Forces, Free French, Poland, and the
    Netherlands.
  • Lead by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Bernard Montgomery,
    Bertram Ramsay, Trafford Leigh-Mallory, Harry
    Crerar, Omar Bradley, Miles Dempsey.

13
The Invaders
  • The US troops taking part in the invasion came
    from the 82nd, 101st, 1st, 29th, 1st and 5th
    Ranger Battalions, 4th,and the 91st
  • Other troops came from British 3rd, 27th armored,
    6th, 1st special brigade, Canadian 3rd, 2nd
    armored, 27th armored, 50th, XXX Corps.
  • More armor was planned but failed to get ashore.

14
The Invaders
  • Contained ships from eight different navies with
    over 6,000 vessels.

15
The Invaders
  • Patton's 1st Army
  • Double crossing spies and false reports.

16
Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • Had to deal with all every concern by every high
    commander on the Allied Side.
  • Put in charge by Winston Churchill.
  • Initially had to decide weather or not to go when
    bad weather came in.
  • Knew that Rommel was well prepared for his
    landing troops

17
The Plan of Attack
  • To cause chaos by using French Resistance and
    Airborne Troops, the airborne having set
    objectives.
  • Use a naval bombardment to soften the beach.
  • Land troops, establish the beach head, protect
    the flank, and then take Cherbourg.
  • Cherbourg to Paris. Paris to Berlin.

18
When and Where
  • The Allied Army choose Normandy because it was
    the closest distance across from the English
    Channel.
  • Also, Cherbourg was in close proximity
  • A strict time table was set so that there was
    enough time to establish a well supplied front
    before winter came.

19
When and Where
20
The Beginning
  • Started with a build up information and build up
    of the Resistance and classified air jumps.
  • Resistance collected intelligence and sent it
    back to England.
  • England sent Paymasters with gold to pay French.
    Gold was used to bribe German officials and buy
    explosives.

21
Go
  • He stopped pacing faced his subordinates, then
    said quietly but clearly, Okay Lets Go.
  • Within thirty seconds the Southwick House was
    empty everyone ran to their command post and
    Eisenhower was left by himself. There was nothing
    more he could do.- SA pg.189

22
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23
Out of his Hands
  • Our Landingshave failed and I have withdrawn
    the troops. My decision to attack at this time
    was based upon the best information available.
    The troops, the air and the navy did all that
    bravery and devotion to duty could do. If any
    blame or fault attaches to the attempt it is mine
    alone. Dwight D. Eisenhower June 5th 1944

24
The Airborne
  • Question on where to deploy the Airborne Troops
    arose when planning.
  • If they were deployed at the coast where they
    were deployed estimated were projected that only
    one in ten would survive.
  • The other option was to deploy them further
    inland and risk them being captured.

25
The Airborne
26
The Airborne
  • General Eisenhower would see many Airborne
    Soldiers off on June 5th because of the high
    estimated casualty rate. He stayed until the last
    plane took off

27
Beach Landings
28
Beach Landings
29
In Berlin
  • Hitler was struggling to deal with the war.
  • Doctors were giving him drugs all the time to
    deal with stress.
  • His focus was on the Great Escape that had
    happened back in March when 100 P.O.W escaped.
  • Was not to be disturbed after taking a sleeping
    pill.

30
Around the World
  • When news reached the United States that landings
    were taken place everyone danced in the streets.
  • American and Soviet Diplomats partied in the bars
    and beat up German Diplomats that walked in
  • In Germany propaganda reported that the Allies
    would be pushed back

31
Back In France
  • Rommel was on his way home to celebrate his
    birthday.
  • The rest of the German High Command were either
    on leave in Paris or on their way to a training
    exercise
  • The Rest of the German army was confused if and
    where the real landings where taking place.

32
Victory
33
Failure
  • The Germans failed to set up proper defense.
  • There was poor communication and lack of
    agreement in the High Command.
  • Failure to react in time.

34
Suggested Reading
  • Behind Hitlers Lines by Thomas H. Taylor
  • Band of Brothers by Stephen Ambrose
  • D-Day By Stephen Ambrose
  • Recon Scout by Fred Salter

35
Work Cited
  • Ambrose Stephen. Band of Brothers, NY Simon
    Schuster 2001
  • Ambrose Stephen. D-Day NY Simon Schuster
    1994
  • Atlantic Wall, wikipedia.org. 22 November2007
    http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_wall
  • Battle of Normandy, wikipeda.org, 3 December,
    2007 http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Norma
    ndy
  • Cronkite Eisenhower's Return to Normandy, 2007
    http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
    Id1923277
  • Lenco, The Atlantikwall Website,
    http//atlantikwall.net/index.htm
  • Life Commemorative D-Day The 60th Anniversary
    Life inc.2004
  • Jurgen, D-Day Omaha Beach
  • Omaha Beach, http//www.omaha-beach.org/The20Beac
    h/TheBeach.html
  • Runstedt Explains, Lone Sentry, 2003-2005,
    http//www.lonesentry.com/articles/rundstedt/
  • Taylor Thomas H., Behind Hitlers Lines, NY
    Ballatine 2002
  • Todt Organization, http//sorrel.humboldt.edu/res
    cuers/book/Pinkhof/josephh/todt.html
  • http//www.flickr.com/photos/sftrajan/1389238430/
  • Generals.Dk, 2007 http//www.generals.dk/general/v
    on_Rundstedt/Gerd/Germany.html
  • http//users.swing.be/tkimg3/char0/11218.jpg
  • http//www.all-science-fair-projects.com/science_f
    air_projects_encyclopedia/upload/d/de/D-day_allied
    _assault_routes.jpg
  • http//www.aviationshoppe.com/index_files/v1-2.jpg
  • http//www.dws.xip.pl/Galeria/Postacie/Polityka/Po
    lityka.html
  • http//www.remuseum.org.uk/campaign/6adiv/Pic_Aspa
    ragus.jpg
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    6856/
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    s/17-Totalitarian-NS_Rally_06.jpg
  • http//www.normandie44.net/
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    SystemFiles/041229/ImageFiles/D-Day13.JPG
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