From north to south in Europe there were the British 1st Army and Canadian 1st Army (these made up the 21st Army Group, under Montgomery); then the US 9th, 1st and 3rd Armies (these were the 12th Army Group, under US General Omar Bradley); then there were the American 7th Army and French 1st Army (these were the 6th Army Group, under US General Jacob Devers). All three of these Army Groups were under Eisenhower's command.
The German attack came at the boundary between the US 9th and 1st Armies, falling more on the 1st Army. These armies became separated when the Germans broke through. Because it looked as though the Germans might reach a small town which was a vital telephone line hub, which would make it difficult for Bradley to communicate with his 9th Army Commander, and for this reason ONLY, during the Battle the US 9th Army was placed under the direction of Montgomery, who was himself north of the Bulge. But the 9th Army was not really in the Ardennes Forest proper. They reformed and faced southward along Elsenborn Ridge. to make a northern shoulder of the Bulge, to contain the Germans and canalize them into moving forward only on the width of their initial breakthrough.
Most of the troops actually in the Ardennes Forest were of the US 1st Army, which was commanded by General Courtney Hodges, and which remained in Omar Bradley's 12th Army Group, all under Eisenhower.
The major mistake that the Allies made in preparing for Germany's attack in 1940 was their assumption that the Ardennes Forest was impassable. They concentrated their forces to the north and south of it. When Germany attacked through the Ardennes, they encountered weak resistance, which allowed them to complete their plan of encircling the allied armies.
The Battle of Ardennes is also referred to as The Battle of the Bulge. The Ardennes Forest is in France and Belgium. It was the last major offensive of the Germans in World War 2.
At the Ardennes Forest and all around that region of territory- The battle got it's name from a huge bulge that swept across the forest.
The bulge was when the Germans surged ahead 60 feet in the Allied defenses in the Ardennes' Forest.
There were three locations for the Battle of the Bulge. These locations included forest areas of Wallonia, Belgium, France, and Luxembourg. Most of the battle action took place in Ardennes forest.
1944 in the ardennes forest.
The major mistake that the Allies made in preparing for Germany's attack in 1940 was their assumption that the Ardennes Forest was impassable. They concentrated their forces to the north and south of it. When Germany attacked through the Ardennes, they encountered weak resistance, which allowed them to complete their plan of encircling the allied armies.
Heinz Guderian.
The Battle of Ardennes is also referred to as The Battle of the Bulge. The Ardennes Forest is in France and Belgium. It was the last major offensive of the Germans in World War 2.
Belgium. It was thought to be a natural obstacle against German tanks, but the German Army attacked through it in the spring of 1940, and again in the winter of 1944-45. The second attack was called the Ardenne Offensive by the Germans, and the Battle of the Bulge by the Allies.
He invaded Belgium and went through the Ardennes forest
At the Ardennes Forest and all around that region of territory- The battle got it's name from a huge bulge that swept across the forest.
He invaded Belgium and went through the Ardennes forest
No, the Huertgen is a bit farther south than the Ardennes Forest, which was the scene of the Ardennes Offensive, commonly called the Battle of the Bulge. The Huertgen was the scene of bitter fighting in the autumn of 1944, as the US command poured in four infantry divisions in succession which were chewed up by the German defenders, instead of taking the reasonable course and going around the relatively small forest. What the US was trying to do was to get at the Roer River dams on the other side of the Huertgen, to prevent the Germans from opening the floodgates on the dams and inundating the countryside downstream from the dams. This the US failed to prevent. The Ardennes Forest was the same area which the Germans used to invade France in 1940. It was thought that this densely wooded area of few roads, steep hills cut by numerous ravines was impassable for a modern, mechanized army with tanks. Despite the Germans proving that it was imminently practicable for tanks in 1940, in 1944 the US high command was not expecting anything from the Germans by way of the Ardennes, which is really inexcusable. The Americans and the other allies basically believed the Germans were already defeated by the autumn of 1944. These two episodes, the Huertgen and the Ardennes, are about the lowest points of the overall far less than stellar performance of the US command in Europe in WWII.
The bulge was when the Germans surged ahead 60 feet in the Allied defenses in the Ardennes' Forest.
There were three locations for the Battle of the Bulge. These locations included forest areas of Wallonia, Belgium, France, and Luxembourg. Most of the battle action took place in Ardennes forest.
Dec 16, 1944 - On Dec. 16, 1944, Marshal von Runstedt launched his three German armies against the allies in what would become known as the Battle of the Bulge. This battle took place in the Ardennes forest on the key road centres of St. Vith and Bastogne.