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I know that the 439th Troop Carrier Group was involved. My father was one of the glider pilots.
I found this information for you from a Norwegian military researcher.17 Dec 2004, 17:20Task Force Hanson (Commanding Officer Captain Harold D. Hanson)During the Battle of the Bulge attached to U.S. 30th Infantry Division??Units attached to Task Force Hanson 99th Infantry Battalion (Separate)526 Armoured Infantry Battalion825th Tank Destroyer Battalion?Battle of the Bulge, the Task Force was ordered into defensive positions south of Malmedy, Belgium.Norwegian-Americans and the 99th Infantry Battalion (Separate) Center of Research and Information on the Battle of the Bulge Website/Mikael Sundholm
Was the 29th Infantry Division involved in the Battle of the Bulge?Read more: Was_the_29th_Infantry_Division_involved_in_the_Battle_of_the_Bulge
members of the 101st Airborne as well as other units were the main stay of resistence against the German assault on Bastogne, Belgium in December 1944.......
The German army was attacking units of the American army. No navy involved in the actual battle it was to far inland.
Romania had surrendered to the Russians in August of 1944, and joined the Allies in September that same year. The Battle of the Bulge began December 16, so there would not be any organized Romanian military units at the Bulge fighting with the Germans. It is also unlikely that the Allied armies contained any Romanian units as their army was not that large and had suffered tremendous losses fighting the Russians. What remained would continue to fight in the east against their former German handlers.
I know that the 439th Troop Carrier Group was involved. My father was one of the glider pilots.
One needs to obtain a copy of their DD Form 214, it list the units in which they served, awards given, and countries in which they served.
I found this information for you from a Norwegian military researcher.17 Dec 2004, 17:20Task Force Hanson (Commanding Officer Captain Harold D. Hanson)During the Battle of the Bulge attached to U.S. 30th Infantry Division??Units attached to Task Force Hanson 99th Infantry Battalion (Separate)526 Armoured Infantry Battalion825th Tank Destroyer Battalion?Battle of the Bulge, the Task Force was ordered into defensive positions south of Malmedy, Belgium.Norwegian-Americans and the 99th Infantry Battalion (Separate) Center of Research and Information on the Battle of the Bulge Website/Mikael Sundholm
Was the 29th Infantry Division involved in the Battle of the Bulge?Read more: Was_the_29th_Infantry_Division_involved_in_the_Battle_of_the_Bulge
Certainly. It should be noted the Battle of the Bulge and to a lesser extent Normandie- pitted the US against the elite of the German Army, Waffen-SS troops and Luftwaffe.
members of the 101st Airborne as well as other units were the main stay of resistence against the German assault on Bastogne, Belgium in December 1944.......
The German army was attacking units of the American army. No navy involved in the actual battle it was to far inland.
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What is called the Battle of the Bulge in the United States was part of the German Ardennes Offensive of 1944. It was a last-gasp effort by the German Army to stave off defeat in the Western European Theater - its primary goal was the Belgian city of Antwerp, the major port from which Allied supplies were flooding onto the continent. It was hoped by that re-taking Antwerp, the Allied forces in Western Europe could be contained long enough to possibly negotiate a peace (or, alternately, allow for more time for Hitler's Superweapons (the various V-rockets and jet aircraft) to play a significant role). While initially successful, mostly due to failures of Allied tactical planners to appreciate that a major German offensive was in the making, the German attack ultimately stalled due to lack of fuel. As the weather cleared a week or so after the battle began, Allied tactical aircraft ravaged stalled German units, and prevented the furthest penetrating German units from resupplying. In the end, the offensive was a German failure, and a strategic Allied victory, as the German army lost most of its remaining quality units, and the Luftwaffe effectively ceased to exist. The Battle of the Bulge was the last significant German offensive of WW2.
There were no entire black units until the civil war. Although there were african-american slaves fighting along sides with their masters during battle.
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