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Allied invasion of Sicily

The Allied invasion of Sicily, also known as the Battle of Sicily and Operation Husky, was a major campaign of World War II in which the Allied forces invaded the island of Sicily in July 1943 and took it from the Axis powers (Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany). It began with a large amphibious and airborne operation, followed by a six-week land campaign, and initiated the Italian campaign.

Sicilian Campaign
Part of the Italian campaign of World War II

A map of the Allied army amphibious landing in Sicily, 10 July 1943, as part of Operation Husky
Date9 July – 17 August 1943
Location
Result

Allied victory

Territorial
changes
Sicily occupied by Allied forces
Belligerents

 United Kingdom

 United States
 Canada
Free France[2]
Supported by:
 Australia[3][4][5]
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Initial strength:
  • 160,000 personnel
  • 600 tanks
  • 14,000 vehicles
  • 1,800 guns[6]

Peak strength:

  • 467,000 personnel[7]
  • Italy:
    • 131,359[8]–252,000 personnel[9]
    • 260 tanks
    • 1,400 aircraft[10]
  • Germany:
Casualties and losses
  • United Kingdom and Canada:[12][13]
    • 2,938 killed
    • 9,212 wounded
    • 2,782 missing
  • United States:[12]
    • 2,811 killed
    • 6,471 wounded
    • 686 missing
  • Italy:[14]
    • 4,678 killed
    • 32,500 wounded
    • 116,861 captured or missing[15]
  • Germany:[14]
    • 4,325 killed
    • 13,500 wounded
    • 10,106 captured or missing

To divert some of the Axis forces to other areas, the Allies engaged in several deception operations, the most famous and successful of which was Operation Mincemeat. Husky began on the night of 9–10 July 1943 and ended on 17 August. Strategically, Husky achieved the goals set out for it by Allied planners; the Allies drove Axis air, land and naval forces from the island and the Mediterranean sea lanes were opened for Allied merchant ships for the first time since 1941. These events led to the Italian leader, Benito Mussolini, being toppled from power in Italy on 25 July, and to the Allied invasion of Italy on 3 September.

The German leader, Adolf Hitler, "canceled a major offensive at Kursk after only a week, in part to divert forces to Italy," resulting in a reduction of German strength on the Eastern Front.[16] The collapse of Italy necessitated German troops replacing the Italians in Italy and to a lesser extent the Balkans, resulting in one-fifth of the entire German army being diverted from the east to southern Europe, a proportion that would remain until near the end of the war.[17]

Background

Allies

The plan for Operation Husky called for the amphibious assault of Sicily by two Allied armies, one landing on the south-eastern and one on the central southern coast. The amphibious assaults were to be supported by naval gunfire, as well as tactical bombing, interdiction and close air support by the combined air forces. As such, the operation required a complex command structure, incorporating land, naval and air forces. The overall commander was American General Dwight D. Eisenhower, as Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of all the Allied forces in North Africa. British General Sir Harold Alexander acted as his second-in-command and as the 15th Army Group commander. The American Major General Walter Bedell Smith was appointed as Eisenhower's Chief of Staff.[18] The overall Naval Force Commander was the British Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham.

The Allied land forces were from the American, British and Canadian armies, and were structured as two task forces. The Eastern Task Force (also known as Task Force 545) was led by General Sir Bernard Montgomery and consisted of the British Eighth Army (which included the 1st Canadian Infantry Division). The Western Task Force (Task Force 343) was commanded by Lieutenant General George S. Patton and consisted of the American Seventh Army. The two task force commanders reported to Alexander as commander of the 15th Army Group.[19]

 
Allied leaders in the Sicilian campaign. General Dwight D. Eisenhower meets in North Africa with (foreground, left to right): Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, General Sir Harold Alexander, Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham, and (top row): Mr. Harold Macmillan, Major General Walter Bedell Smith, and unidentified British officers.

The U.S. Seventh Army consisted initially of three infantry divisions, organized under II Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Omar Bradley. The 1st and 3rd Infantry Divisions, commanded by Major Generals Terry Allen and Lucian Truscott respectively, sailed from ports in Tunisia, while the 45th Infantry Division, under Major General Troy H. Middleton, sailed from the United States via Oran in Algeria. The 2nd Armored Division, under Major General Hugh Joseph Gaffey, also sailing from Oran, was to be a floating reserve and be fed into combat as required. On 15 July, Patton reorganized his command into two corps by creating a new Provisional Corps headquarters, commanded by his deputy army commander, Major General Geoffrey Keyes.[20]

The British Eighth Army had four infantry divisions and an independent infantry brigade organized under XIII Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Miles Dempsey, and XXX Corps, commanded by Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese. The two divisions of XIII Corps, the 5th and 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Divisions, commanded by Major-Generals Horatio Berney-Ficklin and Sidney Kirkman, sailed from Suez in Egypt. The formations of XXX Corps sailed from more diverse ports: the 1st Canadian Infantry Division, under Major-General Guy Simonds, sailed from the United Kingdom, the 51st (Highland) Infantry Division, under Major-General Douglas Wimberley, from Tunisia and Malta, and the 231st Independent Infantry Brigade Group from Suez.

The 1st Canadian Infantry Division was included in Operation Husky at the insistence of the Canadian Prime Minister, William Mackenzie King, and the Canadian Military Headquarters in the United Kingdom. This request was granted by the British, displacing the veteran British 3rd Infantry Division. The change was not finalized until 27 April 1943, when Lieutenant-General Andrew McNaughton, then commanding the Canadian First Army in the United Kingdom, deemed Operation Husky to be a viable military undertaking and agreed to the detachment of both the 1st Canadian Infantry Division and the 1st Canadian Tank Brigade. The "Red Patch Division" was added to Leese's XXX Corps to become part of the British Eighth Army.[21]

In addition to the amphibious landings, airborne troops were to be flown in to support both the Western and Eastern Task Forces. To the east, the British 1st Airborne Division, commanded by Major-General George F. Hopkinson, was to seize vital bridges and high ground in support of the British Eighth Army. The initial plan dictated that the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division, commanded by Major General Matthew Ridgway, was to be held as a tactical reserve in Tunisia.[22]

Allied naval forces were also grouped into two task forces to transport and support the invading armies. The Eastern Naval Task Force was formed from the British Mediterranean Fleet and was commanded by Admiral Bertram Ramsay. The Western Naval Task Force was formed around the U.S. Eighth Fleet, commanded by Admiral Henry Kent Hewitt. The two naval task force commanders reported to Admiral Cunningham as overall Naval Forces Commander.[19] Two sloops of the Royal Indian NavyHMIS Sutlej and HMIS Jumna – also participated.[1]

At the time of Operation Husky, the Allied air forces in North Africa and the Mediterranean were organized into the Mediterranean Air Command (MAC) under Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder. The major sub-command of MAC was the Northwest African Air Forces (NAAF) under the command of Lieutenant General Carl Spaatz with headquarters in Tunisia. NAAF consisted primarily of groups from the United States 12th Air Force, 9th Air Force, and the British Royal Air Force (RAF) that provided the primary air support for the operation. Other groups from the 9th Air Force under Lieutenant General Lewis H. Brereton operating from Tunisia and Egypt, and Air H.Q. Malta under Air Vice-Marshal Sir Keith Park operating from the island of Malta, also provided important air support.

The U.S. Army Air Force 9th Air Force's medium bombers and P-40 fighters that were detached to NAAF's Northwest African Tactical Air Force under the command of Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham moved to southern airfields on Sicily as soon they were secured. At the time, the 9th Air Force was a sub-command of RAF Middle East Command under Air Chief Marshal Sir Sholto Douglas. Middle East Command, like NAAF and Air H.Q. Malta were sub-commands of MAC under Tedder who reported to Eisenhower for NAAF operations[19] and to the British Chiefs of Staff for Air H.Q. Malta and Middle East Command operations.[23][24]

Axis

 
General Alfredo Guzzoni, Supreme Commander of Italo-German forces in Sicily

The island was defended by the two corps of the Italian 6th Army under General Alfredo Guzzoni, although specially designated Fortress Areas around the main ports (Piazze Militari Marittime), were commanded by admirals subordinate to Naval Headquarters and independent of the 6th Army.[25] In early July, the total Axis force in Sicily was about 200,000 Italian troops, 32,000 German troops and 30,000 Luftwaffe ground staff. The main German formations were the Panzer Division Hermann Göring and the 15th Panzergrenadier Division. The Panzer division had 99 tanks in two battalions but was short of infantry (with only three battalions), while the 15th Panzergrenadier Division had three grenadier regiments and a tank battalion with 60 tanks.[26] About half of the Italian troops were formed into four front-line infantry divisions and headquarters troops; the remainder were support troops or inferior coastal divisions and coastal brigades. Guzzoni's defence plan was for the coastal formations to form a screen to receive the invasion and allow time for the field divisions further back to intervene.[27]

By late July, the German units had been reinforced, principally by elements of the 1st Parachute Division, 29th Panzergrenadier Division and the XIV Panzer Corps headquarters (General der Panzertruppe Hans-Valentin Hube), bringing the number of German troops to around 70,000.[28] Until the arrival of the corps headquarters, the two German divisions were nominally under Italian tactical control. The panzer division, with a reinforced infantry regiment from the panzergrenadier division to compensate for its lack of infantry, was under Italian XVI Corps and the rest of the panzergrenadier division under the Italian XII Corps.[29] The German commanders in Sicily were contemptuous of their allies and German units took their orders from the German liaison officer attached to the 6th Army HQ, Generalleutnant Fridolin von Senger und Etterlin who was subordinate to Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring, the German C-in-C Army Command South (OB Süd). Von Senger had arrived in Sicily in late June as part of a German plan to gain greater operational control of its units.[30] Guzzoni agreed from 16 July to delegate to Hube control of all sectors where there were German units involved, and from 2 August, he commanded the Sicilian front.[31]

Planning

 
Sicily (red) in relation to the Italian mainland

At the Casablanca Conference in January 1943, with the end of the North African Campaign in sight, the political leaders and the military Chiefs of Staff of the United States and Britain met to discuss future strategy. The British Chiefs of Staff were in favour of an invasion of Sicily or Sardinia, arguing that it would force Germany to disperse its forces and might knock Italy out of the war and move Turkey to join the Allies.[32] At first, the Americans opposed the plan as opportunistic and irrelevant, but were persuaded to agree to a Sicilian invasion on the grounds of the great savings to Allied shipping that would result from the opening of the Mediterranean by the removal of Axis air and naval forces from the island.[32] The Combined Chiefs of Staff appointed General Eisenhower as C-in-C of the Allied Expeditionary Force, General Alexander as Deputy C-in-C with responsibility for detailed planning and execution of the operation, Admiral Cunningham as Naval Commander, and Air Chief Marshal Tedder as Air Commander.[33]

The outline plan given to Eisenhower by the Chiefs of Staff involved dispersed landings by brigade and division-sized formations in the south-east, south and north-west areas of the island. The logic behind the plan was that it would result in the rapid capture of key Axis airfields that posed a threat to the beachheads and the invasion fleet lying off them. It would also see the rapid capture of all the main ports on the island, except for Messina, including Catania, Palermo, Syracuse, Licata and Augusta. This would facilitate a rapid Allied build-up, as well as denying their use to the Axis.[34] High-level planning for the operation lacked direction because the three mainland commanders, Alexander, Montgomery and Patton, were fully occupied in operations in Tunisia. Effort was wasted in presenting plans that Montgomery, in particular, disliked because of the dispersion of forces involved. He was finally able to articulate his objections and put forward alternative proposals on 24 April.[35] Tedder and Cunningham opposed Montgomery's plan because it would leave 13 landing grounds in Axis hands, posing a considerable threat to the Allied invasion fleet.[36]

Eisenhower called a meeting for 2 May with Montgomery, Cunningham and Tedder, in which Montgomery made new proposals to concentrate the Allied effort on the southeast corner of Sicily, discarding the intended landings close to Palermo and using the south-eastern ports.[36] After Alexander joined the meeting on 3 May, Montgomery's proposals were finally accepted on the basis that it was better to take an administrative risk (having to support troops by landing supplies across beaches) than an operational one (dispersion of effort).[37][38] Not for the last time, Montgomery had argued a sound course of action, yet done so in a conceited manner, which suggested to others, particularly his American allies, that he was preoccupied with his own interests.[39] In the event, maintaining the armies by landing supplies across the beaches proved easier than expected, partly because of the successful introduction of large numbers of the new amphibious DUKW vehicle.[40] Alexander was later to write "It is not too much to say that the DUKW revolutionised the problem of beach maintenance."[37]

 
Map of the Allied landings in Sicily on 10 July 1943

On 17 May, Alexander issued his Operation Instruction No. 1 setting out his broad plan and defining the tasks of the two armies.[37] Broadly speaking, he intended to establish his armies along a line from Catania to Licata preparatory to a final operation to reduce the island. He later wrote that at that stage it was not practicable to plan further ahead but that his intentions were clear in his own mind what the next step would be: he would drive north ultimately to Santo Stefano on the northern coast to split the island in two and cut his enemy's east-west communications.[41] The Seventh Army was assigned to land in the Gulf of Gela, in south-central Sicily, with the 3rd Infantry Division and 2nd Armored Division to the west at Licata Mollarella beach, 1st Division in the center at Gela, and 45th Division to the east at Scoglitti. The 82nd Airborne Division was assigned to drop behind the defences at Gela and Scoglitti. The Seventh Army's beach-front stretched over 50 kilometers (30 mi). The British Eighth Army was assigned to land in south-eastern Sicily. XXX Corps would land on either side of Cape Passero, while XIII Corps would land in the Gulf of Noto, around Avola, off to the north. The Eighth Army's beach front also stretched 40 kilometers (25 mi), and there was a gap of some 40 kilometers (25 mi) between the two armies.

Preparatory operations

Once the Axis forces had been defeated in Tunisia, the Allied strategic bomber force commenced attacks on the principal airfields of Sardinia, Sicily and southern Italy, industrial targets in southern Italy and the ports of Naples, Messina, Palermo and Cagliari (in Sardinia). The attacks were spread to maintain uncertainty as to the next Allied move, and to pin down Axis aircraft and keep them away from Sicily. Bombing of northern Italy (by aircraft based in the UK) and Greece (by aircraft based in the Middle East) was increased.[42] From 3 July, bombing concentrated on Sicilian airfields and Axis communications with Italy, although beach defences were left alone, to preserve surprise as to where the landings would occur.[43] By 10 July, only two airfields in Sicily remained fully operational and over half the Axis aircraft had been forced to leave the island.[44] Between mid-May and the invasion, Allied airmen flew 42,227 sorties and destroyed 323 German and 105 Italian aircraft, for the loss of 250 aircraft, mostly to anti-aircraft fire over Sicily.[45]

Operations began in May against the small island of Pantelleria, some 110 km (70 mi) southwest of Sicily and 240 km (150 mi) northwest of Malta, to prevent the airfield there being used in support of Axis troops attempting to withdraw from North Africa. On 13 and 31 May the cruiser HMS Orion bombarded the island and from 6 June, Allied attacks increased.[46] On 11 June, after a naval bombardment and seaborne landing by the British 1st Infantry Division (Operation Corkscrew) the island garrison surrendered. The Pelagie Islands of Lampedusa and Linosa, some 140 km (90 mi) west of Malta, followed in short order on 12 June.[44]

Headquarters

 
Lascaris War Rooms

The Allies used a network of tunnels and chambers located below the Lascaris Battery in Valletta, Malta (the "Lascaris War Rooms"), for the advance headquarters of the invasion of Sicily.[47] In July 1943, General Eisenhower, Admiral Cunningham, General Montgomery, and Air Marshal Tedder occupied the war rooms. Earlier, the war rooms had served as the British headquarters for the defence of Malta.[48]

Deception

To distract the Axis, and if possible divert some of their forces to other areas, the Allies engaged in several deception operations. The most famous and successful of these was Operation Mincemeat, conceived by Naval intelligence officer Ewen Montagu and RAF Squadron Leader Charles Cholmondeley.[49] The British allowed a corpse, disguised as a British Royal Marines officer, to drift ashore in Spain carrying a briefcase containing fake secret documents. The documents purported to reveal that the Allies were planning "Operation Brimstone" and that an "Operation Husky" was an invasion of Greece. German intelligence accepted the authenticity of the documents and the Germans diverted much of their defensive effort from Sicily to Greece until the occupation of Pantelleria on 11 June, which concentrated German and Italian attention on the western Mediterranean.[49] Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel was sent to Greece to assume command. The Germans transferred a group of "R boats" (German minesweepers and minelayers) from Sicily and laid three additional minefields off the Greek coast. They also moved three panzer divisions to Greece, one from France and two from the Eastern Front which reduced German combat strength in the Kursk salient.[50]

Campaign

Allied landings

Airborne landings

 
British airborne troops wait to board an American WACO CG4A glider.

Two American and two British attacks by airborne troops were carried out just after midnight on the night of 9–10 July, as part of the invasion. The American paratroopers consisted largely of Colonel James M. Gavin's 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment (expanded into the 505th Parachute Regimental Combat Team with the addition of the 3rd Battalion of the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, along with the 456th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, Company 'B' of the 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion and other supporting units) of the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division, making their first combat drop. The British landings were preceded by pathfinders of the 21st Independent Parachute Company, who were to mark landing zones for the troops who were intending to seize the Ponte Grande, the bridge over the River Anape just south of Syracuse, and hold it until the British 5th Infantry Division arrived from the beaches at Cassibile, some eleven kilometres (7 mi) to the south.[51] Glider infantry from the British 1st Airborne Division's 1st Airlanding Brigade, commanded by Brigadier Philip Hicks, were to seize landing zones inland.[52] Strong winds of up to 70 km/h (45 mph)[53] blew the troop-carrying aircraft off course and the American force was scattered widely over south-east Sicily between Gela and Syracuse. By 14 July, about two-thirds of the 505th had managed to concentrate, and half the U.S. paratroopers failed to reach their rallying points.[54]

The British air-landing troops fared little better, with only 12 of the 147 gliders landing on target and 69 crashing into the sea, with over 200 men drowning.[55] Among those who landed in the sea were Major General George F. Hopkinson, commander of the British 1st Airborne Division, who, after several hours spent clutching a piece of wreckage, was eventually rescued by the landing ship HMS Keren. The scattered airborne troops attacked patrols and created confusion wherever possible. A platoon of the 2nd Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment, under Lieutenant Louis Withers, part of the British 1st Airlanding Brigade, landed on target, captured Ponte Grande and repulsed counterattacks. Additional paratroops rallied to the sound of shooting and by 08:30 89 men were holding the bridge.[56] By 11:30, a battalion of the Italian 75th Infantry Regiment (Colonel Francesco Ronco) from the 54th Infantry Division "Napoli" arrived with some artillery.[57] The British force held out until about 15:30 hours, when, low on ammunition and by now reduced to 18 men, they were forced to surrender, 45 minutes before the leading elements of the British 5th Division arrived from the south.[57][58] Despite these mishaps, the widespread landing of airborne troops, both American and British, had a positive effect as small isolated units, acting on their initiative, attacked vital points and created confusion.[59]

Seaborne landings

 
Troops from the 51st (Highland) Division unloading stores from tank landing craft on the opening day of the invasion of Sicily, 10 July 1943

The strong wind also made matters difficult for the amphibious landings but also ensured surprise as many of the defenders had assumed that no one would attempt a landing in such poor conditions.[59] Landings were made in the early hours of 10 July from 2:45am on 26 main beaches spread along 170 kilometres (105 mi) of the southern and eastern coasts of the island between the town of Licata[60] where the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division, under the command of Major General Lucian Truscott, landed at Torre di Gaffe, red beach, and Mollarella and Poliscia, green beaches in the west, and Cassibile in the east,[61] with British and Canadian forces in the east and Americans toward the west. This constituted the largest amphibious operation of World War II in terms of size of the landing zone and the number of divisions put ashore on the first day.[62] The Italian defensive plan did not contemplate a pitched battle on the beaches and so the landings themselves were somewhat anti-climactic.[63]

 
An American crew checks their Sherman tank after landing at Red Beach 2, Sicily, 10 July.

More trouble was experienced from the difficult weather conditions (especially on the southern beaches) and unexpected hidden offshore sandbars than from the coastal divisions. Some troops landed in the wrong place, in the wrong order and as much as six hours behind schedule,[64] but the weakness of the defensive response allowed the Allied force to make up lost time.[59] Nevertheless, several Italian coastal units fought well; the 429th Coastal Battalion (under Major Marco Rubellino[65]), tasked with defending Gela, lost 45 percent of its men, while the attacking U.S. Army Ranger Battalion lost several men to mines and machine-gun and cannon fire.[66] Gruppo Tattico Carmito (under Lieutenant-Colonel Francesco Tropea), tasked with defending Malati Bridge, defeated a Royal Marines Commando Battalion on 13 July with the help of the local middle-age reservists. The Italian 4th Self-Propelled Artillery Battalion attacked the Commandos with the help of the 372nd Coastal Defence Battalion, 553rd (under Captain Giovanni Sartor) and 554th (under Captain Fausto Clementi) Motorcycle Companies,[67] and three Panzer IV medium tanks.[68][69][70] The 246th Coastal Battalion (under Major Rollo Franco[71]) defeated British attempts to capture Augusta on the night of 11–12 July.[72]

In Major General Terry Allen's U.S. 1st Infantry Division sector at Gela, there was an Italian division-sized counterattack where the dispersed 505th Parachute Regimental Combat Team was supposed to have been. Tiger tanks of the Hermann Göring Panzer Division, which had been due to advance with the 4th Infantry Division "Livorno", were late.[73]

On highways 115 and 117 during 10 July, Italian tanks of the "Niscemi" Armoured Combat Group and Livorno Division infantry nearly reached the Allied position at Gela, but gunfire from the destroyer USS Shubrick[74] and the light cruiser USS Boise destroyed several tanks and dispersed the attacking infantry battalion.[75] The 3rd Battalion, 34th Regiment, "Livorno" Infantry Division, composed mainly of conscripts, made a daylight attack on the Gela beachhead two days later, with infantry and armor of the Hermann Göring Panzer Division, but was repulsed.[76]

 
Remains of the Italian Navy armed train "T.A. 76/2/T", destroyed by USS Bristol while opposing the landing at Licata
 
British troops of the 6th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry, part of the British 50th Division, with an American paratrooper of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, part of the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division, in Avola, 11 July 1943

By the morning of 10 July, the Joint Task Force Operations Support System Force captured the port of Licata, at the cost of nearly 100 killed and wounded in the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division, and the division beat back a counter-attack from the 538th Coastal Defence Battalion. By 11:30, Licata was firmly in American hands and the U.S. 3rd Division had lost fewer than one hundred men. Salvage parties had already partially cleared the harbor, and shortly after noon Truscott and his staff came ashore and set up headquarters at Palazzo La Lumia. About that time, the 538th Coastal Defense Battalion, which had been deployed as a tactical reserve, launched a counter-attack. By the evening of 10 July, the seven Allied assault divisions—three American, three British and one Canadian—were well established ashore, the port of Syracuse had been captured, and fears of an Axis air onslaught had proved unfounded.[77]

The preparatory bombing of the previous weeks had greatly weakened the Axis air capability and the heavy Allied presence of aircraft operating from Malta, Gozo, and Pantelleria kept most of the Axis attempts at air attack at bay. Some attacks on the first day of the invasion got through, and German aircraft sank the landing ship LST-313 and minesweeper USS Sentinel. Italian Stukas sank the destroyer USS Maddox[78][79] and Re.2002s[80] sunk the Indian hospital ship Talamba with heavy loss of life,[81][82] and in the following days Axis aircraft damaged or sank several more warships, transport vessels and landing craft starting with the Allied troopship USS Barnett hit and damaged by an Italian bomber formation on the morning of 11 July.[83][84] Italian Stukas (named Picchiatello in Italian service) and Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 torpedo-bombers coordinated their attacks with German Stuka and Ju 88 bomber units. As part of the seaborne landings south at Agnone, some 400 men of Lieutenant Colonel John Durnford-Slater's No. 3 Commando captured Malati Bridge on 13 July, only to lose possession of it when the 4th Self-Propelled Artillery Battalion (Lieutenant-Colonel Francesco Tropea) and the Italian 553rd and 554th Motorcycle Companies counter-attacked.[85][86][87][88] The Commandos lost 28 killed, 66 wounded and 59 captured or missing.[89]

Exploitation

 
Map of Allied movements on Sicily during July

General Alexander's plan was to first establish his forces on a line between Licata in the west and Catania in the east before embarking on operations to reduce the rest of the island. Key to this was capturing ports to facilitate the buildup of his forces and the capture of airfields. The task of General Montgomery's British Eighth Army was, therefore, to capture the Pachino airfield on Cape Passero and the port of Syracuse before moving northwards to take the ports of Augusta and Catania. Their objectives also included the landing fields around Gerbini, on the Catania plain. The objectives of Lieutenant General Patton's U.S. Seventh Army included capturing the port of Licata and the airfields of Ponte Olivo, Biscari and Comiso. It was then to prevent the enemy reserves from moving eastward against the Eighth Army's left flank.[90]

According to Axis plans, Kampfgruppe Schmalz (Colonel Wilhelm Schmalz), in conjunction with the 54th Infantry Division "Napoli" (Major-General Giulio Cesare Gotti Porcinari), was to counter-attack an Allied landing on the Augusta–Syracuse coast. On 10 July, Colonel Schmalz had been unable to contact the Italian division and had proceeded alone towards Syracuse. Unknown to Schmalz, a battalion of 18 Renault R35 tanks (under Lieutenant-Colonel Massimo D'Andretta) and supporting infantry battalion from the 75th Infantry Regiment (under Colonel Paolo Giovanni Ronco) of the Napoli Division,[91][92] broke through the forward positions held by the 2nd Battalion, Wiltshire Regiment, part of the 13th Brigade of Major-General Horatio Berney-Ficklin's British 5th Division, and were stopped only by anti-tank and artillery fire in the Priolo and Floridia suburbs of Syracuse.[93][94]

 
Italian soldiers of the 206th Coastal Division, taken prisoner by British forces. Typical of the second-rate equipment issued to the Coastal divisions, they are wearing Adrian helmets of World War I vintage, rather than the more modern M 33.

On the night of 11–12 July, the Royal Navy attempted to capture Augusta but the 246th Coastal Battalion repelled the British landing force that was supported by three destroyers. On 12 July, several Italian units took up rearguard positions and covered the withdrawal of Kampfgruppe Schmalz and the Hermann Göring Division.[95] The American advance toward Canicattì was temporarily held up by Semovente da 90/53 tank destroyers from the 161st Self-propelled Artillery Battalion,[96] 526th Bersaglieri Battalion and 177th Bersaglieri Regiment from Gruppo Tattico Venturi (under General Enrico Francisci, killed in action and posthumously awarded the Gold Medal of Military Valour),[97] as Kampfgruppe Schmalz retreated toward Catania. The 246th Coastal Battalion retreated to strong points at Cozzo Telegrafo and Acquedolci. The 76th Infantry Regiment of the Napoli Division covered the left flank of Kampfgruppe Schmalz which withdrew toward Lentini and then retired to Palermo. The Hermann Göring Division eventually pulled back from the Piano Lupo area toward Caltagirone and the Livorno Division withdrew its right flank toward Piazza Armerina, to cover the Hermann Göring Division.[98]

Early on 13 July, elements of the British 5th Division on Eighth Army's right flank, which had been delayed by Kampfgruppe Schmalz, entered Augusta.[99] On their left, Major-General Sidney Kirkman's British 50th Division had pushed up Route 114 toward Lentini, 25 kilometres (15 mi) northwest of Augusta and met increasing resistance from the Napoli Division.[100] The commander of the Italian division and his staff were captured by Brigadier John Currie's British 4th Armoured Brigade on 13 July and it was not until 18:45 on 14 July that the town was cleared of obstructions and snipers and the advance resumed.[101][102] A battalion of the Napoli Division managed to break through the British lines and took up new positions at Augusta but the British advance forced it to retire again on 14 July.[103]

Further left, in the XXX Corps sector, Major-General Douglas Wimberley's 51st (Highland) Division had moved directly north to take Palazzolo and Vizzini 50 kilometres (30 mi) west of Syracuse, while the Canadians secured Pachino airfield and headed north-west to make contact with the American right wing at Ragusa; after having driven off the Italian 122 Infantry Regiment north of Pachino. The Canadians captured more than 500 Italians.[104] In the Canadian area, the 2nd Special Service Brigade, under Brigadier Robert Laycock, was counter-attacked by the 206th Coastal Division (under General Achille d'Havet)[105] who launched a strong counter-attack that threatened to penetrate the area between the Canadians and the Royal Marine Commandos before being repulsed.[106]

 
American paratroopers of the 504th PIR bound for Sicily, July 1943

In the American sector, by the morning of 10 July, the port of Licata had been captured. On 11 July, Patton ordered his reserve parachute troops from the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment (minus the 3rd Battalion already deployed in Sicily, attached to the 505th) under Colonel Reuben Tucker, part of Major General Matthew Ridgway's 82nd Airborne Division, to drop and reinforce the center. In addition, going along with the 504th would be the 376th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion, Company 'C' of the 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion and other supporting units. Warning orders had been issued to the fleet and troops on 6, 7, 10 and 11 July concerning the planned route and timing of the drop, so that the aircraft would not be fired on by friendly forces.[107] They were intended to drop east of Ponte Olivo, about eight kilometres (5 mi) inland from Gela, to block routes to the 1st Infantry Division's bridgehead at Gela.[51]

The 144 Douglas C-47 transports arrived at the same time as an Axis air raid; the first echelon of troop carrying planes had dropped their loads without interference, when an Allied naval vessel fired on the formation. Immediately, all the other naval vessels and shore troops joined in, shooting down friendly aircraft and forcing paratroopers to jump far from their drop zones. The 52nd Troop Carrier Wing lost 23 of 144 С-47s to friendly fire; there were 318 casualties with 83 dead.[108] Thirty-seven aircraft were damaged, while eight returned to base without dropping their parachutists. The paratroopers suffered 229 casualties to "friendly fire", including 81 dead.[107][109] Among the casualties was Brigadier General Charles L. Keerans, Jr., the 82nd Airborne's assistant division commander (ADC), who was along with the 504th as an unofficial observer. The 325th Glider Infantry Regiment, part of the 82nd Airborne Division and commanded by Colonel Harry L. Lewis, was then waiting in North Africa and scheduled to land in Sicily by glider that night, together with the rest of the division staff. After what happened to the 504th, Ridgway canceled the operation.

Despite this, the American beach landings went well and a substantial amount of supplies and transport was landed. Despite the failure of the airborne operation, the 1st Infantry Division took Ponte Olivo on 12 July and continued north, while Major General Troy H. Middleton's 45th Infantry Division on the right had taken the airfield at Comiso and entered Ragusa to link-up with the Canadians. On the left, Major General Truscott's 3rd Infantry Division, having landed at Licata, pushed troops 40 kilometres (25 mi) up the coast almost to Argento and 30 kilometres (20 mi) inland to Canicatti.[110]

 

Once the beachheads were secure, Alexander planned to split the island in half by thrusting north through the Caltanissetta and Enna region, to deny the defenders the central east-west lateral road. A further push north to Nicosia would cut the next lateral route and a final advance to Santo Stefano on the north coast would cut the coastal route. In new orders issued on 13 July, he gave this task to Montgomery's Eighth Army, perhaps based on a somewhat over-optimistic situation report by Montgomery late on 12 July, while the Seventh Army were to continue their holding role on the left flank of the Eighth Army, despite what appeared to be an opportunity for them to make a bold offensive move.[113][114] On 12 July, Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring had visited Sicily and formed the opinion that German troops were fighting virtually on their own. As a consequence, he concluded that the German formations needed to be reinforced, and that western Sicily should be abandoned in order to shorten the front line. The priority was first to slow and then halt the Allied advance, while a Hauptkampflinie was formed running from San Stefano on the northern coast, through Nicosia and Agira to Cantenanuova and from there to the eastern coast south of Catania.[115]

While XIII Corps, under Lieutenant General Miles Dempsey, continued to push along the Catania road, XXX Corps, under Lieutenant General Oliver Leese, were directed north along two routes; the first was an inland route through Vizzini, and the second following Route 124, which cut across the U.S. 45th Infantry Division, which had to return to the coast at Gela for redeployment behind the U.S. 1st Infantry Division. Progress was slow as Kampfgruppe Schmalz skilfully delayed the British 5th Infantry Division, allowing time for two regiments from the German 1st Parachute Division flying to Catania to deploy.[116] On 12 July, the British 1st Parachute Brigade, commanded by Brigadier Gerald Lathbury, had been dropped in Operation Fustian, an attempt to capture the Primosole Bridge over the river Simeto, on the southern edge of the Catania plain. The British paratroopers suffered heavy casualties over their designated drop zones due to heavy fire from alert Italian anti-aircraft gunners,[117] but managed to seize and hold the bridge against fierce Axis attacks. The initial counterattacks were Italian in the form of reinforcements from the 10th Arditi Paratroop Regiment (Major Vito Marciano),[69] reservists from the 372nd Coastal Battalion[118](Major Nino Bolla[119])and gunners from the 29th Artillery Group[120] fighting in the infantry role and an armoured car squadron that nearly overran the headquarters of 9th Battalion, the Durham Light Infantry, at nightfall in the first day of the battle for Primosole Bridge.[121] The British 5th Division was delayed by strong opposition, but made contact early on 15 July; nevertheless, it was not until 17 July that a shallow bridgehead north of the river was consolidated.[113]

 
A U.S. Army Sherman tank moves past Sicily's rugged terrain in mid July 1943.

On 16 July, the surviving Italian aircraft withdrew to the mainland. About 160 Italian planes had been lost in the first week of the invasion, 57 lost to Allied fighters and anti-aircraft fire on 10–12 July alone.[122] That day, an Italian bomber torpedoed the aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable,[123] and the Italian submarine Dandolo torpedoed the cruiser HMS Cleopatra.[124] Both ships were put out of action for over a year.

On the night of 17 July, the Italian cruiser Scipione Africano, equipped with EC.3 Gufo radar, detected and engaged four British Elco motor torpedo boats lurking eight kilometres (5 mi) away, while passing the Strait of Messina at high speed.[125] MTB 316 was sunk and MTB 313 damaged between Reggio di Calabria and Pellaro–twelve British sailors were killed.[126][127][128]

On the night of 17–18 July, Montgomery renewed his attack toward Catania, with two brigades of Major General Kirkman's 50th Division. They met strong opposition and by 19 July Montgomery decided to call off the attack and instead increase the pressure on his left. The 5th Division attacked on the 50th Division's left but with no greater success, and on 20 July, the 51st Division, further west, crossed the river Dittaino at Sferro and made for the Gerbini airfields. They too were driven back by counter-attacks on 21 July.[129] On the left flank, the 1st Canadian Division continued to advance but it was becoming clear that, as German units settled into their new positions in north eastern Sicily, the army would not have sufficient strength to carry the whole front and the Canadians were ordered to continue north to Leonforte and then turn eastward to Adrano on the south-western slopes of Mount Etna, instead of an encirclement of Mount Etna using Route 120 to Randazzo. Montgomery called forward his reserve division from North Africa, Major-General Vyvyan Evelegh's British 78th Infantry Division.[129]

 
4.2-inch mortar of the 1st Battalion, Princess Louise's Kensington Regiment, British 78th Infantry Division, in action near Adrano, 6 August 1943

Patton had reorganised his forces into two corps. The Provisional Corps, commanded by Major General Geoffrey Keyes, consisting of the 2nd Armored, 3rd Infantry, and 82nd Airborne Divisions, was on the left. Lieutenant General Omar Bradley's U.S. II Corps was on the right. By 17 July, Provisional Corps had captured Porto Empedocle and Agrigento. On 18 July, II Corps took Caltanissetta, just short of Route 121, the main east–west lateral through the center of Sicily. The American advance toward Agrigento was temporarily held up by the 207th Coastal Defence Division (under Colonel Augusto De Laurentis) that was at Sant'Oliva Station, ten kilometres (6 mi) inland from Licata.[130] The 10th Bersaglieri Regiment (under Colonel Fabrizio Storti) forced Colonel William O. Darby's 1st and 3rd Ranger Battalions of the 3rd Infantry Division to fight their way into Agrigento.[131] By late afternoon on 16 July, the city was in American hands.[132]

 
American troops fire 81mm mortars in support of the Seventh Army's drive on Palermo.

The 15th Panzer Grenadier Division managed to join the other German formations in the east of the island. Patton was ordered on 18 July to push troops north through Petralia on Route 120, the next east–west lateral, and then to cut the northern coast road. After that, he would mop up the west of the island. Bradley's II Corps were given the task of making the northward move, while the Provisional Corps was tasked with the mopping up operation. Alexander issued further orders to Patton to develop an eastward threat along the coast road once he had cut it. He was also directed to capture Palermo as quickly as possible as the main supply base for further eastward commitment north of Mount Etna.[129] On 21 July, the Seventh Army's Provisional Corps overran the Italian battlegroup Raggruppamento Schreiber (under General Ottorino Schreiber), covering the withdrawal of the 15th Panzer Panzergrenadier Division,[133] but Patton lost 300 men killed and wounded in the process.[134][135] On 22 July, the Provisional Corps entered Palermo, and the next day the 45th Division cut the north coast road.[136]

Battles for Etna positions

During the last week in July, General Montgomery gathered his forces to renew the attack on 1 August. His immediate objective was Adrano, the capture of which would split the German forces on either side of Mount Etna. During the week, the Canadians and Brigadier Roy Urquhart's 231st Brigade Group continued their eastward push from Leonforte, and on 29 July had taken Agira, some 25 kilometres (15 mi) west of Adrano. On the night of 29 July, the British 78th Division with the 3rd Canadian Brigade under command, took Catenanuova and made a bridgehead across the river Dittaino. On the night of 1 August, they resumed their attack to the northwest toward Centuripe, an isolated pinnacle of rock, which was the main southern outpost of the Adrano defences. After heavy fighting against the Hermann Göring Division and the 3rd Parachute Regiment all day on 2 August, the town was finally cleared of defenders on the morning of 3 August. The capture of Centuripe proved critical, in that the growing threat to Adrano made the position covering Catania untenable.[136]

 
Men of the 6th Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, British 78th Division, await orders to move into Centuripe, Sicily, 2 August 1943.

Patton had decided that his communications could support two divisions pushing east, the 45th Division on the coast road and the 1st Division on Route 120. In order to maintain the pressure, he relieved the 45th Division with the fresher 3rd Division and called up Major General Manton Eddy's 9th Infantry Division from reserve in North Africa to relieve the 1st Division.[136] Axis forces were now settled on a second defensive line, the Etna Line, running from San Fratello on the north coast through Troina and Aderno. On 31 July, the 1st Division with elements of the arriving 9th Division attached, reached Troina and the Battle of Troina commenced. This important position was held by the 15th Panzer Grenadier Division. The remnants of the 28th Infantry Division "Aosta" in the form of four battalions[137] had also been pulled back to Troina to assist in the defensive preparations and forthcoming battle.[138]

For six days, the Germans and Italians conducted a costly defence; during the battle, they launched 24 counter-attacks and many small local ones. By 7 August, Colonel George Smith's U.S. 18th Infantry Regiment, of the 9th Division, had captured Mount Pellegrino, which overlooked the Troina defences, allowing accurate direction of Allied artillery. The defenders' left flank was also becoming exposed as the adjacent Hermann Göring Division was pushed back by British XXX Corps and they were ordered to withdraw that night in phases to the defensive positions of the Tortorici Line.[139] Elements of the 29th Panzergrenadier Division and 26th Infantry Division "Assietta", were also proving difficult to dislodge on the coast at Santa Agata and San Fratello. Patton sent a small amphibious force behind the defences, which led to the fall of Santa Agata on 8 August after holding out for six days.[136][140]

 
General Montgomery stops his car to talk to men of the Royal Engineers working on a road near Catania, Sicily, August 1943.

On 3 August, XIII Corps exploited the disorganisation caused by the threat to Adrano and resumed their advance on Catania, and by 5 August the town was in their hands. Adrano fell to the 78th Division on the night of 6 August, while on the right, the 51st (Highland) Division took Biancavilla, three kilometres (2 mi) southeast of Adrano.[136] After the fall of Adrano, the 1st Canadian Division was withdrawn into Army Reserve.[141] On 8 August, the 78th Division moved north from Adrano took Bronte and the 9th Division, advancing from Troina, took Cesaro, valuable positions on the New Hube Line. Both divisions converged on Randazzo, on the north-west slopes of Etna. Randazzo fell on 13 August and 78th Division was taken into reserve.[136] As the Allied advance continued, the front line shortened and Montgomery decided to withdraw XIII Corps HQ and the British 5th Infantry Division, now commanded by Major General Gerard Bucknall (replacing Major General Berney-Ficklin who returned to England), on 10 August, to allow them to prepare for the landings on mainland Italy.[142] On the northern coast, the U.S. 3rd Division continued to meet strong resistance and difficulties created by extensive demolition of the road. Two more end-run amphibious attacks, and the rebuilding efforts of the engineers, kept the advance moving.[143] Although Generalfeldmarschall Kesselring had already decided to evacuate, the Axis forces continued their delaying tactics, assisted by the favorable defensive terrain of the Messina Peninsula; on the night of 16 August, the leading elements of the 3rd Division entered Messina.[144]

Axis evacuation

 
Wounded American soldier receiving blood plasma, Sicily, 9 August 1943

By 27 July, the Axis commanders had realised that the outcome of the campaign would be an evacuation from Messina.[145] Kesselring reported to Hitler on 29 July that an evacuation could be accomplished in three days and initial written plans were formulated dated 1 August.[146] However, when Hube suggested on 4 August that a start should be made by transferring superfluous men and equipment, Guzzoni refused to sanction the idea without the approval of the Comando Supremo. The Germans nevertheless went ahead, transferring over 12,000 men, 4,500 vehicles and 5,000 tons of equipment from 1–10 August.[147] On 6 August, Hube suggested to Guzzoni, via von Senger, that HQ 6th Army should move to Calabria. Guzzoni rejected the idea but asked if Hube had decided to evacuate Sicily. Von Senger replied that Hube had not.[148]

The next day, Guzzoni learned of the German plan for evacuation and reported to Rome of his conviction of their intentions. On 7 August, Guzzoni reported that, without German support, any last ditch stand would only be short. On 9 August, Rome ordered that Guzzoni's authority should be extended to Calabria and that he should transfer some forces there to reinforce the area. On 10 August, Guzzoni informed Hube that he was responsible for the defence of northeast Sicily and that Italian coastal units and the Messina garrison were under his command. Guzzoni then crossed to the mainland with 6th Army HQ and 16th Corps HQ, leaving Admiral Pietro Barone and Admiral Pietro Parenti to organise the evacuation of the remains of the Livorno and Assietta divisions (and any other troops and equipment that could be saved).[149]

The German plan was thorough, with clear lines of command imposing strict discipline on the operation. Oberst Ernst-Günther Baade was the German Commandant Messina Straits, with Fortress Commander powers, including control over infantry, artillery, anti-aircraft, engineer and construction, transport and administration units as well as German naval transport headquarters.[150] On the mainland, Generalmajor Richard Heidrich, who had remained in Calabria with the 1st Parachute Division headquarters and the 1st Parachute Regiment, when the rest of the division had been sent as reinforcements to Sicily, was appointed XIV Panzer Corps Mainland Commander to receive evacuating formations, while Hube continued to control the operations on the island.[151]

 
British troops scramble over rubble in a devastated street in Catania, Sicily, 5 August 1943.

Full-scale withdrawal began on 11 August and continued to 17 August. During this period, Hube ordered successive withdrawals each night of between 8 and 24 kilometres (5 and 15 mi), keeping the following Allied units at arm's length with the use of mines, demolitions and other obstacles.[152] As the peninsula narrowed, shortening his front, he was able to withdraw units for evacuation.[153] The Allies attempted to counter this by launching brigade-sized amphibious assaults, one each by the Seventh and Eighth Armies, on 15 August. However, the speed of the Axis withdrawal was such that these operations "hit air".[154]

The German and Italian evacuation schemes proved highly successful. The Allies were not able to prevent the orderly withdrawal nor effectively interfere with transports across the Strait of Messina. The narrow straits were protected by 120 heavy and 112 light anti-aircraft guns.[155] with about half being Italian-built pieces.[156] The resulting overlapping gunfire from both sides of the strait was described by Allied pilots as worse than the Ruhr, making daylight air attacks highly hazardous and generally unsuccessful.[144] Night attacks were less hazardous and there were times when air attack was able to delay and even suspend traffic across the straits but when daylight returned, the Axis were able to clear the backlog from the previous night.[157] Nor was naval interdiction any more practicable. The straits varied from three to ten kilometres (2–6 mi) wide and were covered by artillery up to 24 centimeters (9+12 in) in caliber. This, combined with the hazards of a six-knot (3 m/s) current and fear that Italian warships were preparing to attack the Straits of Messina in a suicide run, made risking warships unjustifiable.[155][158]

Aftermath

On 18 August, the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht recorded that 60,000 troops had been recovered and the Italian figure was about 75,000.[159] In 2004, Tomlin wrote that the Italians evacuated 62,182 men, 41 guns and 227 vehicles with the loss of only one motor raft and the train ferry Carridi, which was scuttled when Allied troops entered Messina.[160] The Germans evacuated some 52,000 troops (including 4,444 wounded), 14,105 vehicles, 47 tanks, 94 guns, 1,100 tons of ammunition, and about 20,700 tons of gear and stores.[161]

Casualties

 
American soldiers looking at a dead German pilot and his wrecked aircraft near Gela, Sicily on 12 July 1943.
 
A Royal Navy ammunition ship, hit by bombs, burns during the initial landings.

The U.S. Seventh Army lost 8,781 men (2,237 killed or missing, 5,946 wounded, and 598 captured), while the British Eighth Army suffered 11,843 casualties (2,062 killed or missing, 7,137 wounded and 2,644 captured). The U.S. Navy lost 546 killed or missing and 484 wounded and the Royal Navy lost 314 killed or missing, 411 wounded and four captured. The USAAF reported 28 killed, 88 missing and 41 wounded.[13] Canadian forces had suffered 2,310 casualties, including 562 killed, 1,664 wounded, and 84 captured.[13][162]

In 2007, Samuel W. Mitcham and Friederich von Stauffenberg wrote that German units lost about 20,000 men who were either killed, wounded or captured and in Germany and the Second World War (2007) Messerschmidt et al. reported that the German forces lost 4,325 men killed, 4,583 missing, 5,532 captured and 13,500 wounded, a total of 27,940 casualties.[163][13][164] According to the Historical Branch of the Italian Army, Italian military losses were 4,678 killed, 36,072 missing, 32,500 wounded and 116,681 captured.[163][165][166][167] A large part of the missing were presumed to have been killed and buried on the battlefield or in unknown locations,[163] whereas another part presumably included locally recruited soldiers who deserted and returned to their homes. In 2007, Mitcham and Von Stauffenberg estimated Italian total casualties as 147,000.[168] An earlier Canadian study of the Allied invasion estimated the total number of Italian and Germans taken prisoner in Sicily to be around 100,000.[162]

War crimes

Immediately after landing in Sicily, some killings of civilians by US troops were reported. These include the Vittoria massacre, where 12 Italians died (including Giuseppe Mangano, podestà (mayor) of Acate, and his seventeen-year-old son Valerio, who was killed by a bayonet thrust to his face),[169] in Piano Stella, Agrigento, where a group of peasants was murdered,[170] and the Canicattì massacre, in which at least eight civilians, including an eleven-year-old girl, were killed.[171][172][173]

After the capture of Biscari airfield on 14 July, American soldiers from the 180th Regimental Combat Team of the 45th Division murdered 74 Italian and two German prisoners of war in two massacres at Biscari airfield on 14 July 1943.[174][175] Sergeant Horace T. West and Captain John T. Compton were charged with a war crime; West was convicted and sentenced to life in prison and stripped of his rank but was released back to active service in November 1944 as a private, and honorably discharged at the end of his service. Compton was charged with killing 40 prisoners in his charge but was acquitted and transferred to another regiment, where he died in November 1943 in the fighting in Italy.[176]

Various sources, including the Special Investigation Branch as well as evidences from Belgian reporters, said that rape and sexual harassment by British troops occurred frequently following the invasion of Sicily in 1943.[177] On 19 July 1943, just over a week after the Allied landings, Captain Angelo Thomas Sesia from the 1st Canadian Infantry Division, reported a number of crimes involving Canadian soldiers, including the shooting of civilians, looting and a case of gang rape at Piazza Armerina.[178]

According to Mitcham and von Stauffenberg, the Canadian The Loyal Edmonton Regiment also murdered German prisoners of war during the Invasion of Sicily.[179]

Constituent operations

See also

References

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  82. ^ Sunk By Enemy Action – SS Talamba
  83. ^ The calm was broken at 0635 when a dozen bombers attacked the transport area. One bomb narrowly missing Barnett, bursting under her port bow and blowing a hole in the number 1 hold, killing seven men and injuring thirty-five soldiers of the army port battalion. With Utmost Spirit: Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean, 1942-1945, Barbara Brooks Tomblin, University Press of Kentucky, 2014
  84. ^ Bauer, Eddy; Kilpi, Mikko (1975). Toinen maailmansota : Suomalaisen laitoksen toimituskunta: Keijo Mikola, Vilho Tervasmäki, Helge Seppälä. 4 (in Finnish). Helsinki: Werner Söderström. ISBN 951-0-05844-0.
  85. ^ Hugh Pond, Sicily Kimber, 1962. p. 128
  86. ^ Zuehlke 2010, p. 183
  87. ^ “Soon, however, Italian troops (probably an anti-tank battalion and a company of motor-cyclists) counter-attacked ... There were no sign of the expected British force from Lentini, and casualties were mounting. Colonel Durnford-Slater therefore broke off the action, and his unit withdrew, commando-style, in separate groups southward.” The Mediterranean and Middle East: The Campaign in Sicily 1943, and the Campaign in Italy, 3rd September 1943 to 31st March 1944, Ian Stanley Ord Playfair, p. 95, H.M. Stationery Office, 1954
  88. ^ UNIONE NAZIONALE UFFICIALI IN CONGEDO D'ITALIA: RIVISTA DI CULTURA MILITARE FONDATA NEL 1927
  89. ^ "BBC – WW2 People's War – 3 Commando Bridge". www.bbc.co.uk.
  90. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 77
  91. ^ The 6th Battalion, however, was counterattacked by the Napoli Division, first with tanks and then with infantry. The tanks - some five in all careered down the road from Palazzola as the Battalion was moving forward: four were knocked out but one reached Floridia, shooting up Colonel Watson's jeep and wounding the medical officer on the way ... The infantry attack was launched after the Battalion had moved into its new positions and it was stopped by artillery fire. The D.L.I. at War: The History of the Durham Light Infantry 1939–1945, David Rissik, p. 123, Andrews UK Limited, 2012
  92. ^ “The attack by the Gruppo Tattico Ronco from Divisione Napoli on July 11 included the remnants of 1/75º Rgt., and Col. Ronco's own 2/75º Rgt. fant. This attack was coordinated with Gruppo Mobile D, which included 18 Renault R-35 tanks, and a company of infantry, and supporting artillery." Sicily 1943: The Debut of Allied joint operations, Steven J. Zaloga, p. ?, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013
  93. ^ Ian Blackwell. The Battle for Sicily: Stepping Stone to Victory. Pen & Sword Military, 24 July 2008. p. 116
  94. ^ Pond, p. 117
  95. ^ “On 12 July, an Axis retreat began all along the line, with the Allies advancing close behind. The U.S. advance toward Cancinatii was temporarily held up by a group of Semovente da 90/53. Group Schmalz retreated toward Catania. The 246th Coastal Brigade, which had been holding off British tanks, was ordered to retreat to strongpoints at Cozzo Telegrafo and Acquedolci. The Napoli Division's 76th Regiment covered the left flank of Schmalz's Germans, who were withdrawing toward Lentini; soon the reunited battalions of Napoli's 76th Regiment were ordered to withdraw to Palermo ... The Hermann Göring Division was tardily withdrawing from the Piano Lupo area toward Caltagirone, and the Livorno Division was refusing its right flank in a withdrawal toward Piazza Armerina, in a move meant to cover the Hermann Göring Division." Regio Esercito: The Italian Royal Army in Mussolini's Wars, 1935-1943, Patrick Cloutier, p. 193, Lulu Press, 2013
  96. ^ Sulle spiagge di Licata muore il generale Enrico Francisci
  97. ^ informatici, Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica – Servizio sistemi. "Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana". www.quirinale.it.
  98. ^ Cloutier, p. 193
  99. ^ Samuel W. Mitcham, Friedrich Von Stauffenberg. The Battle of Sicily: How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victor. Stackpole Books, 10 June 2007. p. 140
  100. ^ Rissik, David (1953). The D.L.I. at War: The History of the Durham Light Infantry, 1939–1945. Durham Light Infantry. p. 123.
  101. ^ Carver, R.M.P. (1945). "4: Sicily, Italy and Home – June 1943 to June 1944". History of 4th Armoured Brigade.
  102. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 94
  103. ^ Samuel Eliot Morison. History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. Vol. 9: Sicily–Salerno–Anzio, January 1943 – June 1944. University of Illinois Press, 1 March 2002. p.163
  104. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 82
  105. ^ Samuel W. Mitcham. Blitzkrieg No Longer: The German Wehrmacht in Battle, 1943 Stackpole Books, 2009. p. 180
  106. ^ Mitcham and Von Stauffenberg, p. 80
  107. ^ a b Molony et al. 2004, pp. 86–87
  108. ^ Carafano, James Jay (2006). "A Serious Second Front". GI ingenuity: improvisation, technology, and winning World War II. Greenwood. p. 100. ISBN 0-275-98698-5.
  109. ^ Hoyt 2007, p. 29
  110. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 86
  111. ^ "THE BRITISH ARMY IN SICILY, AUGUST 1943". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  112. ^ "Quei bambini sul carro armato - la Repubblica.it". Archivio - la Repubblica.it (in Italian). Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  113. ^ a b Alexander 1948, p. 1019
  114. ^ Molony et al. 2004, pp. 87–89
  115. ^ Molony et al. 2004, pp. 91–92
  116. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 93
  117. ^ "The friendly barrage put up into the night sky by the Allied fleet also served to notify the Italians onshore that Allied aircraft ... were on their way towards them. They soon recognised the silhouttes of the Dakota aircraft and waited for the planes ... The aircraft then came within range of the waiting guns of the Italian coastal defences ... Dakota 42, carrying half of the Headquarters of 2 Para, including RSM Oliver, was shot down and crashed into the sea. Another nine Dakotas were claimed by the Italian gunners with numerous more planes being shot up ... Without the Italians receiving warning from the Allied naval fire the lead aircraft may well have been able to reach the drop zones unmolested ... potentially changing the course of the battle." The First Bridge Too Far, Mark Saliger, p. ?, Casemate Publishers, 2018
  118. ^ "Dal ponte al mare si costituì, così, un fronte col btg arditi, paracadutisti tedeschi e il 372° btg costiero, mentre sul fosso Buttaceto era schierato il Gruppo Schmalz E opportuno, a questo punto, elencare le forze." Gaetano Zingali. L' Invasione della Sicilia 1943: Avvenimenti Militari e Responsabilità Politiche. G. Crisafulli, 1962. p. 298
  119. ^ "Major Nino Bolla had been sent by his divisional commander General Carlo Gotti from headquarters 213 Coastal Division to take over command of 372 Coastal Battalion." Sicily, Hugh Pond, 137, W. Kimber, 1962
  120. ^ "Il maggiore Nino Bolla che fu uno dei protagonisti della disperata difesa di Catania, quella sera si trovava ... di Catania mandò nel settore del Ponte di Primosole le poche forze che aveva disponibili assieme al XXIX gruppo 105/28" Sicilia senza Italia, Luglio-Agosto 1943, Sandro Attanasio, p. 151, Mursia, 1976
  121. ^ "Both the 8th and 9th Battalions tried to snatch a few hours rest during the night. The 6th Battalion was still some way behind, after clearing up at Solarino, and did not arrive till later on the 15th. But at 4 a.m. the 9th Battalion was attacked by some Italian armoured cars which penetrated as far as Battalion Headquarters before being halted." Rissik, p. 123
  122. ^ Giorgio Apostolo. Italian Aces of World War 2. Osprey Publishing, 25 November 2000. p. 25
  123. ^ HMS Indomitable (92)
  124. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 June 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  125. ^ Swords, Séan: Technical history of the beginnings of radar. Volume 6 of History of technology series Radar, Sonar, Navigation and Avionics. P. Peregrinus on behalf of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, 1986, p. 129. ISBN 0-86341-043-X
  126. ^ Pope, Dudley: Flag 4: The Battle of Coastal Forces in the Mediterranean 1939–1945. Chatham Publishing, 1998, pp. 121–122. ISBN 1-86176-067-1
  127. ^ Fioravanzo, Giusseppe (1970). Le Azioni Navali in Mediterraneo Dal 1° aprile 1941 all'8 settembre 1943. USMM, pp. 468–469 (in Italian)
  128. ^ Baroni, Piero (2007). La guerra dei radar: il suicidio dell'Italia: 1935/1943. Greco & Greco, p. 187. ISBN 8879804316 (in Italian)
  129. ^ a b c Alexander 1948, p. 1020
  130. ^ Barbara Tomblin. With Utmost Spirit: Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean, 1942–1945. University Press of Kentucky, 2004. p. 203
  131. ^ Cloutier, p. 194
  132. ^ Morison, p. 176
  133. ^ Cloutier, p. 197
  134. ^ Mitcham, p. 185
  135. ^ D. A. Lande. I Was With Patton Zenith Imprint, 2002. p. 81
  136. ^ a b c d e f Alexander 1948, p. 1021
  137. ^ “Whilst the British and Canadians were fighting for Adrano, the Americans had a tough fight of their own to capture the hilltop town of Troina from the 15th Panzergrenadier Division, supported by four battliona of the Italian Aosta Division." The First Bridge Too Far: The Battle of Primosole Bridge 1943, Mark Saliger, p. ?, Casemate Publishers, 2018
  138. ^ The Battle for Sicily: Stepping Stone to Victory, Ian Blackwell, p. 181, Pen & Sword Military, 24 July 2008
  139. ^ Mitcham, Samuel W. Jr.; Stauffenberg, Friedrich Von (2018). The Battle of Sicily: How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory. Stackpole Books. ISBN 9780811734035 – via Google Books.
  140. ^ The Regio Esercito: The Italian Royal Army in Mussolini's Wars, 1935–1943, Patrick Cloutier, p. 202, Lulu, 2013
  141. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 174
  142. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 177
  143. ^ Alexander 1948, pp. 1021–1022
  144. ^ a b Alexander 1948, p. 1022
  145. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 163
  146. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 164
  147. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 166
  148. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 175
  149. ^ Molony et al. 2004, pp. 175–176
  150. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 165
  151. ^ Molony, p. 112n.
  152. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 180
  153. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 167
  154. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 181
  155. ^ a b Molony et al. 2004, p. 168
  156. ^ "Lining either side of the Messina Straits were some 150 Italian antiaircraft guns, and an estimated 168 of the Germans' feared 88mm flak guns." The Decisive Campaigns of the Desert Air Force, 1942–1945, Bryn Evans, p. ?, Pen & Sword, 2014
  157. ^ Molony et al. 2004, p. 179
  158. ^ Years of Expectation: Guadalcanal to Normandy, Henry H. Adams, p. 127, New York, McKay, 1973
  159. ^ Molony, 182.
  160. ^ With Utmost Spirit: Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean, 1942–1945, Barbara Tomlin, p. 227, University Press of Kentucky, 8 October 2004
  161. ^ Rommel's Desert Commanders: The Men Who Served the Desert Fox, North Africa, 1941–1942, Samuel W. Mitcham, p. 80, Greenwood Publishing Group, 28 February 2007
  162. ^ a b Decisive Decades: A History of the Twentieth Century for Canadians, A. B. Hodgetts, J. D. Burns, p. 354, T. Nelson & Sons (Canada), 1973
  163. ^ a b c Le Operazioni in Sicilia e in Calabria (Luglio-Settembre 1943), Alberto Santoni, p. 401, Stato maggiore dell'Esercito, Ufficio storico, 1989
  164. ^ Messerschmidt, et al, 2007, p. 1,114
  165. ^ Voices of My Comrades: America's Reserve Officers Remember World War II, Carol Adele Kelly, p. 159, Fordham Univ Press, 15 December 2007
  166. ^ Silent Wings at War: Combate Gliders in World War II, John L. Lowden, p. 55, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1 May 1992
  167. ^ World War II Companion, David M. Kennedy, p. 550, Simon and Schuster, 2 October 2007
  168. ^ Mitcham & von Stauffenberg (2007), p. 305
  169. ^ Fabrizio Carloni (April 2009). Le atrocità alleate in Sicilia. Storia e battaglie. p. 13.
  170. ^ "I Crimini Degli Alleati in Sicilia e a Napoli Nella Seconda Guerra Mondiale – Il Ruolo della Mafia e Quello della Massoneria".
  171. ^ Giovanni Bartolone, Le altre stragi: Le stragi alleate e tedesche nella Sicilia del 1943-1944 (in Italian)
  172. ^ Ezio Costanzo, George Lawrence, The Mafia and the Allies: Sicily 1943 and the Return of the Mafia, Enigma, 2007, p.119
  173. ^ George Duncan (3 March 2016). "Massacres and Atrocities of World War II in the Axis Countries". Wayback Machine.
  174. ^ La Guerra in Sicilia 1943: Storia Fotografica, Ezio Costanzo, p. 130, Le Nove Muse, 2009
  175. ^ The Greatest War: Americans in Combat, 1941–1945, Gerald Astor, p. 333, Presidio, 1 December 1999
  176. ^ Le altre stragi: le stragi alleate e tedesche nella Sicilia del 1943–1944, Giovanni Bartolone, p. 44, 2005
  177. ^ Emsley, Clive (2013) Soldier, Sailor, Beggarman, Thief: Crime and the British Armed Services since 1914. Oxford University Press, USA, p. 128–129; ISBN 0199653712
  178. ^ "On 19 July 1943, just over a week into the fighting, Sesia recorded a number of unsettling incidents involving the Canadians, including drunkenness, the shooting of civilians, looting, and a case of gang rape at Piazza Armerina ..." Why We Fight: New Approaches to the Human Dimension of Warfare, Robert C. Engen, H. Christian Breede, Allan English, p. ?, McGill-Queen's Press, 2020
  179. ^ Samual W. Mitcham; Stephen Von Stauffenberg (2007). The Battle of Sicily: How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory. Stackpole Books. ISBN 9780811734035.

Bibliography

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  • Atkinson, Rick (2007), The Day of Battle, The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943–1944, The Liberation Trilogy, vol. II, New York: Henry Holt, ISBN 978-0-8050-6289-2
  • Bimberg, Edward L. (1999), The Moroccan Goums, Westport, Conn: Greenwood, ISBN 0-313-30913-2
  • Birtle, Andrew J. (1993), Sicily 1943, The U.S. Army WWII Campaigns, Washington: United States Army Center of Military History, ISBN 0-16-042081-4, CMH Pub 72-16
  • Bovi, Lorenzo (2013), Sicilia.WW2: foto inedite (in Italian), Siracusa, Italy: Morrone, ISBN 978-88-97672-59-3
  • Brown, Shaun R. G. (1984). The Loyal Edmonton Regiment at war, 1943–1945 (M.A.). Waterloo, Ont: Wilfrid Laurier University. OCLC 827992837.
  • Carver, Field Marshal Lord (2001), The Imperial War Museum Book of the War in Italy 1943–1945, London: Sidgwick & Jackson, ISBN 0-330-48230-0
  • Copp, Terry; McGreer, Eric; Symes, Matt (2008), The Canadian Battlefields in Italy: Sicily and Southern Italy, Waterloo: Laurier Centre for Military, Strategic and Disarmament Studies
  • Costanzo, Ezio (2003), Sicilia 1943: breve storia dello sbarco alleato (in Italian), Catania, Italy: Le Nove Muse, ISBN 88-87820-21-X
  • D'Este, Carlo (2008), Bitter Victory: The Battle for Sicily 1943, London: Arum Press, ISBN 978-1-84513-329-0
  • Dickson, Keith (2001), World War II for Dummies, New York City, ISBN 9780764553523
  • Ferguson, Gregor; Lyles, Kevin (1984), The Paras 1940–1984: British airborne forces 1940–1984, Oxford: Osprey, ISBN 0-85045-573-1
  • Follain, John (2005), Mussolini's Island: The Invasion of Sicily Through The Eyes Of Those Who Witnessed The Campaign, London: Hodder & Stoughton, ISBN 0-34083-362-9
  • Grigg, John (1982), 1943: The Victory that Never Was, London: Kensington, ISBN 0-8217-1596-8
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  • Shaw, A. (2002) [2000], World War II: Day by Day, Hoo: Grange, ISBN 1-84013-363-5
  • Tomblin, Barbara (2004), With Utmost Spirit: Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean, 1942–1945, Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, ISBN 0-8131-2338-0
  • Zabecki, David T. (1995). "Operation Mincemeat". World War II Magazine. History Net (November 1995). Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  • Zuehlke, Mark (2010), Operation Husky: the Canadian invasion of Sicily, July 10 – August 7, 1943, Douglas & McIntyre, ISBN 978-1-55365-539-8

Further reading

External links

  • Describes Operation Mincemeat
  • Gela Beachhead Counterattack of 1943
  • Canadians in Sicily, 1943 Canadians in Sicily: Photos, battle info, video footage and newspaper archives 21 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Operation Husky: The Allied Invasion of Sicily, 1943 by Thomas E. Nutter
  • 2nd World War Best of Sicily History of the Allied Campaign and its social context
  • The 82nd Airborne during World War II
  • German Soldiers' Cemetery, Motta S. Anastasia, Sicily (in German)
  • Commonwealth War Cemetery, Catania, Sicily
  • Syracuse War Cemetery, Sicily
  • The Irish Brigade 1941–47 account of the 38th (Irish) Brigade in Sicily in August 1943
  • Licata Landing La Vedettaonline
  • Sicily and the Surrender of Italy/Landing at Mollarella Beach
  • US Official History
  • Agrigento-Licata from 10–16 July
  • [1] Husky Planning on 10 July 1943

allied, invasion, sicily, invasion, sicily, redirects, here, athenian, offensive, second, peloponnesian, sicilian, expedition, also, known, battle, sicily, operation, husky, major, campaign, world, which, allied, forces, invaded, island, sicily, july, 1943, to. Invasion of Sicily redirects here For the Athenian offensive in the Second Peloponnesian War see Sicilian Expedition The Allied invasion of Sicily also known as the Battle of Sicily and Operation Husky was a major campaign of World War II in which the Allied forces invaded the island of Sicily in July 1943 and took it from the Axis powers Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany It began with a large amphibious and airborne operation followed by a six week land campaign and initiated the Italian campaign Sicilian CampaignPart of the Italian campaign of World War IIA map of the Allied army amphibious landing in Sicily 10 July 1943 as part of Operation HuskyDate9 July 17 August 1943LocationSicily ItalyResultAllied victory Mussolini s regime collapses Armistice of Cassibile signed Operation Achse launchedTerritorialchangesSicily occupied by Allied forcesBelligerents United Kingdom India 1 United States Canada Free France 2 Supported by Australia 3 4 5 Italy GermanyCommanders and leadersDwight D Eisenhower Harold Alexander Bernard Montgomery George S Patton Walter Bedell Smith Arthur Tedder Andrew CunninghamAlfredo Guzzoni Albert Kesselring Hans Valentin Hube F v Senger u Etterlin Pietro BaroneStrengthInitial strength 160 000 personnel 600 tanks 14 000 vehicles 1 800 guns 6 Peak strength 467 000 personnel 7 Italy 131 359 8 252 000 personnel 9 260 tanks 1 400 aircraft 10 Germany 40 000 60 000 personnel 7 11 Casualties and lossesUnited Kingdom and Canada 12 13 2 938 killed 9 212 wounded 2 782 missing United States 12 2 811 killed 6 471 wounded 686 missingItaly 14 4 678 killed 32 500 wounded 116 861 captured or missing 15 Germany 14 4 325 killed 13 500 wounded 10 106 captured or missing To divert some of the Axis forces to other areas the Allies engaged in several deception operations the most famous and successful of which was Operation Mincemeat Husky began on the night of 9 10 July 1943 and ended on 17 August Strategically Husky achieved the goals set out for it by Allied planners the Allies drove Axis air land and naval forces from the island and the Mediterranean sea lanes were opened for Allied merchant ships for the first time since 1941 These events led to the Italian leader Benito Mussolini being toppled from power in Italy on 25 July and to the Allied invasion of Italy on 3 September The German leader Adolf Hitler canceled a major offensive at Kursk after only a week in part to divert forces to Italy resulting in a reduction of German strength on the Eastern Front 16 The collapse of Italy necessitated German troops replacing the Italians in Italy and to a lesser extent the Balkans resulting in one fifth of the entire German army being diverted from the east to southern Europe a proportion that would remain until near the end of the war 17 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Allies 1 2 Axis 1 3 Planning 1 3 1 Preparatory operations 1 3 2 Headquarters 1 3 3 Deception 2 Campaign 2 1 Allied landings 2 1 1 Airborne landings 2 1 2 Seaborne landings 2 2 Exploitation 2 3 Battles for Etna positions 2 4 Axis evacuation 3 Aftermath 3 1 Casualties 3 2 War crimes 4 Constituent operations 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 6 2 Further reading 7 External linksBackground EditAllies Edit Main article Operation Husky order of battle The plan for Operation Husky called for the amphibious assault of Sicily by two Allied armies one landing on the south eastern and one on the central southern coast The amphibious assaults were to be supported by naval gunfire as well as tactical bombing interdiction and close air support by the combined air forces As such the operation required a complex command structure incorporating land naval and air forces The overall commander was American General Dwight D Eisenhower as Commander in Chief C in C of all the Allied forces in North Africa British General Sir Harold Alexander acted as his second in command and as the 15th Army Group commander The American Major General Walter Bedell Smith was appointed as Eisenhower s Chief of Staff 18 The overall Naval Force Commander was the British Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham The Allied land forces were from the American British and Canadian armies and were structured as two task forces The Eastern Task Force also known as Task Force 545 was led by General Sir Bernard Montgomery and consisted of the British Eighth Army which included the 1st Canadian Infantry Division The Western Task Force Task Force 343 was commanded by Lieutenant General George S Patton and consisted of the American Seventh Army The two task force commanders reported to Alexander as commander of the 15th Army Group 19 Allied leaders in the Sicilian campaign General Dwight D Eisenhower meets in North Africa with foreground left to right Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder General Sir Harold Alexander Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham and top row Mr Harold Macmillan Major General Walter Bedell Smith and unidentified British officers The U S Seventh Army consisted initially of three infantry divisions organized under II Corps commanded by Lieutenant General Omar Bradley The 1st and 3rd Infantry Divisions commanded by Major Generals Terry Allen and Lucian Truscott respectively sailed from ports in Tunisia while the 45th Infantry Division under Major General Troy H Middleton sailed from the United States via Oran in Algeria The 2nd Armored Division under Major General Hugh Joseph Gaffey also sailing from Oran was to be a floating reserve and be fed into combat as required On 15 July Patton reorganized his command into two corps by creating a new Provisional Corps headquarters commanded by his deputy army commander Major General Geoffrey Keyes 20 The British Eighth Army had four infantry divisions and an independent infantry brigade organized under XIII Corps commanded by Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey and XXX Corps commanded by Lieutenant General Sir Oliver Leese The two divisions of XIII Corps the 5th and 50th Northumbrian Infantry Divisions commanded by Major Generals Horatio Berney Ficklin and Sidney Kirkman sailed from Suez in Egypt The formations of XXX Corps sailed from more diverse ports the 1st Canadian Infantry Division under Major General Guy Simonds sailed from the United Kingdom the 51st Highland Infantry Division under Major General Douglas Wimberley from Tunisia and Malta and the 231st Independent Infantry Brigade Group from Suez The 1st Canadian Infantry Division was included in Operation Husky at the insistence of the Canadian Prime Minister William Mackenzie King and the Canadian Military Headquarters in the United Kingdom This request was granted by the British displacing the veteran British 3rd Infantry Division The change was not finalized until 27 April 1943 when Lieutenant General Andrew McNaughton then commanding the Canadian First Army in the United Kingdom deemed Operation Husky to be a viable military undertaking and agreed to the detachment of both the 1st Canadian Infantry Division and the 1st Canadian Tank Brigade The Red Patch Division was added to Leese s XXX Corps to become part of the British Eighth Army 21 In addition to the amphibious landings airborne troops were to be flown in to support both the Western and Eastern Task Forces To the east the British 1st Airborne Division commanded by Major General George F Hopkinson was to seize vital bridges and high ground in support of the British Eighth Army The initial plan dictated that the U S 82nd Airborne Division commanded by Major General Matthew Ridgway was to be held as a tactical reserve in Tunisia 22 Allied naval forces were also grouped into two task forces to transport and support the invading armies The Eastern Naval Task Force was formed from the British Mediterranean Fleet and was commanded by Admiral Bertram Ramsay The Western Naval Task Force was formed around the U S Eighth Fleet commanded by Admiral Henry Kent Hewitt The two naval task force commanders reported to Admiral Cunningham as overall Naval Forces Commander 19 Two sloops of the Royal Indian Navy HMIS Sutlej and HMIS Jumna also participated 1 At the time of Operation Husky the Allied air forces in North Africa and the Mediterranean were organized into the Mediterranean Air Command MAC under Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder The major sub command of MAC was the Northwest African Air Forces NAAF under the command of Lieutenant General Carl Spaatz with headquarters in Tunisia NAAF consisted primarily of groups from the United States 12th Air Force 9th Air Force and the British Royal Air Force RAF that provided the primary air support for the operation Other groups from the 9th Air Force under Lieutenant General Lewis H Brereton operating from Tunisia and Egypt and Air H Q Malta under Air Vice Marshal Sir Keith Park operating from the island of Malta also provided important air support The U S Army Air Force 9th Air Force s medium bombers and P 40 fighters that were detached to NAAF s Northwest African Tactical Air Force under the command of Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham moved to southern airfields on Sicily as soon they were secured At the time the 9th Air Force was a sub command of RAF Middle East Command under Air Chief Marshal Sir Sholto Douglas Middle East Command like NAAF and Air H Q Malta were sub commands of MAC under Tedder who reported to Eisenhower for NAAF operations 19 and to the British Chiefs of Staff for Air H Q Malta and Middle East Command operations 23 24 Axis Edit General Alfredo Guzzoni Supreme Commander of Italo German forces in Sicily The island was defended by the two corps of the Italian 6th Army under General Alfredo Guzzoni although specially designated Fortress Areas around the main ports Piazze Militari Marittime were commanded by admirals subordinate to Naval Headquarters and independent of the 6th Army 25 In early July the total Axis force in Sicily was about 200 000 Italian troops 32 000 German troops and 30 000 Luftwaffe ground staff The main German formations were the Panzer Division Hermann Goring and the 15th Panzergrenadier Division The Panzer division had 99 tanks in two battalions but was short of infantry with only three battalions while the 15th Panzergrenadier Division had three grenadier regiments and a tank battalion with 60 tanks 26 About half of the Italian troops were formed into four front line infantry divisions and headquarters troops the remainder were support troops or inferior coastal divisions and coastal brigades Guzzoni s defence plan was for the coastal formations to form a screen to receive the invasion and allow time for the field divisions further back to intervene 27 By late July the German units had been reinforced principally by elements of the 1st Parachute Division 29th Panzergrenadier Division and the XIV Panzer Corps headquarters General der Panzertruppe Hans Valentin Hube bringing the number of German troops to around 70 000 28 Until the arrival of the corps headquarters the two German divisions were nominally under Italian tactical control The panzer division with a reinforced infantry regiment from the panzergrenadier division to compensate for its lack of infantry was under Italian XVI Corps and the rest of the panzergrenadier division under the Italian XII Corps 29 The German commanders in Sicily were contemptuous of their allies and German units took their orders from the German liaison officer attached to the 6th Army HQ Generalleutnant Fridolin von Senger und Etterlin who was subordinate to Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring the German C in C Army Command South OB Sud Von Senger had arrived in Sicily in late June as part of a German plan to gain greater operational control of its units 30 Guzzoni agreed from 16 July to delegate to Hube control of all sectors where there were German units involved and from 2 August he commanded the Sicilian front 31 Planning Edit Sicily red in relation to the Italian mainland At the Casablanca Conference in January 1943 with the end of the North African Campaign in sight the political leaders and the military Chiefs of Staff of the United States and Britain met to discuss future strategy The British Chiefs of Staff were in favour of an invasion of Sicily or Sardinia arguing that it would force Germany to disperse its forces and might knock Italy out of the war and move Turkey to join the Allies 32 At first the Americans opposed the plan as opportunistic and irrelevant but were persuaded to agree to a Sicilian invasion on the grounds of the great savings to Allied shipping that would result from the opening of the Mediterranean by the removal of Axis air and naval forces from the island 32 The Combined Chiefs of Staff appointed General Eisenhower as C in C of the Allied Expeditionary Force General Alexander as Deputy C in C with responsibility for detailed planning and execution of the operation Admiral Cunningham as Naval Commander and Air Chief Marshal Tedder as Air Commander 33 The outline plan given to Eisenhower by the Chiefs of Staff involved dispersed landings by brigade and division sized formations in the south east south and north west areas of the island The logic behind the plan was that it would result in the rapid capture of key Axis airfields that posed a threat to the beachheads and the invasion fleet lying off them It would also see the rapid capture of all the main ports on the island except for Messina including Catania Palermo Syracuse Licata and Augusta This would facilitate a rapid Allied build up as well as denying their use to the Axis 34 High level planning for the operation lacked direction because the three mainland commanders Alexander Montgomery and Patton were fully occupied in operations in Tunisia Effort was wasted in presenting plans that Montgomery in particular disliked because of the dispersion of forces involved He was finally able to articulate his objections and put forward alternative proposals on 24 April 35 Tedder and Cunningham opposed Montgomery s plan because it would leave 13 landing grounds in Axis hands posing a considerable threat to the Allied invasion fleet 36 Eisenhower called a meeting for 2 May with Montgomery Cunningham and Tedder in which Montgomery made new proposals to concentrate the Allied effort on the southeast corner of Sicily discarding the intended landings close to Palermo and using the south eastern ports 36 After Alexander joined the meeting on 3 May Montgomery s proposals were finally accepted on the basis that it was better to take an administrative risk having to support troops by landing supplies across beaches than an operational one dispersion of effort 37 38 Not for the last time Montgomery had argued a sound course of action yet done so in a conceited manner which suggested to others particularly his American allies that he was preoccupied with his own interests 39 In the event maintaining the armies by landing supplies across the beaches proved easier than expected partly because of the successful introduction of large numbers of the new amphibious DUKW vehicle 40 Alexander was later to write It is not too much to say that the DUKW revolutionised the problem of beach maintenance 37 Map of the Allied landings in Sicily on 10 July 1943 On 17 May Alexander issued his Operation Instruction No 1 setting out his broad plan and defining the tasks of the two armies 37 Broadly speaking he intended to establish his armies along a line from Catania to Licata preparatory to a final operation to reduce the island He later wrote that at that stage it was not practicable to plan further ahead but that his intentions were clear in his own mind what the next step would be he would drive north ultimately to Santo Stefano on the northern coast to split the island in two and cut his enemy s east west communications 41 The Seventh Army was assigned to land in the Gulf of Gela in south central Sicily with the 3rd Infantry Division and 2nd Armored Division to the west at Licata Mollarella beach 1st Division in the center at Gela and 45th Division to the east at Scoglitti The 82nd Airborne Division was assigned to drop behind the defences at Gela and Scoglitti The Seventh Army s beach front stretched over 50 kilometers 30 mi The British Eighth Army was assigned to land in south eastern Sicily XXX Corps would land on either side of Cape Passero while XIII Corps would land in the Gulf of Noto around Avola off to the north The Eighth Army s beach front also stretched 40 kilometers 25 mi and there was a gap of some 40 kilometers 25 mi between the two armies Preparatory operations Edit Once the Axis forces had been defeated in Tunisia the Allied strategic bomber force commenced attacks on the principal airfields of Sardinia Sicily and southern Italy industrial targets in southern Italy and the ports of Naples Messina Palermo and Cagliari in Sardinia The attacks were spread to maintain uncertainty as to the next Allied move and to pin down Axis aircraft and keep them away from Sicily Bombing of northern Italy by aircraft based in the UK and Greece by aircraft based in the Middle East was increased 42 From 3 July bombing concentrated on Sicilian airfields and Axis communications with Italy although beach defences were left alone to preserve surprise as to where the landings would occur 43 By 10 July only two airfields in Sicily remained fully operational and over half the Axis aircraft had been forced to leave the island 44 Between mid May and the invasion Allied airmen flew 42 227 sorties and destroyed 323 German and 105 Italian aircraft for the loss of 250 aircraft mostly to anti aircraft fire over Sicily 45 Operations began in May against the small island of Pantelleria some 110 km 70 mi southwest of Sicily and 240 km 150 mi northwest of Malta to prevent the airfield there being used in support of Axis troops attempting to withdraw from North Africa On 13 and 31 May the cruiser HMS Orion bombarded the island and from 6 June Allied attacks increased 46 On 11 June after a naval bombardment and seaborne landing by the British 1st Infantry Division Operation Corkscrew the island garrison surrendered The Pelagie Islands of Lampedusa and Linosa some 140 km 90 mi west of Malta followed in short order on 12 June 44 Headquarters Edit Main article Lascaris War Rooms Lascaris War Rooms The Allies used a network of tunnels and chambers located below the Lascaris Battery in Valletta Malta the Lascaris War Rooms for the advance headquarters of the invasion of Sicily 47 In July 1943 General Eisenhower Admiral Cunningham General Montgomery and Air Marshal Tedder occupied the war rooms Earlier the war rooms had served as the British headquarters for the defence of Malta 48 Deception Edit Main article Operation Mincemeat To distract the Axis and if possible divert some of their forces to other areas the Allies engaged in several deception operations The most famous and successful of these was Operation Mincemeat conceived by Naval intelligence officer Ewen Montagu and RAF Squadron Leader Charles Cholmondeley 49 The British allowed a corpse disguised as a British Royal Marines officer to drift ashore in Spain carrying a briefcase containing fake secret documents The documents purported to reveal that the Allies were planning Operation Brimstone and that an Operation Husky was an invasion of Greece German intelligence accepted the authenticity of the documents and the Germans diverted much of their defensive effort from Sicily to Greece until the occupation of Pantelleria on 11 June which concentrated German and Italian attention on the western Mediterranean 49 Generalfeldmarschall Erwin Rommel was sent to Greece to assume command The Germans transferred a group of R boats German minesweepers and minelayers from Sicily and laid three additional minefields off the Greek coast They also moved three panzer divisions to Greece one from France and two from the Eastern Front which reduced German combat strength in the Kursk salient 50 Campaign EditAllied landings Edit Airborne landings Edit Further information Operation Ladbroke and Operation Fustian British airborne troops wait to board an American WACO CG4A glider Two American and two British attacks by airborne troops were carried out just after midnight on the night of 9 10 July as part of the invasion The American paratroopers consisted largely of Colonel James M Gavin s 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment expanded into the 505th Parachute Regimental Combat Team with the addition of the 3rd Battalion of the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment along with the 456th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion Company B of the 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion and other supporting units of the U S 82nd Airborne Division making their first combat drop The British landings were preceded by pathfinders of the 21st Independent Parachute Company who were to mark landing zones for the troops who were intending to seize the Ponte Grande the bridge over the River Anape just south of Syracuse and hold it until the British 5th Infantry Division arrived from the beaches at Cassibile some eleven kilometres 7 mi to the south 51 Glider infantry from the British 1st Airborne Division s 1st Airlanding Brigade commanded by Brigadier Philip Hicks were to seize landing zones inland 52 Strong winds of up to 70 km h 45 mph 53 blew the troop carrying aircraft off course and the American force was scattered widely over south east Sicily between Gela and Syracuse By 14 July about two thirds of the 505th had managed to concentrate and half the U S paratroopers failed to reach their rallying points 54 The British air landing troops fared little better with only 12 of the 147 gliders landing on target and 69 crashing into the sea with over 200 men drowning 55 Among those who landed in the sea were Major General George F Hopkinson commander of the British 1st Airborne Division who after several hours spent clutching a piece of wreckage was eventually rescued by the landing ship HMS Keren The scattered airborne troops attacked patrols and created confusion wherever possible A platoon of the 2nd Battalion South Staffordshire Regiment under Lieutenant Louis Withers part of the British 1st Airlanding Brigade landed on target captured Ponte Grande and repulsed counterattacks Additional paratroops rallied to the sound of shooting and by 08 30 89 men were holding the bridge 56 By 11 30 a battalion of the Italian 75th Infantry Regiment Colonel Francesco Ronco from the 54th Infantry Division Napoli arrived with some artillery 57 The British force held out until about 15 30 hours when low on ammunition and by now reduced to 18 men they were forced to surrender 45 minutes before the leading elements of the British 5th Division arrived from the south 57 58 Despite these mishaps the widespread landing of airborne troops both American and British had a positive effect as small isolated units acting on their initiative attacked vital points and created confusion 59 Seaborne landings Edit Troops from the 51st Highland Division unloading stores from tank landing craft on the opening day of the invasion of Sicily 10 July 1943 The strong wind also made matters difficult for the amphibious landings but also ensured surprise as many of the defenders had assumed that no one would attempt a landing in such poor conditions 59 Landings were made in the early hours of 10 July from 2 45am on 26 main beaches spread along 170 kilometres 105 mi of the southern and eastern coasts of the island between the town of Licata 60 where the U S 3rd Infantry Division under the command of Major General Lucian Truscott landed at Torre di Gaffe red beach and Mollarella and Poliscia green beaches in the west and Cassibile in the east 61 with British and Canadian forces in the east and Americans toward the west This constituted the largest amphibious operation of World War II in terms of size of the landing zone and the number of divisions put ashore on the first day 62 The Italian defensive plan did not contemplate a pitched battle on the beaches and so the landings themselves were somewhat anti climactic 63 An American crew checks their Sherman tank after landing at Red Beach 2 Sicily 10 July More trouble was experienced from the difficult weather conditions especially on the southern beaches and unexpected hidden offshore sandbars than from the coastal divisions Some troops landed in the wrong place in the wrong order and as much as six hours behind schedule 64 but the weakness of the defensive response allowed the Allied force to make up lost time 59 Nevertheless several Italian coastal units fought well the 429th Coastal Battalion under Major Marco Rubellino 65 tasked with defending Gela lost 45 percent of its men while the attacking U S Army Ranger Battalion lost several men to mines and machine gun and cannon fire 66 Gruppo Tattico Carmito under Lieutenant Colonel Francesco Tropea tasked with defending Malati Bridge defeated a Royal Marines Commando Battalion on 13 July with the help of the local middle age reservists The Italian 4th Self Propelled Artillery Battalion attacked the Commandos with the help of the 372nd Coastal Defence Battalion 553rd under Captain Giovanni Sartor and 554th under Captain Fausto Clementi Motorcycle Companies 67 and three Panzer IV medium tanks 68 69 70 The 246th Coastal Battalion under Major Rollo Franco 71 defeated British attempts to capture Augusta on the night of 11 12 July 72 In Major General Terry Allen s U S 1st Infantry Division sector at Gela there was an Italian division sized counterattack where the dispersed 505th Parachute Regimental Combat Team was supposed to have been Tiger tanks of the Hermann Goring Panzer Division which had been due to advance with the 4th Infantry Division Livorno were late 73 On highways 115 and 117 during 10 July Italian tanks of the Niscemi Armoured Combat Group and Livorno Division infantry nearly reached the Allied position at Gela but gunfire from the destroyer USS Shubrick 74 and the light cruiser USS Boise destroyed several tanks and dispersed the attacking infantry battalion 75 The 3rd Battalion 34th Regiment Livorno Infantry Division composed mainly of conscripts made a daylight attack on the Gela beachhead two days later with infantry and armor of the Hermann Goring Panzer Division but was repulsed 76 Remains of the Italian Navy armed train T A 76 2 T destroyed by USS Bristol while opposing the landing at Licata British troops of the 6th Battalion Durham Light Infantry part of the British 50th Division with an American paratrooper of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment part of the U S 82nd Airborne Division in Avola 11 July 1943 By the morning of 10 July the Joint Task Force Operations Support System Force captured the port of Licata at the cost of nearly 100 killed and wounded in the U S 3rd Infantry Division and the division beat back a counter attack from the 538th Coastal Defence Battalion By 11 30 Licata was firmly in American hands and the U S 3rd Division had lost fewer than one hundred men Salvage parties had already partially cleared the harbor and shortly after noon Truscott and his staff came ashore and set up headquarters at Palazzo La Lumia About that time the 538th Coastal Defense Battalion which had been deployed as a tactical reserve launched a counter attack By the evening of 10 July the seven Allied assault divisions three American three British and one Canadian were well established ashore the port of Syracuse had been captured and fears of an Axis air onslaught had proved unfounded 77 The preparatory bombing of the previous weeks had greatly weakened the Axis air capability and the heavy Allied presence of aircraft operating from Malta Gozo and Pantelleria kept most of the Axis attempts at air attack at bay Some attacks on the first day of the invasion got through and German aircraft sank the landing ship LST 313 and minesweeper USS Sentinel Italian Stukas sank the destroyer USS Maddox 78 79 and Re 2002s 80 sunk the Indian hospital ship Talamba with heavy loss of life 81 82 and in the following days Axis aircraft damaged or sank several more warships transport vessels and landing craft starting with the Allied troopship USS Barnett hit and damaged by an Italian bomber formation on the morning of 11 July 83 84 Italian Stukas named Picchiatello in Italian service and Savoia Marchetti SM 79 torpedo bombers coordinated their attacks with German Stuka and Ju 88 bomber units As part of the seaborne landings south at Agnone some 400 men of Lieutenant Colonel John Durnford Slater s No 3 Commando captured Malati Bridge on 13 July only to lose possession of it when the 4th Self Propelled Artillery Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Francesco Tropea and the Italian 553rd and 554th Motorcycle Companies counter attacked 85 86 87 88 The Commandos lost 28 killed 66 wounded and 59 captured or missing 89 Exploitation Edit Map of Allied movements on Sicily during July General Alexander s plan was to first establish his forces on a line between Licata in the west and Catania in the east before embarking on operations to reduce the rest of the island Key to this was capturing ports to facilitate the buildup of his forces and the capture of airfields The task of General Montgomery s British Eighth Army was therefore to capture the Pachino airfield on Cape Passero and the port of Syracuse before moving northwards to take the ports of Augusta and Catania Their objectives also included the landing fields around Gerbini on the Catania plain The objectives of Lieutenant General Patton s U S Seventh Army included capturing the port of Licata and the airfields of Ponte Olivo Biscari and Comiso It was then to prevent the enemy reserves from moving eastward against the Eighth Army s left flank 90 According to Axis plans Kampfgruppe Schmalz Colonel Wilhelm Schmalz in conjunction with the 54th Infantry Division Napoli Major General Giulio Cesare Gotti Porcinari was to counter attack an Allied landing on the Augusta Syracuse coast On 10 July Colonel Schmalz had been unable to contact the Italian division and had proceeded alone towards Syracuse Unknown to Schmalz a battalion of 18 Renault R35 tanks under Lieutenant Colonel Massimo D Andretta and supporting infantry battalion from the 75th Infantry Regiment under Colonel Paolo Giovanni Ronco of the Napoli Division 91 92 broke through the forward positions held by the 2nd Battalion Wiltshire Regiment part of the 13th Brigade of Major General Horatio Berney Ficklin s British 5th Division and were stopped only by anti tank and artillery fire in the Priolo and Floridia suburbs of Syracuse 93 94 Italian soldiers of the 206th Coastal Division taken prisoner by British forces Typical of the second rate equipment issued to the Coastal divisions they are wearing Adrian helmets of World War I vintage rather than the more modern M 33 On the night of 11 12 July the Royal Navy attempted to capture Augusta but the 246th Coastal Battalion repelled the British landing force that was supported by three destroyers On 12 July several Italian units took up rearguard positions and covered the withdrawal of Kampfgruppe Schmalz and the Hermann Goring Division 95 The American advance toward Canicatti was temporarily held up by Semovente da 90 53 tank destroyers from the 161st Self propelled Artillery Battalion 96 526th Bersaglieri Battalion and 177th Bersaglieri Regiment from Gruppo Tattico Venturi under General Enrico Francisci killed in action and posthumously awarded the Gold Medal of Military Valour 97 as Kampfgruppe Schmalz retreated toward Catania The 246th Coastal Battalion retreated to strong points at Cozzo Telegrafo and Acquedolci The 76th Infantry Regiment of the Napoli Division covered the left flank of Kampfgruppe Schmalz which withdrew toward Lentini and then retired to Palermo The Hermann Goring Division eventually pulled back from the Piano Lupo area toward Caltagirone and the Livorno Division withdrew its right flank toward Piazza Armerina to cover the Hermann Goring Division 98 Early on 13 July elements of the British 5th Division on Eighth Army s right flank which had been delayed by Kampfgruppe Schmalz entered Augusta 99 On their left Major General Sidney Kirkman s British 50th Division had pushed up Route 114 toward Lentini 25 kilometres 15 mi northwest of Augusta and met increasing resistance from the Napoli Division 100 The commander of the Italian division and his staff were captured by Brigadier John Currie s British 4th Armoured Brigade on 13 July and it was not until 18 45 on 14 July that the town was cleared of obstructions and snipers and the advance resumed 101 102 A battalion of the Napoli Division managed to break through the British lines and took up new positions at Augusta but the British advance forced it to retire again on 14 July 103 Men of The Loyal Edmonton Regiment part of the 1st Canadian Division enter Modica Further left in the XXX Corps sector Major General Douglas Wimberley s 51st Highland Division had moved directly north to take Palazzolo and Vizzini 50 kilometres 30 mi west of Syracuse while the Canadians secured Pachino airfield and headed north west to make contact with the American right wing at Ragusa after having driven off the Italian 122 Infantry Regiment north of Pachino The Canadians captured more than 500 Italians 104 In the Canadian area the 2nd Special Service Brigade under Brigadier Robert Laycock was counter attacked by the 206th Coastal Division under General Achille d Havet 105 who launched a strong counter attack that threatened to penetrate the area between the Canadians and the Royal Marine Commandos before being repulsed 106 American paratroopers of the 504th PIR bound for Sicily July 1943 In the American sector by the morning of 10 July the port of Licata had been captured On 11 July Patton ordered his reserve parachute troops from the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment minus the 3rd Battalion already deployed in Sicily attached to the 505th under Colonel Reuben Tucker part of Major General Matthew Ridgway s 82nd Airborne Division to drop and reinforce the center In addition going along with the 504th would be the 376th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion Company C of the 307th Airborne Engineer Battalion and other supporting units Warning orders had been issued to the fleet and troops on 6 7 10 and 11 July concerning the planned route and timing of the drop so that the aircraft would not be fired on by friendly forces 107 They were intended to drop east of Ponte Olivo about eight kilometres 5 mi inland from Gela to block routes to the 1st Infantry Division s bridgehead at Gela 51 The 144 Douglas C 47 transports arrived at the same time as an Axis air raid the first echelon of troop carrying planes had dropped their loads without interference when an Allied naval vessel fired on the formation Immediately all the other naval vessels and shore troops joined in shooting down friendly aircraft and forcing paratroopers to jump far from their drop zones The 52nd Troop Carrier Wing lost 23 of 144 S 47s to friendly fire there were 318 casualties with 83 dead 108 Thirty seven aircraft were damaged while eight returned to base without dropping their parachutists The paratroopers suffered 229 casualties to friendly fire including 81 dead 107 109 Among the casualties was Brigadier General Charles L Keerans Jr the 82nd Airborne s assistant division commander ADC who was along with the 504th as an unofficial observer The 325th Glider Infantry Regiment part of the 82nd Airborne Division and commanded by Colonel Harry L Lewis was then waiting in North Africa and scheduled to land in Sicily by glider that night together with the rest of the division staff After what happened to the 504th Ridgway canceled the operation Despite this the American beach landings went well and a substantial amount of supplies and transport was landed Despite the failure of the airborne operation the 1st Infantry Division took Ponte Olivo on 12 July and continued north while Major General Troy H Middleton s 45th Infantry Division on the right had taken the airfield at Comiso and entered Ragusa to link up with the Canadians On the left Major General Truscott s 3rd Infantry Division having landed at Licata pushed troops 40 kilometres 25 mi up the coast almost to Argento and 30 kilometres 20 mi inland to Canicatti 110 Sherman tank of the 3rd County of London Yeomanry Sharpshooters in the village of Belpasso near Catania Sicily August 1943 111 112 Once the beachheads were secure Alexander planned to split the island in half by thrusting north through the Caltanissetta and Enna region to deny the defenders the central east west lateral road A further push north to Nicosia would cut the next lateral route and a final advance to Santo Stefano on the north coast would cut the coastal route In new orders issued on 13 July he gave this task to Montgomery s Eighth Army perhaps based on a somewhat over optimistic situation report by Montgomery late on 12 July while the Seventh Army were to continue their holding role on the left flank of the Eighth Army despite what appeared to be an opportunity for them to make a bold offensive move 113 114 On 12 July Generalfeldmarschall Albert Kesselring had visited Sicily and formed the opinion that German troops were fighting virtually on their own As a consequence he concluded that the German formations needed to be reinforced and that western Sicily should be abandoned in order to shorten the front line The priority was first to slow and then halt the Allied advance while a Hauptkampflinie was formed running from San Stefano on the northern coast through Nicosia and Agira to Cantenanuova and from there to the eastern coast south of Catania 115 While XIII Corps under Lieutenant General Miles Dempsey continued to push along the Catania road XXX Corps under Lieutenant General Oliver Leese were directed north along two routes the first was an inland route through Vizzini and the second following Route 124 which cut across the U S 45th Infantry Division which had to return to the coast at Gela for redeployment behind the U S 1st Infantry Division Progress was slow as Kampfgruppe Schmalz skilfully delayed the British 5th Infantry Division allowing time for two regiments from the German 1st Parachute Division flying to Catania to deploy 116 On 12 July the British 1st Parachute Brigade commanded by Brigadier Gerald Lathbury had been dropped in Operation Fustian an attempt to capture the Primosole Bridge over the river Simeto on the southern edge of the Catania plain The British paratroopers suffered heavy casualties over their designated drop zones due to heavy fire from alert Italian anti aircraft gunners 117 but managed to seize and hold the bridge against fierce Axis attacks The initial counterattacks were Italian in the form of reinforcements from the 10th Arditi Paratroop Regiment Major Vito Marciano 69 reservists from the 372nd Coastal Battalion 118 Major Nino Bolla 119 and gunners from the 29th Artillery Group 120 fighting in the infantry role and an armoured car squadron that nearly overran the headquarters of 9th Battalion the Durham Light Infantry at nightfall in the first day of the battle for Primosole Bridge 121 The British 5th Division was delayed by strong opposition but made contact early on 15 July nevertheless it was not until 17 July that a shallow bridgehead north of the river was consolidated 113 A U S Army Sherman tank moves past Sicily s rugged terrain in mid July 1943 On 16 July the surviving Italian aircraft withdrew to the mainland About 160 Italian planes had been lost in the first week of the invasion 57 lost to Allied fighters and anti aircraft fire on 10 12 July alone 122 That day an Italian bomber torpedoed the aircraft carrier HMS Indomitable 123 and the Italian submarine Dandolo torpedoed the cruiser HMS Cleopatra 124 Both ships were put out of action for over a year On the night of 17 July the Italian cruiser Scipione Africano equipped with EC 3 Gufo radar detected and engaged four British Elco motor torpedo boats lurking eight kilometres 5 mi away while passing the Strait of Messina at high speed 125 MTB 316 was sunk and MTB 313 damaged between Reggio di Calabria and Pellaro twelve British sailors were killed 126 127 128 On the night of 17 18 July Montgomery renewed his attack toward Catania with two brigades of Major General Kirkman s 50th Division They met strong opposition and by 19 July Montgomery decided to call off the attack and instead increase the pressure on his left The 5th Division attacked on the 50th Division s left but with no greater success and on 20 July the 51st Division further west crossed the river Dittaino at Sferro and made for the Gerbini airfields They too were driven back by counter attacks on 21 July 129 On the left flank the 1st Canadian Division continued to advance but it was becoming clear that as German units settled into their new positions in north eastern Sicily the army would not have sufficient strength to carry the whole front and the Canadians were ordered to continue north to Leonforte and then turn eastward to Adrano on the south western slopes of Mount Etna instead of an encirclement of Mount Etna using Route 120 to Randazzo Montgomery called forward his reserve division from North Africa Major General Vyvyan Evelegh s British 78th Infantry Division 129 4 2 inch mortar of the 1st Battalion Princess Louise s Kensington Regiment British 78th Infantry Division in action near Adrano 6 August 1943 Patton had reorganised his forces into two corps The Provisional Corps commanded by Major General Geoffrey Keyes consisting of the 2nd Armored 3rd Infantry and 82nd Airborne Divisions was on the left Lieutenant General Omar Bradley s U S II Corps was on the right By 17 July Provisional Corps had captured Porto Empedocle and Agrigento On 18 July II Corps took Caltanissetta just short of Route 121 the main east west lateral through the center of Sicily The American advance toward Agrigento was temporarily held up by the 207th Coastal Defence Division under Colonel Augusto De Laurentis that was at Sant Oliva Station ten kilometres 6 mi inland from Licata 130 The 10th Bersaglieri Regiment under Colonel Fabrizio Storti forced Colonel William O Darby s 1st and 3rd Ranger Battalions of the 3rd Infantry Division to fight their way into Agrigento 131 By late afternoon on 16 July the city was in American hands 132 American troops fire 81mm mortars in support of the Seventh Army s drive on Palermo The 15th Panzer Grenadier Division managed to join the other German formations in the east of the island Patton was ordered on 18 July to push troops north through Petralia on Route 120 the next east west lateral and then to cut the northern coast road After that he would mop up the west of the island Bradley s II Corps were given the task of making the northward move while the Provisional Corps was tasked with the mopping up operation Alexander issued further orders to Patton to develop an eastward threat along the coast road once he had cut it He was also directed to capture Palermo as quickly as possible as the main supply base for further eastward commitment north of Mount Etna 129 On 21 July the Seventh Army s Provisional Corps overran the Italian battlegroup Raggruppamento Schreiber under General Ottorino Schreiber covering the withdrawal of the 15th Panzer PanzergrenadierDivision 133 but Patton lost 300 men killed and wounded in the process 134 135 On 22 July the Provisional Corps entered Palermo and the next day the 45th Division cut the north coast road 136 Battles for Etna positions Edit Further information Battle of Centuripe During the last week in July General Montgomery gathered his forces to renew the attack on 1 August His immediate objective was Adrano the capture of which would split the German forces on either side of Mount Etna During the week the Canadians and Brigadier Roy Urquhart s 231st Brigade Group continued their eastward push from Leonforte and on 29 July had taken Agira some 25 kilometres 15 mi west of Adrano On the night of 29 July the British 78th Division with the 3rd Canadian Brigade under command took Catenanuova and made a bridgehead across the river Dittaino On the night of 1 August they resumed their attack to the northwest toward Centuripe an isolated pinnacle of rock which was the main southern outpost of the Adrano defences After heavy fighting against the Hermann Goring Division and the 3rd Parachute Regiment all day on 2 August the town was finally cleared of defenders on the morning of 3 August The capture of Centuripe proved critical in that the growing threat to Adrano made the position covering Catania untenable 136 Men of the 6th Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers British 78th Division await orders to move into Centuripe Sicily 2 August 1943 Patton had decided that his communications could support two divisions pushing east the 45th Division on the coast road and the 1st Division on Route 120 In order to maintain the pressure he relieved the 45th Division with the fresher 3rd Division and called up Major General Manton Eddy s 9th Infantry Division from reserve in North Africa to relieve the 1st Division 136 Axis forces were now settled on a second defensive line the Etna Line running from San Fratello on the north coast through Troina and Aderno On 31 July the 1st Division with elements of the arriving 9th Division attached reached Troina and the Battle of Troina commenced This important position was held by the 15th Panzer Grenadier Division The remnants of the 28th Infantry Division Aosta in the form of four battalions 137 had also been pulled back to Troina to assist in the defensive preparations and forthcoming battle 138 For six days the Germans and Italians conducted a costly defence during the battle they launched 24 counter attacks and many small local ones By 7 August Colonel George Smith s U S 18th Infantry Regiment of the 9th Division had captured Mount Pellegrino which overlooked the Troina defences allowing accurate direction of Allied artillery The defenders left flank was also becoming exposed as the adjacent Hermann Goring Division was pushed back by British XXX Corps and they were ordered to withdraw that night in phases to the defensive positions of the Tortorici Line 139 Elements of the 29th Panzergrenadier Division and 26th Infantry Division Assietta were also proving difficult to dislodge on the coast at Santa Agata and San Fratello Patton sent a small amphibious force behind the defences which led to the fall of Santa Agata on 8 August after holding out for six days 136 140 General Montgomery stops his car to talk to men of the Royal Engineers working on a road near Catania Sicily August 1943 On 3 August XIII Corps exploited the disorganisation caused by the threat to Adrano and resumed their advance on Catania and by 5 August the town was in their hands Adrano fell to the 78th Division on the night of 6 August while on the right the 51st Highland Division took Biancavilla three kilometres 2 mi southeast of Adrano 136 After the fall of Adrano the 1st Canadian Division was withdrawn into Army Reserve 141 On 8 August the 78th Division moved north from Adrano took Bronte and the 9th Division advancing from Troina took Cesaro valuable positions on the New Hube Line Both divisions converged on Randazzo on the north west slopes of Etna Randazzo fell on 13 August and 78th Division was taken into reserve 136 As the Allied advance continued the front line shortened and Montgomery decided to withdraw XIII Corps HQ and the British 5th Infantry Division now commanded by Major General Gerard Bucknall replacing Major General Berney Ficklin who returned to England on 10 August to allow them to prepare for the landings on mainland Italy 142 On the northern coast the U S 3rd Division continued to meet strong resistance and difficulties created by extensive demolition of the road Two more end run amphibious attacks and the rebuilding efforts of the engineers kept the advance moving 143 Although Generalfeldmarschall Kesselring had already decided to evacuate the Axis forces continued their delaying tactics assisted by the favorable defensive terrain of the Messina Peninsula on the night of 16 August the leading elements of the 3rd Division entered Messina 144 Axis evacuation Edit Wounded American soldier receiving blood plasma Sicily 9 August 1943 By 27 July the Axis commanders had realised that the outcome of the campaign would be an evacuation from Messina 145 Kesselring reported to Hitler on 29 July that an evacuation could be accomplished in three days and initial written plans were formulated dated 1 August 146 However when Hube suggested on 4 August that a start should be made by transferring superfluous men and equipment Guzzoni refused to sanction the idea without the approval of the Comando Supremo The Germans nevertheless went ahead transferring over 12 000 men 4 500 vehicles and 5 000 tons of equipment from 1 10 August 147 On 6 August Hube suggested to Guzzoni via von Senger that HQ 6th Army should move to Calabria Guzzoni rejected the idea but asked if Hube had decided to evacuate Sicily Von Senger replied that Hube had not 148 The next day Guzzoni learned of the German plan for evacuation and reported to Rome of his conviction of their intentions On 7 August Guzzoni reported that without German support any last ditch stand would only be short On 9 August Rome ordered that Guzzoni s authority should be extended to Calabria and that he should transfer some forces there to reinforce the area On 10 August Guzzoni informed Hube that he was responsible for the defence of northeast Sicily and that Italian coastal units and the Messina garrison were under his command Guzzoni then crossed to the mainland with 6th Army HQ and 16th Corps HQ leaving Admiral Pietro Barone and Admiral Pietro Parenti to organise the evacuation of the remains of the Livorno and Assietta divisions and any other troops and equipment that could be saved 149 The German plan was thorough with clear lines of command imposing strict discipline on the operation Oberst Ernst Gunther Baade was the German Commandant Messina Straits with Fortress Commander powers including control over infantry artillery anti aircraft engineer and construction transport and administration units as well as German naval transport headquarters 150 On the mainland Generalmajor Richard Heidrich who had remained in Calabria with the 1st Parachute Division headquarters and the 1st Parachute Regiment when the rest of the division had been sent as reinforcements to Sicily was appointed XIV Panzer Corps Mainland Commander to receive evacuating formations while Hube continued to control the operations on the island 151 British troops scramble over rubble in a devastated street in Catania Sicily 5 August 1943 Full scale withdrawal began on 11 August and continued to 17 August During this period Hube ordered successive withdrawals each night of between 8 and 24 kilometres 5 and 15 mi keeping the following Allied units at arm s length with the use of mines demolitions and other obstacles 152 As the peninsula narrowed shortening his front he was able to withdraw units for evacuation 153 The Allies attempted to counter this by launching brigade sized amphibious assaults one each by the Seventh and Eighth Armies on 15 August However the speed of the Axis withdrawal was such that these operations hit air 154 The German and Italian evacuation schemes proved highly successful The Allies were not able to prevent the orderly withdrawal nor effectively interfere with transports across the Strait of Messina The narrow straits were protected by 120 heavy and 112 light anti aircraft guns 155 with about half being Italian built pieces 156 The resulting overlapping gunfire from both sides of the strait was described by Allied pilots as worse than the Ruhr making daylight air attacks highly hazardous and generally unsuccessful 144 Night attacks were less hazardous and there were times when air attack was able to delay and even suspend traffic across the straits but when daylight returned the Axis were able to clear the backlog from the previous night 157 Nor was naval interdiction any more practicable The straits varied from three to ten kilometres 2 6 mi wide and were covered by artillery up to 24 centimeters 9 1 2 in in caliber This combined with the hazards of a six knot 3 m s current and fear that Italian warships were preparing to attack the Straits of Messina in a suicide run made risking warships unjustifiable 155 158 Aftermath EditOn 18 August the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht recorded that 60 000 troops had been recovered and the Italian figure was about 75 000 159 In 2004 Tomlin wrote that the Italians evacuated 62 182 men 41 guns and 227 vehicles with the loss of only one motor raft and the train ferry Carridi which was scuttled when Allied troops entered Messina 160 The Germans evacuated some 52 000 troops including 4 444 wounded 14 105 vehicles 47 tanks 94 guns 1 100 tons of ammunition and about 20 700 tons of gear and stores 161 Casualties Edit American soldiers looking at a dead German pilot and his wrecked aircraft near Gela Sicily on 12 July 1943 A Royal Navy ammunition ship hit by bombs burns during the initial landings The U S Seventh Army lost 8 781 men 2 237 killed or missing 5 946 wounded and 598 captured while the British Eighth Army suffered 11 843 casualties 2 062 killed or missing 7 137 wounded and 2 644 captured The U S Navy lost 546 killed or missing and 484 wounded and the Royal Navy lost 314 killed or missing 411 wounded and four captured The USAAF reported 28 killed 88 missing and 41 wounded 13 Canadian forces had suffered 2 310 casualties including 562 killed 1 664 wounded and 84 captured 13 162 In 2007 Samuel W Mitcham and Friederich von Stauffenberg wrote that German units lost about 20 000 men who were either killed wounded or captured and in Germany and the Second World War 2007 Messerschmidt et al reported that the German forces lost 4 325 men killed 4 583 missing 5 532 captured and 13 500 wounded a total of 27 940 casualties 163 13 164 According to the Historical Branch of the Italian Army Italian military losses were 4 678 killed 36 072 missing 32 500 wounded and 116 681 captured 163 165 166 167 A large part of the missing were presumed to have been killed and buried on the battlefield or in unknown locations 163 whereas another part presumably included locally recruited soldiers who deserted and returned to their homes In 2007 Mitcham and Von Stauffenberg estimated Italian total casualties as 147 000 168 An earlier Canadian study of the Allied invasion estimated the total number of Italian and Germans taken prisoner in Sicily to be around 100 000 162 War crimes Edit Immediately after landing in Sicily some killings of civilians by US troops were reported These include the Vittoria massacre where 12 Italians died including Giuseppe Mangano podesta mayor of Acate and his seventeen year old son Valerio who was killed by a bayonet thrust to his face 169 in Piano Stella Agrigento where a group of peasants was murdered 170 and the Canicatti massacre in which at least eight civilians including an eleven year old girl were killed 171 172 173 After the capture of Biscari airfield on 14 July American soldiers from the 180th Regimental Combat Team of the 45th Division murdered 74 Italian and two German prisoners of war in two massacres at Biscari airfield on 14 July 1943 174 175 Sergeant Horace T West and Captain John T Compton were charged with a war crime West was convicted and sentenced to life in prison and stripped of his rank but was released back to active service in November 1944 as a private and honorably discharged at the end of his service Compton was charged with killing 40 prisoners in his charge but was acquitted and transferred to another regiment where he died in November 1943 in the fighting in Italy 176 Various sources including the Special Investigation Branch as well as evidences from Belgian reporters said that rape and sexual harassment by British troops occurred frequently following the invasion of Sicily in 1943 177 On 19 July 1943 just over a week after the Allied landings Captain Angelo Thomas Sesia from the 1st Canadian Infantry Division reported a number of crimes involving Canadian soldiers including the shooting of civilians looting and a case of gang rape at Piazza Armerina 178 According to Mitcham and von Stauffenberg the Canadian The Loyal Edmonton Regiment also murdered German prisoners of war during the Invasion of Sicily 179 Constituent operations EditOperation Barclay Operation Mincemeat Deception operations aimed at misleading Axis forces as to the actual date and location of the Allied landings Operation Corkscrew Allied invasion of the Italian island Pantelleria on 10 June 1943 Operation Ladbroke Glider landing at Syracuse on 9 July 1943 Operation Narcissus Commando raid on a lighthouse near the main landings on 10 July 1943 Operation Chestnut Advanced air drop by 2 SAS to disrupt communications on 12 July 1943 Operation Fustian Airborne landing at Primosole Bridge ahead on 13 14 July 1943 See also EditAllied Military Government for Occupied TerritoriesReferences Edit a b Tucker Spencer C 30 November 2011 World War II at Sea An Encyclopedia Volume 1 2011 ed Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO LLC p 374 ISBN 9781598844573 Retrieved 13 March 2015 Gaujac p 68 Royal Australian Navy the corvettes minesweepers HMAS Cairns Cessnock HMAS Gawler HMAS Geraldton HMAS Ipswich HMAS Lismore HMAS Maryborough and HMAS WollongongRoyal Australian Air Force No 3 Squadron RAAF fighters No 450 Squadron RAAF fighters No 458 Squadron RAAF maritime patrol and No 462 Squadron RAAF heavy bombers SICILY 1943 Battle Honors Royal Australian Navy Official site For service in the prescribed area 10 July to 17 August 1943 450 Squadron RAAF Roll of Honour Queensland War Memorial Register 16 September 2015 Mitcham amp von Stauffenberg 2007 p 63 a b Mitcham amp von Stauffenberg 2007 p 307 Le Operazioni in Sicilia e in Calabria Luglio Settembre 1943 Alberto Santoni p 400 Stato maggiore dell Esercito Ufficio storico 1989 Including Navy and Air Force personnel Dickson 2001 p 201 Shaw p 119 a b Hart Basil H Liddel 1970 A History of the Second World War London Weidenfeld Nicolson p 627 a b c d The Battle of Sicily How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory Samuel W Mitcham Jr Friedrich Von Stauffenberg p 305 Stackpole Books 10 June 2007 a b Ufficio storico dello Stato Maggiore dell Esercito USSME 1993 Le operazioni in Sicilia e in Calabria Rome pp 400 401 La guerra in Sicilia Sbarchi Alleati in Italia Atkinson 2007 p 172 Charles T O Reilly Forgotten Battles Italy s War of Liberation 1943 1945 Lexington Books 2001 pp 37 38 D Este Appendix B a b c D Este Appendix A Molony et al 2004 p 108 Copp 2008 pp 5 42 Molony et al 2004 pp 26 27 Craven Wesley F and James L Cate The Army Air Forces in World War II Volume 2 Chicago Illinois Chicago University Press 1949 Reprinted 1983 ISBN 0 912799 03 X Richards D and H Saunders The Royal Air Force 1939 1945 Volume 2 HMSO 1953 Molony et al 2004 p 40 Molony et al 2004 pp 41 42 Alexander 1948 p 1010 Molony et al 2004 p 122 Molony et al 2004 p 43 Molony et al 2004 p 41 Molony et al 2004 p 44 a b Molony et al 2004 p 2 Molony et al 2004 p 3 Molony et al 2004 pp 13 18 Molony et al 2004 p 21 a b Molony et al 2004 p 23 a b c Alexander 1948 p 1013 Molony et al 2004 pp 23 24 Molony et al 2004 p 24 Allen Thomas B August 2002 Odd DUKW On land and in the water World War II s amphibian workhorse showed the skeptics a thing or two now it shows tourists the sights Smithsonian Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 7 March 2021 Alexander 1948 p 1014 Molony et al 2004 p 32 Molony et al 2004 p 33 a b Molony et al 2004 p 49 Zuehlke 2010 p 90 Playfair et al 2004 p 427 Holland 2004 p 416 Holland 2004 p 170 a b Hinsley 1994 p 341 Zabecki 1995 a b Molony et al 2004 p 83 Hoyt 2007 p 12 Hoyt 2007 p 21 Molony et al 2004 pp 81 82 Molony et al 2004 pp 79 80 Molony et al 2004 p 8 a b Molony et al 2004 p 81 Mitcham amp von Stauffenberg 2007 p 75 a b c Alexander 1948 p 1018 Morison Samuel Eliot 2018 Sicily Salerno Anzio January 1943 June 1944 University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252070396 via Google Books Molony et al 2004 p 55 Birtle 1993 p 24 Molony et al 2004 p 52 Carver p 31 Settant anni fa l ultima battaglia del Regio Esercito Gela 9 12 luglio 1943 seconda e ultima parte di Miles 17 November 2013 Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 19 June 2018 The 429th Coastal Battalion lost 45 percent of its men A Military History of Italy Ciro Paoletti p 184 Greenwood Publishing Group 2008 UNIONE NAZIONALE UFFICIALI IN CONGEDO D ITALIA RIVISTA DI CULTURA MILITARE FONDATA NEL 1927 Sandro Attanasio Sicilia senza Italia Luglio Agosto 1943 Mursia 1976 pp 153 154 a b Patrick Cloutier Regio Esercito The Italian Royal Army in Mussolini s Wars 1935 1943 Lulu Press 2013 p 193 Soon however Italian troops probably an anti tank battalion and a company of motor cyclists counter attacked There were no sign of the expected British force from Lentini and casualties were mounting Colonel Durnford Slater therefore broke off the action and his unit withdrew commando style in separate groups southward The Mediterranean and Middle East The Campaign in Sicily 1943 and the Campaign in Italy 3rd September 1943 to 31st March 1944 Ian Stanley Ord Playfair p 95 H M Stationery Office 1954 Fondo M 9 Serie Sicilia Andrea Crescenzi Ministero della Difesa 2015 Cloutier p 191 Follain 2005 p 130 La Monte John L Lewis Winston B 1993 The Sicilian Campaign 10 July 17 August 1943 Washington DC United States Government Printing Office p 149 ISBN 0 945274 17 3 Garland Albert N Smyth Howard McGaw 1965 U S Army in World War II Mediterranean Theater of Operations Sicily and the Surrender of Italy Washington D C United States Government Printing Office pp 147 162 Gazzi Alessandro Flesh vs Iron 3rd Battalion 34th Regiment Livorno Infantry Division in the Gela Beachhead counterattack Sicily 11 July 12th 1943 Comando Supremo Italy at War website Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 30 May 2008 Molony et al 2004 pp 60 64 Therefore when Allied forces crossed the narrows to launch Operation Husky on 10 July 1943 the dive bomber response was entirely in the hands of the Italians The Regia Aeronautica had taken delivery of a bunch of Ju 87Ds earlier in the year but rather than re equip their existing dive bomber units the Doras had been used to form two new gruppi 103 and 121 Still working upon Sardinia the largely inexperienced crews were dispatched at once to southern Italy and Sicily to counter the invasion A bomb from an unseen aircraft struck the destroyer s stern blowing it apart in a gust of flame smoke and debris In less than two minutes she had disappeared beneath the waves The surviving Doras of 121 Gruppo were to retire back to Sardina before the Sicilian campaign had run its 38 day course John Weal Junkers Ju 87 Stukageschwader of North Africa amp the Mediterranean Osprey Publishing 1998 pp 81 82 The first victim of the air attack was USS Maddox DD 622 which was steaming alone on antisubmarine patrol when she was hit by a bomb dropped by an Italian Ju 87 Stuka at 0421 One of the bombs exploded Maddox s aft magazine causing the ship to roll over and sink within two minutes taking 210 of her crew with her The Stuka returned strafing the 74 survivors before departing Michael G Walling Bloodstained Sands U S Amphibious Operations in World War II Bloomsbury Publishing 2017 p 270 Reggiane Re 2002 Ariete The only serious casualty was the sinking with heavy loss of life of the hospital ship Talamba which was lying fully illuminated five miles off the beaches The War at Sea 1939 1945 part 1 The offensive 1st June 1943 31st May 1944 Stephen Wentworth Roskill p 131 H M Stationery Office 1960 Sunk By Enemy Action SS Talamba The calm was broken at 0635 when a dozen bombers attacked the transport area One bomb narrowly missing Barnett bursting under her port bow and blowing a hole in the number 1 hold killing seven men and injuring thirty five soldiers of the army port battalion With Utmost Spirit Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 Barbara Brooks Tomblin University Press of Kentucky 2014 Bauer Eddy Kilpi Mikko 1975 Toinen maailmansota Suomalaisen laitoksen toimituskunta Keijo Mikola Vilho Tervasmaki Helge Seppala 4 in Finnish Helsinki Werner Soderstrom ISBN 951 0 05844 0 Hugh Pond Sicily Kimber 1962 p 128 Zuehlke 2010 p 183 Soon however Italian troops probably an anti tank battalion and a company of motor cyclists counter attacked There were no sign of the expected British force from Lentini and casualties were mounting Colonel Durnford Slater therefore broke off the action and his unit withdrew commando style in separate groups southward The Mediterranean and Middle East The Campaign in Sicily 1943 and the Campaign in Italy 3rd September 1943 to 31st March 1944 Ian Stanley Ord Playfair p 95 H M Stationery Office 1954 UNIONE NAZIONALE UFFICIALI IN CONGEDO D ITALIA RIVISTA DI CULTURA MILITARE FONDATA NEL 1927 BBC WW2 People s War 3 Commando Bridge www bbc co uk Molony et al 2004 p 77 The 6th Battalion however was counterattacked by the Napoli Division first with tanks and then with infantry The tanks some five in all careered down the road from Palazzola as the Battalion was moving forward four were knocked out but one reached Floridia shooting up Colonel Watson s jeep and wounding the medical officer on the way The infantry attack was launched after the Battalion had moved into its new positions and it was stopped by artillery fire The D L I at War The History of the Durham Light Infantry 1939 1945 David Rissik p 123 Andrews UK Limited 2012 The attack by the Gruppo Tattico Ronco from Divisione Napoli on July 11 included the remnants of 1 75º Rgt and Col Ronco s own 2 75º Rgt fant This attack was coordinated with Gruppo Mobile D which included 18 Renault R 35 tanks and a company of infantry and supporting artillery Sicily 1943 The Debut of Allied joint operations Steven J Zaloga p Bloomsbury Publishing 2013 Ian Blackwell The Battle for Sicily Stepping Stone to Victory Pen amp Sword Military 24 July 2008 p 116 Pond p 117 On 12 July an Axis retreat began all along the line with the Allies advancing close behind The U S advance toward Cancinatii was temporarily held up by a group of Semovente da 90 53 Group Schmalz retreated toward Catania The 246th Coastal Brigade which had been holding off British tanks was ordered to retreat to strongpoints at Cozzo Telegrafo and Acquedolci The Napoli Division s 76th Regiment covered the left flank of Schmalz s Germans who were withdrawing toward Lentini soon the reunited battalions of Napoli s 76th Regiment were ordered to withdraw to Palermo The Hermann Goring Division was tardily withdrawing from the Piano Lupo area toward Caltagirone and the Livorno Division was refusing its right flank in a withdrawal toward Piazza Armerina in a move meant to cover the Hermann Goring Division Regio Esercito The Italian Royal Army in Mussolini s Wars 1935 1943 Patrick Cloutier p 193 Lulu Press 2013 Sulle spiagge di Licata muore il generale Enrico Francisci informatici Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica Servizio sistemi Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana www quirinale it Cloutier p 193 Samuel W Mitcham Friedrich Von Stauffenberg The Battle of Sicily How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victor Stackpole Books 10 June 2007 p 140 Rissik David 1953 The D L I at War The History of the Durham Light Infantry 1939 1945 Durham Light Infantry p 123 Carver R M P 1945 4 Sicily Italy and Home June 1943 to June 1944 History of 4th Armoured Brigade Molony et al 2004 p 94 Samuel Eliot Morison History of United States Naval Operations in World War II Vol 9 Sicily Salerno Anzio January 1943 June 1944 University of Illinois Press 1 March 2002 p 163 Molony et al 2004 p 82 Samuel W Mitcham Blitzkrieg No Longer The German Wehrmacht in Battle 1943 Stackpole Books 2009 p 180 Mitcham and Von Stauffenberg p 80 a b Molony et al 2004 pp 86 87 Carafano James Jay 2006 A Serious Second Front GI ingenuity improvisation technology and winning World War II Greenwood p 100 ISBN 0 275 98698 5 Hoyt 2007 p 29 Molony et al 2004 p 86 THE BRITISH ARMY IN SICILY AUGUST 1943 Imperial War Museums Retrieved 13 September 2020 Quei bambini sul carro armato la Repubblica it Archivio la Repubblica it in Italian Retrieved 13 September 2020 a b Alexander 1948 p 1019 Molony et al 2004 pp 87 89 Molony et al 2004 pp 91 92 Molony et al 2004 p 93 The friendly barrage put up into the night sky by the Allied fleet also served to notify the Italians onshore that Allied aircraft were on their way towards them They soon recognised the silhouttes of the Dakota aircraft and waited for the planes The aircraft then came within range of the waiting guns of the Italian coastal defences Dakota 42 carrying half of the Headquarters of 2 Para including RSM Oliver was shot down and crashed into the sea Another nine Dakotas were claimed by the Italian gunners with numerous more planes being shot up Without the Italians receiving warning from the Allied naval fire the lead aircraft may well have been able to reach the drop zones unmolested potentially changing the course of the battle The First Bridge Too Far Mark Saliger p Casemate Publishers 2018 Dal ponte al mare si costitui cosi un fronte col btg arditi paracadutisti tedeschi e il 372 btg costiero mentre sul fosso Buttaceto era schierato il Gruppo Schmalz E opportuno a questo punto elencare le forze Gaetano Zingali L Invasione della Sicilia 1943 Avvenimenti Militari e Responsabilita Politiche G Crisafulli 1962 p 298 Major Nino Bolla had been sent by his divisional commander General Carlo Gotti from headquarters 213 Coastal Division to take over command of 372 Coastal Battalion Sicily Hugh Pond 137 W Kimber 1962 Il maggiore Nino Bolla che fu uno dei protagonisti della disperata difesa di Catania quella sera si trovava di Catania mando nel settore del Ponte di Primosole le poche forze che aveva disponibili assieme al XXIX gruppo 105 28 Sicilia senza Italia Luglio Agosto 1943 Sandro Attanasio p 151 Mursia 1976 Both the 8th and 9th Battalions tried to snatch a few hours rest during the night The 6th Battalion was still some way behind after clearing up at Solarino and did not arrive till later on the 15th But at 4 a m the 9th Battalion was attacked by some Italian armoured cars which penetrated as far as Battalion Headquarters before being halted Rissik p 123 Giorgio Apostolo Italian Aces of World War 2 Osprey Publishing 25 November 2000 p 25 HMS Indomitable 92 Original Royal Navy HMS Cleopatra Ships Badge WWII 1941 Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Swords Sean Technical history of the beginnings of radar Volume 6 of History of technology series Radar Sonar Navigation and Avionics P Peregrinus on behalf of the Institution of Electrical Engineers 1986 p 129 ISBN 0 86341 043 X Pope Dudley Flag 4 The Battle of Coastal Forces in the Mediterranean 1939 1945 Chatham Publishing 1998 pp 121 122 ISBN 1 86176 067 1 Fioravanzo Giusseppe 1970 Le Azioni Navali in Mediterraneo Dal 1 aprile 1941 all 8 settembre 1943 USMM pp 468 469 in Italian Baroni Piero 2007 La guerra dei radar il suicidio dell Italia 1935 1943 Greco amp Greco p 187 ISBN 8879804316 in Italian a b c Alexander 1948 p 1020 Barbara Tomblin With Utmost Spirit Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 University Press of Kentucky 2004 p 203 Cloutier p 194 Morison p 176 Cloutier p 197 Mitcham p 185 D A Lande I Was With Patton Zenith Imprint 2002 p 81 a b c d e f Alexander 1948 p 1021 Whilst the British and Canadians were fighting for Adrano the Americans had a tough fight of their own to capture the hilltop town of Troina from the 15th Panzergrenadier Division supported by four battliona of the Italian Aosta Division The First Bridge Too Far The Battle of Primosole Bridge 1943 Mark Saliger p Casemate Publishers 2018 The Battle for Sicily Stepping Stone to Victory Ian Blackwell p 181 Pen amp Sword Military 24 July 2008 Mitcham Samuel W Jr Stauffenberg Friedrich Von 2018 The Battle of Sicily How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory Stackpole Books ISBN 9780811734035 via Google Books The Regio Esercito The Italian Royal Army in Mussolini s Wars 1935 1943 Patrick Cloutier p 202 Lulu 2013 Molony et al 2004 p 174 Molony et al 2004 p 177 Alexander 1948 pp 1021 1022 a b Alexander 1948 p 1022 Molony et al 2004 p 163 Molony et al 2004 p 164 Molony et al 2004 p 166 Molony et al 2004 p 175 Molony et al 2004 pp 175 176 Molony et al 2004 p 165 Molony p 112n Molony et al 2004 p 180 Molony et al 2004 p 167 Molony et al 2004 p 181 a b Molony et al 2004 p 168 Lining either side of the Messina Straits were some 150 Italian antiaircraft guns and an estimated 168 of the Germans feared 88mm flak guns The Decisive Campaigns of the Desert Air Force 1942 1945 Bryn Evans p Pen amp Sword 2014 Molony et al 2004 p 179 Years of Expectation Guadalcanal to Normandy Henry H Adams p 127 New York McKay 1973 Molony 182 With Utmost Spirit Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 Barbara Tomlin p 227 University Press of Kentucky 8 October 2004 Rommel s Desert Commanders The Men Who Served the Desert Fox North Africa 1941 1942 Samuel W Mitcham p 80 Greenwood Publishing Group 28 February 2007 a b Decisive Decades A History of the Twentieth Century for Canadians A B Hodgetts J D Burns p 354 T Nelson amp Sons Canada 1973 a b c Le Operazioni in Sicilia e in Calabria Luglio Settembre 1943 Alberto Santoni p 401 Stato maggiore dell Esercito Ufficio storico 1989 Messerschmidt et al 2007 p 1 114 Voices of My Comrades America s Reserve Officers Remember World War II Carol Adele Kelly p 159 Fordham Univ Press 15 December 2007 Silent Wings at War Combate Gliders in World War II John L Lowden p 55 Smithsonian Institution Press 1 May 1992 World War II Companion David M Kennedy p 550 Simon and Schuster 2 October 2007 Mitcham amp von Stauffenberg 2007 p 305 Fabrizio Carloni April 2009 Le atrocita alleate in Sicilia Storia e battaglie p 13 I Crimini Degli Alleati in Sicilia e a Napoli Nella Seconda Guerra Mondiale Il Ruolo della Mafia e Quello della Massoneria Giovanni Bartolone Le altre stragi Le stragi alleate e tedesche nella Sicilia del 1943 1944 in Italian Ezio Costanzo George Lawrence The Mafia and the Allies Sicily 1943 and the Return of the Mafia Enigma 2007 p 119 George Duncan 3 March 2016 Massacres and Atrocities of World War II in the Axis Countries Wayback Machine La Guerra in Sicilia 1943 Storia Fotografica Ezio Costanzo p 130 Le Nove Muse 2009 The Greatest War Americans in Combat 1941 1945 Gerald Astor p 333 Presidio 1 December 1999 Le altre stragi le stragi alleate e tedesche nella Sicilia del 1943 1944 Giovanni Bartolone p 44 2005 Emsley Clive 2013 Soldier Sailor Beggarman Thief Crime and the British Armed Services since 1914 Oxford University Press USA p 128 129 ISBN 0199653712 On 19 July 1943 just over a week into the fighting Sesia recorded a number of unsettling incidents involving the Canadians including drunkenness the shooting of civilians looting and a case of gang rape at Piazza Armerina Why We Fight New Approaches to the Human Dimension of Warfare Robert C Engen H Christian Breede Allan English p McGill Queen s Press 2020 Samual W Mitcham Stephen Von Stauffenberg 2007 The Battle of Sicily How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory Stackpole Books ISBN 9780811734035 Bibliography Edit Alexander Harold 12 February 1948 The Conquest of Sicily from 10 July 1943 to 17 August 1943 Alexander s Despatches published in No 38205 The London Gazette 2nd supplement 10 February 1948 pp 1009 1025 Atkinson Rick 2007 The Day of Battle The War in Sicily and Italy 1943 1944 The Liberation Trilogy vol II New York Henry Holt ISBN 978 0 8050 6289 2 Bimberg Edward L 1999 The Moroccan Goums Westport Conn Greenwood ISBN 0 313 30913 2 Birtle Andrew J 1993 Sicily 1943 The U S Army WWII Campaigns Washington United States Army Center of Military History ISBN 0 16 042081 4 CMH Pub 72 16 Bovi Lorenzo 2013 Sicilia WW2 foto inedite in Italian Siracusa Italy Morrone ISBN 978 88 97672 59 3 Brown Shaun R G 1984 The Loyal Edmonton Regiment at war 1943 1945 M A Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University OCLC 827992837 Carver Field Marshal Lord 2001 The Imperial War Museum Book of the War in Italy 1943 1945 London Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 0 330 48230 0 Copp Terry McGreer Eric Symes Matt 2008 The Canadian Battlefields in Italy Sicily and Southern Italy Waterloo Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies Costanzo Ezio 2003 Sicilia 1943 breve storia dello sbarco alleato in Italian Catania Italy Le Nove Muse ISBN 88 87820 21 X D Este Carlo 2008 Bitter Victory The Battle for Sicily 1943 London Arum Press ISBN 978 1 84513 329 0 Dickson Keith 2001 World War II for Dummies New York City ISBN 9780764553523 Ferguson Gregor Lyles Kevin 1984 The Paras 1940 1984 British airborne forces 1940 1984 Oxford Osprey ISBN 0 85045 573 1 Follain John 2005 Mussolini s Island The Invasion of Sicily Through The Eyes Of Those Who Witnessed The Campaign London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 34083 362 9 Grigg John 1982 1943 The Victory that Never Was London Kensington ISBN 0 8217 1596 8 Hinsley F H 1994 1993 British Intelligence in the Second World War Its influence on Strategy and Operations abridged edition History of the Second World War 2nd rev ed London HMSO ISBN 0 11 630961 X Holland James 2004 Fortress Malta An Island Under Siege 1940 1943 London Phoenix ISBN 978 0 30436 654 5 Hoyt Edwin P 2007 2002 Backwater War The Allied Campaign in Italy 1943 45 Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3382 3 Jowett Philip S Stephen A 2001 The Italian Army 1940 45 Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 85532 866 6 Mitcham Samuel W amp von Stauffenberg Friedrich 2007 1991 The Battle of Sicily How the Allies Lost Their Chance for Total Victory Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3403 5 Playfair I S O Molony C J C Flynn F C amp Gleave T P 2004 1st pub HMSO 1966 Butler J R M ed The Mediterranean and Middle East The Destruction of the Axis Forces in Africa History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series vol IV Uckfield UK Naval amp Military Press ISBN 1 84574 068 8 Molony C J C Flynn F C Davies H L amp Gleave T P 2004 1973 Butler Sir James ed The Mediterranean and Middle East The Campaign in Sicily 1943 and The Campaign in Italy 3 September 1943 to 31 March 1944 History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series vol V pbk repr Naval amp Military Press ed Uckfield UK HMSO ISBN 1 84574 069 6 Shaw A 2002 2000 World War II Day by Day Hoo Grange ISBN 1 84013 363 5 Tomblin Barbara 2004 With Utmost Spirit Allied Naval Operations in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2338 0 Zabecki David T 1995 Operation Mincemeat World War II Magazine History Net November 1995 Retrieved 5 August 2015 Zuehlke Mark 2010 Operation Husky the Canadian invasion of Sicily July 10 August 7 1943 Douglas amp McIntyre ISBN 978 1 55365 539 8 Further reading Edit Birtle Andrew J 2004 Sicily 1943 The U S Army Campaigns of World War II United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 607176966 CMH Pub 72 26 Holland James 2020 Sicily 43 The First Assault on Fortress Europe Hardback London Bantam Press ISBN 978 1 7876 3293 6 Pack S W C 1977 Operation HUSKY The Allied Invasion of Sicily Hippocrene Books ISBN 0882544403 External links EditThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Wikimedia Commons has media related to Operation Husky Describes Operation Mincemeat Gela Beachhead Counterattack of 1943 Husky Operations Plan Sicily Excerpt from The Day Of Battle by Rick Atkinson Canadians in Sicily 1943 Canadians in Sicily Photos battle info video footage and newspaper archives Archived 21 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine World War Two Online Newspaper Archives The Sicilian and Italian Campaigns 1943 1945 Operation Husky The Allied Invasion of Sicily 1943 by Thomas E Nutter Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and Second World War Sicily 2nd World War Best of Sicily History of the Allied Campaign and its social context The 82nd Airborne during World War II Historical Museum of the Military Invasion of Sicily 1943 Museo Storico dello Sbarco in Sicilia 1943 Dedicated to the historical event which culminated in the liberation of Sicily and Italy from the German occupation German Soldiers Cemetery Motta S Anastasia Sicily in German Commonwealth War Cemetery Catania Sicily Syracuse War Cemetery Sicily Sicily Rome American Cemetery and Memorial COHQ bulletin Y6 digest of reports on Operation Husky COHQ bulletin Y1 notes on the planning and assault phase of the Sicilian operation 45th Infantry Division in the Sicilian Campaign The Irish Brigade 1941 47 account of the 38th Irish Brigade in Sicily in August 1943 Licata Landing La Vedettaonline Sicily and the Surrender of Italy Landing at Mollarella Beach US Official History Agrigento Licata from 10 16 July 1 Husky Planning on 10 July 1943 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allied invasion of Sicily amp oldid 1129582908, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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