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Battle of Dunkirk

The Battle of Dunkirk (French: Bataille de Dunkerque) was fought around the French port of Dunkirk (Dunkerque) during the Second World War, between the Allies and Nazi Germany. As the Allies were losing the Battle of France on the Western Front, the Battle of Dunkirk was the defence and evacuation of British and other Allied forces to Britain from 26 May to 4 June 1940.

Battle of Dunkirk
Part of the Battle of France in the Second World War

"Soldiers from the British Expeditionary Force fire at low flying German aircraft during the Dunkirk evacuation" – Soldiers were strafed and bombed by German aircraft while awaiting transport.[1]
Date26 May – 4 June 1940
Location
Result See aftermath
Belligerents
 France
 United Kingdom
 Belgium
 Canada
 Netherlands
 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Maxime Weygand
Georges Blanchard
René Prioux
J.M. Charles Abrial
Lord Gort[2]
Gerd von Rundstedt
Fedor von Bock
Ewald von Kleist
Strength
approx. 400,000
338,226 evacuated
approx. 800,000
Casualties and losses
  • Estimated total casualties
    61,774 killed, wounded, or captured
  • French
    • 18,000 killed, 35,000 captured
    • 3 destroyers
  • British
    • ~3,500 killed[citation needed]
    • 63,879 vehicles including tanks and motorcycles
    • 2,472 field guns
    • 6 destroyers
    • 23 destroyers damaged[3]
    • 89 transport ships[3]
    • 177 aircraft destroyed or damaged in total[4]
    • 127 belonged to RAF Fighter Command.[5]

Estimated total casualties
20,000 killed or wounded

  • 100 tanks
  • 240 aircraft in theatre[4]
  • 156 aircraft on Dunkirk front[6]
Civilian casualties: 1,000 civilians killed during air raids

After the Phoney War, the Battle of France began in earnest on 10 May 1940. To the east, the German Army Group B invaded the Netherlands and advanced westward. In response, the Supreme Allied Commander, French General Maurice Gamelin, initiated "Plan D" and British and French troops entered Belgium to engage the Germans in the Netherlands. French planning for war relied on the Maginot Line fortifications along the German–French border protecting the region of Lorraine but the line did not cover the Belgian border. German forces had already crossed most of the Netherlands before the French forces had arrived. Gamelin instead committed the forces under his command — three mechanised forces, the French First and Seventh Armies and the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) — to the River Dyle. On 14 May, German Army Group A burst through the Ardennes and advanced rapidly westward toward Sedan, turning northward to the English Channel, using Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein's plan Sichelschnitt (under the German strategy Fall Gelb), effectively flanking the Allied forces.[7]

A series of Allied counter-attacks, including the Battle of Arras, failed to sever the German spearhead, which reached the coast on 20 May, separating the BEF near Armentières, the French First Army, and the Belgian Army further to the north from the majority of French troops south of the German penetration. After reaching the Channel, the German forces swung north along the coast, threatening to capture the ports and trap the British and French forces.

In one of the most debated decisions of the war, the Germans halted their advance on Dunkirk. What became known as the "Halt Order" did not originate with Adolf Hitler. Generaloberste (Colonel-Generals) Gerd von Rundstedt and Günther von Kluge suggested that the German forces around the Dunkirk pocket should cease their advance on the port and consolidate to avoid an Allied breakout. Hitler sanctioned the order on 24 May with the support of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (German high command). The army was to halt for three days, which gave the Allies sufficient time to organise the Dunkirk evacuation and build a defensive line. While more than 330,000 Allied troops were rescued,[8] the British and French sustained heavy casualties and were forced to abandon nearly all their equipment; around 16,000 French and 1,000 British soldiers died during the evacuation. The British Expeditionary Force alone lost some 68,000 soldiers during the French campaign.

Prelude

On 10 May 1940, Winston Churchill became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. By 26 May, the BEF and the French 1st Army were bottled up in a corridor to the sea, about 60 miles (97 km) deep and 15 miles (24 km) wide. Most of the British forces were still around Lille, over 40 miles (64 km) from Dunkirk, with the French farther south. Two massive German armies flanked them. General Fedor von Bock's Army Group B was to the east, and General Gerd von Rundstedt's Army Group A to the west. Both officers were later promoted to field marshal.[7]

Halt order

During the following days... it became known that Hitler's decision was mainly influenced by Goering. To the dictator the rapid movement of the Army, whose risks and prospects of success he did not understand because of his lack of military schooling, became almost sinister. He was constantly oppressed by a feeling of anxiety that a reversal loomed...

Halder, in a letter of July 1957[9]

The day's entry concludes with the remark: "The task of Army Group A can be considered to have been completed in the main"—a view which further explains Rundstedt's reluctance to employ his armoured divisions in the final clearing-up stage of this first phase of the campaign.

Major L. F. Ellis[10]

Brauchitsch is angry ... The pocket would have been closed at the coast if only our armour had not been held back. The bad weather has grounded the Luftwaffe and we must now stand and watch countless thousands of the enemy get away to England right under our noses.

Franz Halder, written in his diary on 30 May[11]

On 24 May, Hitler visited General von Rundstedt's headquarters at Charleville. The terrain around Dunkirk was thought unsuitable for armour. Von Rundstedt advised him the infantry should attack the British forces at Arras, where the British had proved capable of significant action, while Kleist's armour held the line west and south of Dunkirk to pounce on the Allied forces retreating before Army Group B. Hitler, who was familiar with Flanders' marshes from the First World War, agreed. This order allowed the Germans to consolidate their gains and prepare for a southward advance against the remaining French forces.

Luftwaffe commander Hermann Göring asked for the chance to destroy the forces in Dunkirk. The Allied forces' destruction was thus initially assigned to the air force while the German infantry organised in Army Group B. Von Rundstedt later called this "one of the great turning points of the war."[12][13][14]

The true reason for the decision to halt the German armour on 24 May is still debated. One theory is that Von Rundstedt and Hitler agreed to conserve the armour for Fall Rot ("Case Red"), an operation to the south. It is possible that the Luftwaffe's closer ties than the army's to the Nazi Party contributed to Hitler's approval of Göring's request. Another theory—which few historians have given credence—is that Hitler was still trying to establish diplomatic peace with Britain before Operation Barbarossa (the invasion of the Soviet Union). Although von Rundstedt after the war stated his suspicions that Hitler wanted "to help the British", based on alleged praise of the British Empire during a visit to his headquarters, little evidence that Hitler wanted to let the Allies escape exists apart from a self-exculpatory statement by Hitler himself in 1945.[12][14][15] The historian Brian Bond wrote:

Few historians now accept the view that Hitler's behaviour was influenced by the desire to let the British off lightly in [the] hope that they would then accept a compromise peace. True, in his political testament dated 26 February 1945 Hitler lamented that Churchill was "quite unable to appreciate the sporting spirit" in which he had refrained from annihilating [the] British Expeditionary Force, at Dunkirk, but this hardly squares with the contemporary record. Directive No. 13, issued by the Supreme Headquarters on 24 May called specifically for the annihilation of the French, English and Belgian forces in the pocket, while the Luftwaffe was ordered to prevent the escape of the English forces across the channel.[16]

Whatever the reasons for Hitler's decision, the Germans confidently believed the Allied troops were doomed. American journalist William Shirer reported on 25 May, "German military circles here tonight put it flatly. They said the fate of the great Allied army bottled up in Flanders is sealed." BEF commander General Lord Gort VC commander-in-chief (C-in-C) of the BEF agreed, writing to Anthony Eden, "I must not conceal from you that a great part of the BEF and its equipment will inevitably be lost in the best of circumstances".[14]

Hitler did not rescind the Halt Order until the evening of 26 May. The three days thus gained gave a vital breathing space to the Royal Navy to arrange the evacuation of the British and Allied troops. About 338,000 men were rescued in about 11 days. Of these some 215,000 were British and 123,000 were French, of whom 102,250 escaped in British ships.[17]

Battle

"Fight back to the west"

 
Map of the battle

On 26 May, Anthony Eden told Gort that he might need to "fight back to the west", and ordered him to prepare plans for the evacuation, but without telling the French or the Belgians. Gort had foreseen the order and preliminary plans were already in hand. The first such plan, for a defence along the Lys Canal, could not be carried out because of German advances on 26 May, with the 2nd and 50th Divisions pinned down, and the 1st, 5th and 48th Divisions under heavy attack. The 2nd Division took heavy casualties trying to keep a corridor open, being reduced to brigade strength, but they succeeded; the 1st, 3rd, 4th and 42nd Divisions escaped along the corridor that day, as did about one-third of the French First Army. As the Allies fell back, they disabled their artillery and vehicles and destroyed their stores.[18][19][20]

On 27 May, the British fought back to the Dunkirk perimeter line. The Le Paradis massacre took place that day, when the 3rd SS Division Totenkopf machine-gunned 97 British and French prisoners near the La Bassée Canal. The British prisoners were from the 2nd Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment, part of the 4th Brigade of the 2nd Division. The SS men lined them up against the wall of a barn and shot them all; only two survived. Meanwhile, the Luftwaffe dropped bombs and leaflets on the Allied armies. The leaflets showed a map of the situation. They read, in English and French: "British soldiers! Look at the map: it gives your true situation! Your troops are entirely surrounded—stop fighting! Put down your arms!" To the land- and air-minded Germans, the sea seemed an impassable barrier, so they believed the Allies were surrounded; but the British saw the sea as a route to safety.[21][22]

Besides the Luftwaffe's bombs, German heavy artillery (which had just come within range) also fired high-explosive shells into Dunkirk. By this time, over 1,000 civilians in the town had been killed. This bombardment continued until the evacuation was over.[19]

Battle of Wytschaete

Gort had sent Lieutenant General Ronald Adam, commanding III Corps, ahead to build the defensive perimeter around Dunkirk; his corps command passed to Lieutenant General Sydney Rigby Wason from the GHQ staff.[23] Lieutenant General Alan Brooke, commanding II Corps, was to conduct a holding action with the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 50th Divisions along the Ypres-Comines canal as far as Yser, while the rest of the BEF fell back. The battle of Wytschaete, over the border in Belgium, was the toughest action Brooke faced in this role.[24]

On 26 May, the Germans made a reconnaissance in force against the British position. At mid-day on 27 May, they launched a full-scale attack with three divisions south of Ypres. A confused battle followed, where visibility was low because of forested or urban terrain and communications were poor because the British at that time used no radios below battalion level and the telephone wires had been cut. The Germans used infiltration tactics to get among the British, who were beaten back.[25]

The heaviest fighting was in the 5th Division's sector. Still on 27 May, Brooke ordered the 3rd Division commander, Major-General Bernard Montgomery, to extend his division's line to the left, thereby freeing the 10th and 11th Brigades, both of the 4th Division, to join the 5th Division at Messines Ridge. The 10th Brigade arrived first, to find the enemy had advanced so far they were closing on the British field artillery. Between them, the 10th and 11th Brigades cleared the ridge of Germans, and by 28 May they were securely dug in east of Wytschaete.[26]

That day, Brooke ordered a counterattack. This was to be spearheaded by two battalions, the 3rd Grenadier Guards and 2nd North Staffordshire Regiment, both of Major-General Harold Alexander's 1st Division. The North Staffords advanced as far as the Kortekeer River, while the Grenadiers reached the canal itself, but could not hold it. The counterattack disrupted the Germans, holding them back a little longer while the BEF retreated.[27]

Action at Poperinge

The route back from Brooke's position to Dunkirk passed through the town of Poperinge (known to most British sources as "Poperinghe"), where there was a bottleneck at a bridge over the Yser canal. Most of the main roads in the area converged on that bridge. On 27 May, the Luftwaffe bombed the resulting traffic jam thoroughly for two hours, destroying or immobilising about 80 percent of the vehicles. Another Luftwaffe raid, on the night of 28–29 May, was illuminated by flares as well as the light from burning vehicles. The British 44th Division in particular had to abandon many guns and lorries, losing almost all of them between Poperinge and the Mont.[28]

The German 6. Panzerdivision could probably have destroyed the 44th Division at Poperinge on 29 May, thereby cutting off the 3rd and 50th Divisions as well. The historian and author Julian Thompson calls it "astonishing" that they did not, but they were distracted, investing the nearby town of Cassel.[29]

Belgian surrender

Gort had ordered Lieutenant General Adam, commanding III Corps, and French General Fagalde to prepare a perimeter defence of Dunkirk. The perimeter was semicircular, with French troops manning the western sector and British troops the eastern. It ran along the Belgian coastline from Nieuwpoort in the east via Veurne, Bulskamp and Bergues to Gravelines in the west. The line was made as strong as possible under the circumstances. On 28 May the Belgian army fighting on the Lys river under the command of King Leopold III surrendered. This left a 20 mi (32 km) gap in Gort's eastern flank between the British and the sea. The British were surprised by the Belgian capitulation, despite King Leopold warning them in advance.[30][31] As a constitutional monarch, Leopold's decision to surrender without consulting the Belgian government led to his condemnation by the Belgian and French Prime Ministers, Hubert Pierlot and Paul Reynaud. Gort sent the battle-worn 3rd, 4th and 50th Divisions into the line to fill the space the Belgians had held.[32]

Defence of the perimeter

 
British prisoners of war with a Panzer I German tank

While they were still moving into position, they ran headlong into the German 256th Division, who were trying to outflank Gort. Armoured cars of the 12th Royal Lancers stopped the Germans at Nieuwpoort itself. A confused battle raged all along the perimeter throughout 28 May. Command and control on the British side disintegrated, and the perimeter was driven slowly inwards toward Dunkirk.[32]

Meanwhile, Erwin Rommel had surrounded five divisions of the French First Army near Lille. Although completely cut off and heavily outnumbered, the French fought on for four days under General Molinié in the Siege of Lille, thereby keeping seven German divisions from the assault on Dunkirk and saving an estimated 100,000 Allied troops.[32] In recognition of the garrison's stubborn defence, German general Kurt Waeger granted them the honours of war, saluting the French troops as they marched past in parade formation with rifles shouldered.[33]

The defence of the Dunkirk perimeter held throughout 29–30 May, with the Allies falling back by degrees. On 31 May, the Germans nearly broke through at Nieuwpoort. The situation grew so desperate that two British battalion commanders manned a Bren gun, with one colonel firing and the other loading. A few hours later, the 2nd Battalion, Coldstream Guards of the 3rd Division, rushed to reinforce the line near Furnes, where the British troops had been routed. The Guards restored order by shooting some of the fleeing troops and turning others around at bayonet point. The British troops returned to the line and the German assault was beaten back.[34]

In the afternoon, the Germans breached the perimeter near the canal at Bulskamp, but the boggy ground on the far side of the canal and sporadic fire from the Durham Light Infantry halted them. As night fell, the Germans massed for another attack at Nieuwpoort. Eighteen RAF bombers found the Germans while they were still assembling and scattered them with an accurate bombing run.[35]

Retreat to Dunkirk

Also on 31 May, General von Küchler assumed command of all the German forces at Dunkirk. His plan was simple: launch an all-out attack across the whole front at 11:00 on 1 June. Strangely, von Küchler ignored a radio intercept telling him the British were abandoning the eastern end of the line to fall back to Dunkirk itself.[36] During the night of 31 May/1 June 1940, Marcus Ervine-Andrews won the Victoria Cross in the battle when he defended 1,000 yards (910 m) of territory.[37]

The morning of 1 June was clear—good flying weather, in contrast to the bad weather that had hindered air operations on 30 and 31 May (there were only two-and-a-half good flying days in the whole operation.) Although Churchill had promised the French that the British would cover their escape, on the ground it was the French who held the line whilst the last remaining British soldiers were evacuated. Enduring concentrated German artillery fire and Luftwaffe strafing and bombs, the outnumbered French stood their ground. On 2 June (the day the last of the British units embarked onto the ships),[Notes 1] the French began to fall back slowly, and by 3 June the Germans were about 2 miles (3.2 km) from Dunkirk. The night of 3 June was the last night of evacuations. At 10:20 on 4 June, the Germans hoisted the swastika over the docks from which so many British and French troops had escaped.[39][40][41]

The resistance of Allied forces, especially the French forces, including the French 12th Motorised Infantry Division from the Fort des Dunes, had bought time for the evacuation of the bulk of the troops. The Wehrmacht captured some 35,000 soldiers, almost all of them French. These men had protected the evacuation until the last moment and were unable to embark. The same fate was reserved for the survivors of the French 12th Motorised Infantry Division (composed in particular of the French 150th Infantry Regiment); they were taken prisoner on the morning of 4 June on the beach of Malo-les-Bains. The flag of this regiment was burnt so as not to fall into enemy hands.[42][page needed]

Evacuation

The War Office made the decision to evacuate British forces on 25 May. In the nine days from 27 May to 4 June 338,226 men escaped, including 139,997 French, Polish, and Belgian troops, together with a small number of Dutch soldiers, aboard 861 vessels (of which 243 were sunk during the operation). B. H. Liddell Hart wrote that Fighter Command lost 106 aircraft over Dunkirk and the Luftwaffe lost about 135, some of which were shot down by the French Navy and the Royal Navy. MacDonald wrote in 1986 that the British losses were 177 aircraft and German losses 240.[39][41][43]

The docks at Dunkirk were too badly damaged to be used, but the east and west moles (sea walls protecting the harbour entrance) were intact. Captain William Tennant—in charge of the evacuation—decided to use the beaches and the east mole to land the ships. This highly successful idea hugely increased the number of troops that could be embarked each day, and on 31 May, over 68,000 men were embarked.[44]

The last of the British Army left on 3 June, and at 10:50, Tennant signalled Ramsay to say "Operation completed. Returning to Dover". Churchill insisted on going back for the French, and the Royal Navy returned on 4 June to rescue as many as possible of the French rearguard. Over 26,000 French soldiers were evacuated on that last day, but between 30,000 and 40,000 more were left behind and captured by the Germans. Around 16,000 French soldiers and 1,000 British soldiers died during the evacuation. 90% of Dunkirk was destroyed during the battle.[45]

Aftermath

 
Troops evacuated from Dunkirk at Dover, 31 May 1940
 
Battle of Dunkirk memorial

Following the events at Dunkirk, the German forces regrouped before commencing operation Fall Rot, a renewed assault southward, starting on 5 June. Although the French soldiers who had been evacuated at Dunkirk returned to France a few hours later to stop the German advance and two fresh British divisions had begun moving to France in an attempt to form a Second BEF, the decision was taken on 14 June to withdraw all the remaining British troops, an evacuation called Operation Aerial. By 25 June, almost 192,000 Allied personnel, 144,000 of them British, had been evacuated through various French ports.[46] Although the French Army fought on, German troops entered Paris on 14 June. The French government was forced to negotiate an armistice at Compiègne on 22 June.[47]

The loss of materiel on the beaches was enormous. The British Army left enough equipment behind to fit out about eight to ten divisions.[citation needed] Discarded in France were, among other things, huge supplies of ammunition, 880 field guns, 310 guns of large calibre, some 500 anti-aircraft guns, about 850 anti-tank guns, 11,000 machine guns, nearly 700 tanks, 20,000 motorcycles and 45,000 motor cars and lorries. Army equipment available at home was only just sufficient to equip two divisions.[citation needed] The British Army needed months to re-supply properly, and some planned introductions of new equipment were halted while industrial resources concentrated on making good the losses. Officers told troops falling back from Dunkirk to burn or otherwise disable their trucks (so as not to let them benefit the advancing German forces). The shortage of army vehicles after Dunkirk was so severe that the Royal Army Service Corps (RASC) was reduced to retrieving and refurbishing obsolete buses and coaches from British scrapyards to press them into use as troop transports.[according to whom?] Some of these antique workhorses were still in use as late as the North African campaign of 1942.[48]

On 2 June, the Dean of St Paul's, Walter Matthews, was the first to call the evacuation the "Miracle of Dunkirk".

During the following week papers were filled with letters from readers making an obvious association. It was remembered that the Archbishop of Canterbury had announced that the Day of National Prayer might well be a turning point, and it was obvious to many that God had answered the nation's collective prayer with the 'miracle of Dunkirk'. The evidence of God's intervention was clear for those who wished to see it; papers had written of calm seas and the high mist which interfered with the accuracy of German bombers.

— Duncan Anderson[49]

A marble memorial to the battle stands at Dunkirk. The French inscription is translated as: "To the glorious memory of the pilots, mariners, and soldiers of the French and Allied armies who sacrificed themselves in the Battle of Dunkirk, May–June 1940." The missing dead of the BEF are commemorated on the Dunkirk Memorial.[citation needed]

A considerable number of British troops remained in France after Dunkirk to the south of the River Somme. These numbered some 140,000 men, mostly logistic support and lines-of-communications troops, but also including the 51st (Highland) Division and the remnants of the 1st Armoured Division. On 2 June, Lieutenant General Brooke was ordered back to France to form a Second BEF together with two further infantry divisions to follow, a project which Brooke believed was doomed to failure.[50] After learning that most of the 51st Division had surrendered, having been cut off at St Valery-en-Caux on the Channel coast, Brooke spoke to Churchill by telephone on 14 June and persuaded him to allow the evacuation of all the remaining British forces in France. In Operation Aerial, 144,171 British, 18,246 French, 24,352 Polish and 1,939 Czech troops were embarked in ships at several major ports along the west coast of France and returned to England, along with much of their equipment. The only major mishap was the sinking of the RMS Lancastria with the loss of perhaps 6,000 men. The last British troops left France on 25 June, the day the French Armistice came into force.[51]

"Dunkirk Spirit"

British press later exploited the successful evacuation of Dunkirk in 1940, and particularly the role of the "Dunkirk little ships", very effectively. Many of them were private vessels such as fishing boats and pleasure cruisers, but commercial vessels such as ferries also contributed to the force, including a number from as far away as the Isle of Man and Glasgow. These smaller vessels—guided by naval craft across the Channel from the Thames Estuary and from Dover—assisted in the official evacuation. Being able to move closer into the beachfront shallows than larger craft, the "little ships" acted as shuttles to and from the larger ships, lifting troops who were queuing in the water, many waiting shoulder-deep in water for hours. The term "Dunkirk Spirit" refers to the solidarity of the British people in times of adversity.[52]

Dunkirk Medal

A commemorative medal was established in 1960 by the French National Association of Veterans of the Fortified Sector of Flanders and Dunkirk on behalf of the town of Dunkirk.[53] The medal was initially awarded only to the French defenders of Dunkirk, but in 1970 the qualification was expanded to include British forces who served in the Dunkirk sector and their rescue forces, including the civilians who volunteered to man the "little ships".[54]

The design of the bronze medal included the arms of the town of Dunkirk on one side, and "Dunkerque 1940" on the reverse side.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Major General Harold Alexander, commanding I Corps, was one of the last to leave. Just before midnight on 2 June, Ramsay received the signal: "BEF evacuated".[38]

Citations

  1. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 736 Footnote
  2. ^ Ellis, Major L F. "The War in France and Flanders 1939–1940 (Chapter XII: Dunkirk Bethune and Ypres)". History of the Second World War. from the original on 30 May 2007 – via Hyperwar Foundation.
  3. ^ a b Hooton 2010, p. 71.
  4. ^ a b Murray 2002, p. 42 (1985 ed.)
  5. ^ Franks 2008, pp. 33–39.
  6. ^ Franks 2008, p. 160.
  7. ^ a b MacDonald 1986, p. 8.
  8. ^ Frieser 2005, pp. 291–292.
  9. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 879.
  10. ^ Butler 2004, p. 151.
  11. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 883.
  12. ^ a b Taylor & Mayer 1974, p. 60.
  13. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 877.
  14. ^ a b c Atkin 1990, p. 120.
  15. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 27.
  16. ^ Bond 1990, pp. 104–105.
  17. ^ Lord 1982, p. 148.
  18. ^ Liddell Hart 1970, p. 40.
  19. ^ a b MacDonald 1986, p. 12.
  20. ^ Sebag-Montefiore 2006, p. 250.
  21. ^ Lord 1982, pp. 74–76.
  22. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 882.
  23. ^ Grehan 2018, Chapter 4.
  24. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 174–178.
  25. ^ Thompson 2009, p. 179.
  26. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 182–183.
  27. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 183–184.
  28. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 186–192, 215.
  29. ^ Thompson 2009, p. 219.
  30. ^ Anderson, Professor Duncan. "Day of National Prayer." 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine BBC. Retrieved: 30 July 2009.
  31. ^ Sebag-Montefiore 2006, p. 303.
  32. ^ a b c Liddell Hart 1970, p. 41.
  33. ^ Fermer 2013, p. 208.
  34. ^ Lord 1982, p. 199.
  35. ^ Lord 1982, p. 200.
  36. ^ Lord 1982, p. 210.
  37. ^ "Captain (later Lieutenant Colonel) Harold Marcus Ervine-Andrews VC | Lancashire Infantry Museum". www.lancashireinfantrymuseum.org.uk. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  38. ^ MacDonald 1986, p. 18.
  39. ^ a b MacDonald 1986, p. 16.
  40. ^ Lord 1982, p. 246.
  41. ^ a b Liddell Hart 1970, p. 46.
  42. ^ Carse 1970.
  43. ^ Shirer 1959, p. 884.
  44. ^ MacDonald 1986, pp. 12, 16.
  45. ^ Lord 1982, pp. 267–269.
  46. ^ Butler 2004, pp. 296–305.
  47. ^ "France - German aggressions | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  48. ^ Postan 1952, Chapter IV.
  49. ^ Anderson, Professor Duncan (17 February 2011), Spinning Dunkirk, BBC, from the original on 31 October 2016, retrieved 30 July 2009
  50. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 314–315.
  51. ^ Thompson 2009, pp. 337–338.
  52. ^ Rodgers, Lucy. "The men who defined the 'Dunkirk spirit'." 24 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine BBC, 14 May 2010. Retrieved: 30 July 2010.
  53. ^ "Medals: campaigns, descriptions and eligibility". www.gov.uk. from the original on 23 June 2017. Retrieved 2 June 2017.
  54. ^ "Dunkirk Medal (1940)". from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 11 July 2017.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Franks, Norman. The Air Battle of Dunkirk (2008 [1983], William Kimber, London) ISBN 0-7183-0349-0
  • Holland, James. The Rise of Germany. New York, NY: Atlantic Monthly Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-8021-2397-8
  • Holmes, Richard, ed. "France: Fall of". The Oxford Companion to Military History. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-19-866209-2.
  • Hooton, E.R. Luftwaffe at War; Blitzkrieg in the West. London: Chevron/Ian Allan, 2007. ISBN 978-1-85780-272-6.
  • Keegan, John. The Second World War. New York: Viking Penguin, 1989. ISBN 0-670-82359-7.
  • Kilzer, Louis. Hitler's Traitor: Martin Bormann and the Defeat of the Reich. New York: Presidio Press, 2000. ISBN 0-89141-710-9.
  • McEwan, Ian. Atonement. London: Jonathan Cape, 2001. ISBN 0-224-06252-2.
  • McGlashan, Kenneth B. with Owen P. Zupp. Down to Earth: A Fighter Pilot Recounts His Experiences of Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain, Dieppe, D-Day and Beyond. London: Grub Street Publishing, 2007. ISBN 1-904943-84-5.
  • Murray, Williamson and Allan R. Millett. A War to Be Won: Fighting the Second World War. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press, 2000. ISBN 0-674-00163-X.
  • Salmaggi, Cesare and Alfredo Pallavisini. 2194 Days of War: An Illustrated Chronology of the Second World War. New York: Gallery Books, 1993. ISBN 0-8317-8885-2.
  • Smith, Peter C (2011). The Junkers Ju 87 Stuka: A Complete History. London: Crecy Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-0-85979-156-4.
  • Thomas, Nick. RAF Top Gun: Teddy Donaldson CB, DSO, AFC and Bar, Battle of Britain Ace and World Air Speed Record Holder. London: Pen and Sword, 2008. ISBN 1-84415-685-0.
  • Weinberg, Gerhard L. A World at Arms. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-521-44317-2.
  • Wilmot, Chester. The Struggle for Europe. Old Saybrook, Connecticut: Konecky & Konecky, 1952. ISBN 1-56852-525-7

External links

  • War Museum of Dunkirk
  • Churchill: We shall fight on the beaches - UK Parliament Living Heritage
  • Battle of Dunkirk short documentary with footage, from British Pathé
  • Maps of the battle from the BBC
  • Dunkirk 1940 (museum)

Coordinates: 51°02′03″N 2°22′37″E / 51.0343°N 2.37682°E / 51.0343; 2.37682

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This article is about the Second World War battle in 1940 For details about the major evacuation of Allied troops from Dunkirk see Dunkirk evacuation For the other battles of the name see Battle of Dunkirk disambiguation The Battle of Dunkirk French Bataille de Dunkerque was fought around the French port of Dunkirk Dunkerque during the Second World War between the Allies and Nazi Germany As the Allies were losing the Battle of France on the Western Front the Battle of Dunkirk was the defence and evacuation of British and other Allied forces to Britain from 26 May to 4 June 1940 Battle of DunkirkPart of the Battle of France in the Second World War Soldiers from the British Expeditionary Force fire at low flying German aircraft during the Dunkirk evacuation Soldiers were strafed and bombed by German aircraft while awaiting transport 1 Date26 May 4 June 1940LocationDunkirk FranceResultSee aftermathBelligerents France United Kingdom Belgium Canada Netherlands GermanyCommanders and leadersMaxime Weygand Georges Blanchard Rene Prioux J M Charles Abrial Lord Gort 2 Gerd von Rundstedt Fedor von Bock Ewald von KleistStrengthapprox 400 000 338 226 evacuatedapprox 800 000Casualties and lossesEstimated total casualties61 774 killed wounded or captured French 18 000 killed 35 000 captured 3 destroyers British 3 500 killed citation needed 63 879 vehicles including tanks and motorcycles 2 472 field guns 6 destroyers 23 destroyers damaged 3 89 transport ships 3 177 aircraft destroyed or damaged in total 4 127 belonged to RAF Fighter Command 5 Estimated total casualties 20 000 killed or wounded 100 tanks 240 aircraft in theatre 4 156 aircraft on Dunkirk front 6 Civilian casualties 1 000 civilians killed during air raids After the Phoney War the Battle of France began in earnest on 10 May 1940 To the east the German Army Group B invaded the Netherlands and advanced westward In response the Supreme Allied Commander French General Maurice Gamelin initiated Plan D and British and French troops entered Belgium to engage the Germans in the Netherlands French planning for war relied on the Maginot Line fortifications along the German French border protecting the region of Lorraine but the line did not cover the Belgian border German forces had already crossed most of the Netherlands before the French forces had arrived Gamelin instead committed the forces under his command three mechanised forces the French First and Seventh Armies and the British Expeditionary Force BEF to the River Dyle On 14 May German Army Group A burst through the Ardennes and advanced rapidly westward toward Sedan turning northward to the English Channel using Generalfeldmarschall Erich von Manstein s plan Sichelschnitt under the German strategy Fall Gelb effectively flanking the Allied forces 7 A series of Allied counter attacks including the Battle of Arras failed to sever the German spearhead which reached the coast on 20 May separating the BEF near Armentieres the French First Army and the Belgian Army further to the north from the majority of French troops south of the German penetration After reaching the Channel the German forces swung north along the coast threatening to capture the ports and trap the British and French forces In one of the most debated decisions of the war the Germans halted their advance on Dunkirk What became known as the Halt Order did not originate with Adolf Hitler Generaloberste Colonel Generals Gerd von Rundstedt and Gunther von Kluge suggested that the German forces around the Dunkirk pocket should cease their advance on the port and consolidate to avoid an Allied breakout Hitler sanctioned the order on 24 May with the support of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht German high command The army was to halt for three days which gave the Allies sufficient time to organise the Dunkirk evacuation and build a defensive line While more than 330 000 Allied troops were rescued 8 the British and French sustained heavy casualties and were forced to abandon nearly all their equipment around 16 000 French and 1 000 British soldiers died during the evacuation The British Expeditionary Force alone lost some 68 000 soldiers during the French campaign Contents 1 Prelude 2 Halt order 3 Battle 3 1 Fight back to the west 3 2 Battle of Wytschaete 3 3 Action at Poperinge 3 4 Belgian surrender 3 5 Defence of the perimeter 3 6 Retreat to Dunkirk 4 Evacuation 5 Aftermath 6 Dunkirk Spirit 7 Dunkirk Medal 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 9 4 Further reading 10 External linksPrelude EditSee also Operation David On 10 May 1940 Winston Churchill became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom By 26 May the BEF and the French 1st Army were bottled up in a corridor to the sea about 60 miles 97 km deep and 15 miles 24 km wide Most of the British forces were still around Lille over 40 miles 64 km from Dunkirk with the French farther south Two massive German armies flanked them General Fedor von Bock s Army Group B was to the east and General Gerd von Rundstedt s Army Group A to the west Both officers were later promoted to field marshal 7 Halt order EditSee also Battle of Arras 1940 During the following days it became known that Hitler s decision was mainly influenced by Goering To the dictator the rapid movement of the Army whose risks and prospects of success he did not understand because of his lack of military schooling became almost sinister He was constantly oppressed by a feeling of anxiety that a reversal loomed Halder in a letter of July 1957 9 The day s entry concludes with the remark The task of Army Group A can be considered to have been completed in the main a view which further explains Rundstedt s reluctance to employ his armoured divisions in the final clearing up stage of this first phase of the campaign Major L F Ellis 10 Brauchitsch is angry The pocket would have been closed at the coast if only our armour had not been held back The bad weather has grounded the Luftwaffe and we must now stand and watch countless thousands of the enemy get away to England right under our noses Franz Halder written in his diary on 30 May 11 On 24 May Hitler visited General von Rundstedt s headquarters at Charleville The terrain around Dunkirk was thought unsuitable for armour Von Rundstedt advised him the infantry should attack the British forces at Arras where the British had proved capable of significant action while Kleist s armour held the line west and south of Dunkirk to pounce on the Allied forces retreating before Army Group B Hitler who was familiar with Flanders marshes from the First World War agreed This order allowed the Germans to consolidate their gains and prepare for a southward advance against the remaining French forces Luftwaffe commander Hermann Goring asked for the chance to destroy the forces in Dunkirk The Allied forces destruction was thus initially assigned to the air force while the German infantry organised in Army Group B Von Rundstedt later called this one of the great turning points of the war 12 13 14 The true reason for the decision to halt the German armour on 24 May is still debated One theory is that Von Rundstedt and Hitler agreed to conserve the armour for Fall Rot Case Red an operation to the south It is possible that the Luftwaffe s closer ties than the army s to the Nazi Party contributed to Hitler s approval of Goring s request Another theory which few historians have given credence is that Hitler was still trying to establish diplomatic peace with Britain before Operation Barbarossa the invasion of the Soviet Union Although von Rundstedt after the war stated his suspicions that Hitler wanted to help the British based on alleged praise of the British Empire during a visit to his headquarters little evidence that Hitler wanted to let the Allies escape exists apart from a self exculpatory statement by Hitler himself in 1945 12 14 15 The historian Brian Bond wrote Few historians now accept the view that Hitler s behaviour was influenced by the desire to let the British off lightly in the hope that they would then accept a compromise peace True in his political testament dated 26 February 1945 Hitler lamented that Churchill was quite unable to appreciate the sporting spirit in which he had refrained from annihilating the British Expeditionary Force at Dunkirk but this hardly squares with the contemporary record Directive No 13 issued by the Supreme Headquarters on 24 May called specifically for the annihilation of the French English and Belgian forces in the pocket while the Luftwaffe was ordered to prevent the escape of the English forces across the channel 16 Whatever the reasons for Hitler s decision the Germans confidently believed the Allied troops were doomed American journalist William Shirer reported on 25 May German military circles here tonight put it flatly They said the fate of the great Allied army bottled up in Flanders is sealed BEF commander General Lord Gort VC commander in chief C in C of the BEF agreed writing to Anthony Eden I must not conceal from you that a great part of the BEF and its equipment will inevitably be lost in the best of circumstances 14 Hitler did not rescind the Halt Order until the evening of 26 May The three days thus gained gave a vital breathing space to the Royal Navy to arrange the evacuation of the British and Allied troops About 338 000 men were rescued in about 11 days Of these some 215 000 were British and 123 000 were French of whom 102 250 escaped in British ships 17 Battle Edit Fight back to the west Edit Map of the battle On 26 May Anthony Eden told Gort that he might need to fight back to the west and ordered him to prepare plans for the evacuation but without telling the French or the Belgians Gort had foreseen the order and preliminary plans were already in hand The first such plan for a defence along the Lys Canal could not be carried out because of German advances on 26 May with the 2nd and 50th Divisions pinned down and the 1st 5th and 48th Divisions under heavy attack The 2nd Division took heavy casualties trying to keep a corridor open being reduced to brigade strength but they succeeded the 1st 3rd 4th and 42nd Divisions escaped along the corridor that day as did about one third of the French First Army As the Allies fell back they disabled their artillery and vehicles and destroyed their stores 18 19 20 On 27 May the British fought back to the Dunkirk perimeter line The Le Paradis massacre took place that day when the 3rd SS Division Totenkopf machine gunned 97 British and French prisoners near the La Bassee Canal The British prisoners were from the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment part of the 4th Brigade of the 2nd Division The SS men lined them up against the wall of a barn and shot them all only two survived Meanwhile the Luftwaffe dropped bombs and leaflets on the Allied armies The leaflets showed a map of the situation They read in English and French British soldiers Look at the map it gives your true situation Your troops are entirely surrounded stop fighting Put down your arms To the land and air minded Germans the sea seemed an impassable barrier so they believed the Allies were surrounded but the British saw the sea as a route to safety 21 22 Besides the Luftwaffe s bombs German heavy artillery which had just come within range also fired high explosive shells into Dunkirk By this time over 1 000 civilians in the town had been killed This bombardment continued until the evacuation was over 19 Battle of Wytschaete Edit Main article Battle of the Ypres Comines Canal Gort had sent Lieutenant General Ronald Adam commanding III Corps ahead to build the defensive perimeter around Dunkirk his corps command passed to Lieutenant General Sydney Rigby Wason from the GHQ staff 23 Lieutenant General Alan Brooke commanding II Corps was to conduct a holding action with the 3rd 4th 5th and 50th Divisions along the Ypres Comines canal as far as Yser while the rest of the BEF fell back The battle of Wytschaete over the border in Belgium was the toughest action Brooke faced in this role 24 On 26 May the Germans made a reconnaissance in force against the British position At mid day on 27 May they launched a full scale attack with three divisions south of Ypres A confused battle followed where visibility was low because of forested or urban terrain and communications were poor because the British at that time used no radios below battalion level and the telephone wires had been cut The Germans used infiltration tactics to get among the British who were beaten back 25 The heaviest fighting was in the 5th Division s sector Still on 27 May Brooke ordered the 3rd Division commander Major General Bernard Montgomery to extend his division s line to the left thereby freeing the 10th and 11th Brigades both of the 4th Division to join the 5th Division at Messines Ridge The 10th Brigade arrived first to find the enemy had advanced so far they were closing on the British field artillery Between them the 10th and 11th Brigades cleared the ridge of Germans and by 28 May they were securely dug in east of Wytschaete 26 That day Brooke ordered a counterattack This was to be spearheaded by two battalions the 3rd Grenadier Guards and 2nd North Staffordshire Regiment both of Major General Harold Alexander s 1st Division The North Staffords advanced as far as the Kortekeer River while the Grenadiers reached the canal itself but could not hold it The counterattack disrupted the Germans holding them back a little longer while the BEF retreated 27 Action at Poperinge Edit The route back from Brooke s position to Dunkirk passed through the town of Poperinge known to most British sources as Poperinghe where there was a bottleneck at a bridge over the Yser canal Most of the main roads in the area converged on that bridge On 27 May the Luftwaffe bombed the resulting traffic jam thoroughly for two hours destroying or immobilising about 80 percent of the vehicles Another Luftwaffe raid on the night of 28 29 May was illuminated by flares as well as the light from burning vehicles The British 44th Division in particular had to abandon many guns and lorries losing almost all of them between Poperinge and the Mont 28 The German 6 Panzerdivision could probably have destroyed the 44th Division at Poperinge on 29 May thereby cutting off the 3rd and 50th Divisions as well The historian and author Julian Thompson calls it astonishing that they did not but they were distracted investing the nearby town of Cassel 29 Belgian surrender Edit Gort had ordered Lieutenant General Adam commanding III Corps and French General Fagalde to prepare a perimeter defence of Dunkirk The perimeter was semicircular with French troops manning the western sector and British troops the eastern It ran along the Belgian coastline from Nieuwpoort in the east via Veurne Bulskamp and Bergues to Gravelines in the west The line was made as strong as possible under the circumstances On 28 May the Belgian army fighting on the Lys river under the command of King Leopold III surrendered This left a 20 mi 32 km gap in Gort s eastern flank between the British and the sea The British were surprised by the Belgian capitulation despite King Leopold warning them in advance 30 31 As a constitutional monarch Leopold s decision to surrender without consulting the Belgian government led to his condemnation by the Belgian and French Prime Ministers Hubert Pierlot and Paul Reynaud Gort sent the battle worn 3rd 4th and 50th Divisions into the line to fill the space the Belgians had held 32 Defence of the perimeter Edit British prisoners of war with a Panzer I German tank While they were still moving into position they ran headlong into the German 256th Division who were trying to outflank Gort Armoured cars of the 12th Royal Lancers stopped the Germans at Nieuwpoort itself A confused battle raged all along the perimeter throughout 28 May Command and control on the British side disintegrated and the perimeter was driven slowly inwards toward Dunkirk 32 Meanwhile Erwin Rommel had surrounded five divisions of the French First Army near Lille Although completely cut off and heavily outnumbered the French fought on for four days under General Molinie in the Siege of Lille thereby keeping seven German divisions from the assault on Dunkirk and saving an estimated 100 000 Allied troops 32 In recognition of the garrison s stubborn defence German general Kurt Waeger granted them the honours of war saluting the French troops as they marched past in parade formation with rifles shouldered 33 The defence of the Dunkirk perimeter held throughout 29 30 May with the Allies falling back by degrees On 31 May the Germans nearly broke through at Nieuwpoort The situation grew so desperate that two British battalion commanders manned a Bren gun with one colonel firing and the other loading A few hours later the 2nd Battalion Coldstream Guards of the 3rd Division rushed to reinforce the line near Furnes where the British troops had been routed The Guards restored order by shooting some of the fleeing troops and turning others around at bayonet point The British troops returned to the line and the German assault was beaten back 34 In the afternoon the Germans breached the perimeter near the canal at Bulskamp but the boggy ground on the far side of the canal and sporadic fire from the Durham Light Infantry halted them As night fell the Germans massed for another attack at Nieuwpoort Eighteen RAF bombers found the Germans while they were still assembling and scattered them with an accurate bombing run 35 Retreat to Dunkirk Edit Also on 31 May General von Kuchler assumed command of all the German forces at Dunkirk His plan was simple launch an all out attack across the whole front at 11 00 on 1 June Strangely von Kuchler ignored a radio intercept telling him the British were abandoning the eastern end of the line to fall back to Dunkirk itself 36 During the night of 31 May 1 June 1940 Marcus Ervine Andrews won the Victoria Cross in the battle when he defended 1 000 yards 910 m of territory 37 The morning of 1 June was clear good flying weather in contrast to the bad weather that had hindered air operations on 30 and 31 May there were only two and a half good flying days in the whole operation Although Churchill had promised the French that the British would cover their escape on the ground it was the French who held the line whilst the last remaining British soldiers were evacuated Enduring concentrated German artillery fire and Luftwaffe strafing and bombs the outnumbered French stood their ground On 2 June the day the last of the British units embarked onto the ships Notes 1 the French began to fall back slowly and by 3 June the Germans were about 2 miles 3 2 km from Dunkirk The night of 3 June was the last night of evacuations At 10 20 on 4 June the Germans hoisted the swastika over the docks from which so many British and French troops had escaped 39 40 41 The resistance of Allied forces especially the French forces including the French 12th Motorised Infantry Division from the Fort des Dunes had bought time for the evacuation of the bulk of the troops The Wehrmacht captured some 35 000 soldiers almost all of them French These men had protected the evacuation until the last moment and were unable to embark The same fate was reserved for the survivors of the French 12th Motorised Infantry Division composed in particular of the French 150th Infantry Regiment they were taken prisoner on the morning of 4 June on the beach of Malo les Bains The flag of this regiment was burnt so as not to fall into enemy hands 42 page needed Evacuation EditMain article Dunkirk evacuation The War Office made the decision to evacuate British forces on 25 May In the nine days from 27 May to 4 June 338 226 men escaped including 139 997 French Polish and Belgian troops together with a small number of Dutch soldiers aboard 861 vessels of which 243 were sunk during the operation B H Liddell Hart wrote that Fighter Command lost 106 aircraft over Dunkirk and the Luftwaffe lost about 135 some of which were shot down by the French Navy and the Royal Navy MacDonald wrote in 1986 that the British losses were 177 aircraft and German losses 240 39 41 43 The docks at Dunkirk were too badly damaged to be used but the east and west moles sea walls protecting the harbour entrance were intact Captain William Tennant in charge of the evacuation decided to use the beaches and the east mole to land the ships This highly successful idea hugely increased the number of troops that could be embarked each day and on 31 May over 68 000 men were embarked 44 The last of the British Army left on 3 June and at 10 50 Tennant signalled Ramsay to say Operation completed Returning to Dover Churchill insisted on going back for the French and the Royal Navy returned on 4 June to rescue as many as possible of the French rearguard Over 26 000 French soldiers were evacuated on that last day but between 30 000 and 40 000 more were left behind and captured by the Germans Around 16 000 French soldiers and 1 000 British soldiers died during the evacuation 90 of Dunkirk was destroyed during the battle 45 Aftermath Edit Troops evacuated from Dunkirk at Dover 31 May 1940 Battle of Dunkirk memorial Following the events at Dunkirk the German forces regrouped before commencing operation Fall Rot a renewed assault southward starting on 5 June Although the French soldiers who had been evacuated at Dunkirk returned to France a few hours later to stop the German advance and two fresh British divisions had begun moving to France in an attempt to form a Second BEF the decision was taken on 14 June to withdraw all the remaining British troops an evacuation called Operation Aerial By 25 June almost 192 000 Allied personnel 144 000 of them British had been evacuated through various French ports 46 Although the French Army fought on German troops entered Paris on 14 June The French government was forced to negotiate an armistice at Compiegne on 22 June 47 The loss of materiel on the beaches was enormous The British Army left enough equipment behind to fit out about eight to ten divisions citation needed Discarded in France were among other things huge supplies of ammunition 880 field guns 310 guns of large calibre some 500 anti aircraft guns about 850 anti tank guns 11 000 machine guns nearly 700 tanks 20 000 motorcycles and 45 000 motor cars and lorries Army equipment available at home was only just sufficient to equip two divisions citation needed The British Army needed months to re supply properly and some planned introductions of new equipment were halted while industrial resources concentrated on making good the losses Officers told troops falling back from Dunkirk to burn or otherwise disable their trucks so as not to let them benefit the advancing German forces The shortage of army vehicles after Dunkirk was so severe that the Royal Army Service Corps RASC was reduced to retrieving and refurbishing obsolete buses and coaches from British scrapyards to press them into use as troop transports according to whom Some of these antique workhorses were still in use as late as the North African campaign of 1942 48 On 2 June the Dean of St Paul s Walter Matthews was the first to call the evacuation the Miracle of Dunkirk During the following week papers were filled with letters from readers making an obvious association It was remembered that the Archbishop of Canterbury had announced that the Day of National Prayer might well be a turning point and it was obvious to many that God had answered the nation s collective prayer with the miracle of Dunkirk The evidence of God s intervention was clear for those who wished to see it papers had written of calm seas and the high mist which interfered with the accuracy of German bombers Duncan Anderson 49 A marble memorial to the battle stands at Dunkirk The French inscription is translated as To the glorious memory of the pilots mariners and soldiers of the French and Allied armies who sacrificed themselves in the Battle of Dunkirk May June 1940 The missing dead of the BEF are commemorated on the Dunkirk Memorial citation needed A considerable number of British troops remained in France after Dunkirk to the south of the River Somme These numbered some 140 000 men mostly logistic support and lines of communications troops but also including the 51st Highland Division and the remnants of the 1st Armoured Division On 2 June Lieutenant General Brooke was ordered back to France to form a Second BEF together with two further infantry divisions to follow a project which Brooke believed was doomed to failure 50 After learning that most of the 51st Division had surrendered having been cut off at St Valery en Caux on the Channel coast Brooke spoke to Churchill by telephone on 14 June and persuaded him to allow the evacuation of all the remaining British forces in France In Operation Aerial 144 171 British 18 246 French 24 352 Polish and 1 939 Czech troops were embarked in ships at several major ports along the west coast of France and returned to England along with much of their equipment The only major mishap was the sinking of the RMS Lancastria with the loss of perhaps 6 000 men The last British troops left France on 25 June the day the French Armistice came into force 51 Dunkirk Spirit EditFurther information Little ships of Dunkirk British press later exploited the successful evacuation of Dunkirk in 1940 and particularly the role of the Dunkirk little ships very effectively Many of them were private vessels such as fishing boats and pleasure cruisers but commercial vessels such as ferries also contributed to the force including a number from as far away as the Isle of Man and Glasgow These smaller vessels guided by naval craft across the Channel from the Thames Estuary and from Dover assisted in the official evacuation Being able to move closer into the beachfront shallows than larger craft the little ships acted as shuttles to and from the larger ships lifting troops who were queuing in the water many waiting shoulder deep in water for hours The term Dunkirk Spirit refers to the solidarity of the British people in times of adversity 52 Dunkirk Medal EditMain article Dunkirk Medal A commemorative medal was established in 1960 by the French National Association of Veterans of the Fortified Sector of Flanders and Dunkirk on behalf of the town of Dunkirk 53 The medal was initially awarded only to the French defenders of Dunkirk but in 1970 the qualification was expanded to include British forces who served in the Dunkirk sector and their rescue forces including the civilians who volunteered to man the little ships 54 The design of the bronze medal included the arms of the town of Dunkirk on one side and Dunkerque 1940 on the reverse side See also Edit United Kingdom portal War portal France portal Military of Germany portal World War II portal1940 Dunkirk Veterans AssociationReferences EditNotes Edit Major General Harold Alexander commanding I Corps was one of the last to leave Just before midnight on 2 June Ramsay received the signal BEF evacuated 38 Citations Edit Shirer 1959 p 736 Footnote Ellis Major L F The War in France and Flanders 1939 1940 Chapter XII Dunkirk Bethune and Ypres History of the Second World War Archived from the original on 30 May 2007 via Hyperwar Foundation a b Hooton 2010 p 71 a b Murray 2002 p 42 1985 ed Franks 2008 pp 33 39 Franks 2008 p 160 a b MacDonald 1986 p 8 Frieser 2005 pp 291 292 Shirer 1959 p 879 Butler 2004 p 151 Shirer 1959 p 883 a b Taylor amp Mayer 1974 p 60 Shirer 1959 p 877 a b c Atkin 1990 p 120 Kershaw 2008 p 27 Bond 1990 pp 104 105 Lord 1982 p 148 Liddell Hart 1970 p 40 a b MacDonald 1986 p 12 Sebag Montefiore 2006 p 250 Lord 1982 pp 74 76 Shirer 1959 p 882 Grehan 2018 Chapter 4 Thompson 2009 pp 174 178 Thompson 2009 p 179 Thompson 2009 pp 182 183 Thompson 2009 pp 183 184 Thompson 2009 pp 186 192 215 Thompson 2009 p 219 Anderson Professor Duncan Day of National Prayer Archived 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine BBC Retrieved 30 July 2009 Sebag Montefiore 2006 p 303 a b c Liddell Hart 1970 p 41 Fermer 2013 p 208 Lord 1982 p 199 Lord 1982 p 200 Lord 1982 p 210 Captain later Lieutenant Colonel Harold Marcus Ervine Andrews VC Lancashire Infantry Museum www lancashireinfantrymuseum org uk Retrieved 21 August 2020 MacDonald 1986 p 18 a b MacDonald 1986 p 16 Lord 1982 p 246 a b Liddell Hart 1970 p 46 Carse 1970 Shirer 1959 p 884 MacDonald 1986 pp 12 16 Lord 1982 pp 267 269 Butler 2004 pp 296 305 France German aggressions Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 30 March 2022 Postan 1952 Chapter IV Anderson Professor Duncan 17 February 2011 Spinning Dunkirk BBC archived from the original on 31 October 2016 retrieved 30 July 2009 Thompson 2009 pp 314 315 Thompson 2009 pp 337 338 Rodgers Lucy The men who defined the Dunkirk spirit Archived 24 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine BBC 14 May 2010 Retrieved 30 July 2010 Medals campaigns descriptions and eligibility www gov uk Archived from the original on 23 June 2017 Retrieved 2 June 2017 Dunkirk Medal 1940 Archived from the original on 9 August 2017 Retrieved 11 July 2017 Bibliography Edit Atkin Ronald 1990 Pillar of Fire Dunkirk 1940 Edinburgh Birlinn Limited ISBN 978 1 84158 078 4 Bond Brian 1990 Britain France and Belgium 1939 1940 London Brasseys ISBN 978 0 08 037700 1 Butler J R M 2004 The War in France and Flanders 1939 1940 Official Campaign History Uckfield UK Naval amp Military Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 84574 056 6 Carse Robert 1970 Dunkirk 1940 A History Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 221077 5 Fermer Douglas 2013 Three German Invasions of France The Summer Campaigns of 1870 1914 and 1940 Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 78159 354 7 Franks Norman 2008 Royal Air Force Fighter Command Losses of the Second World War Volume 1 Operational Losses Aircraft and crews 1939 1941 London Midland Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 85780 286 3 Frieser Karl Heinz 2005 The Blitzkrieg Legend The 1940 Campaign in the West Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 294 2 Grehan John 2018 Dunkirk Nine Days That Saved an Army A Day by Day Account of the Greatest Evacuation Yorkshire Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 5267 2484 7 Hooton E R 2010 The Luftwaffe A Study in Air Power 1933 1945 London Classic Publications ISBN 978 1 906537 18 0 Kershaw Ian 2008 Fateful Choices Ten Decisions That Changed the World 1940 1941 London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 101418 0 Liddell Hart Basil Henry 1970 History of the Second World War New York G P Putnam ISBN 978 0 306 80912 5 Lord Walter 1982 The Miracle of Dunkirk London Allen Lane 1983 Citations from the Wordsworth Military Library reprint of 1998 New York The Viking Press ISBN 978 1 85326 685 0 MacDonald John 1986 Great Battles of World War II Toronto Canada Strathearn Books Limited ISBN 978 0 86288 116 0 Murray Willamson 2002 Strategy for Defeat The Luftwaffe 1935 1945 Princeton New Jersey University Press of the Pacific ISBN 978 0 89875 797 2 Postan Michael M 1952 History of the Second World War British War Production London H M Stationery Office OCLC 2175640 Sebag Montefiore Hugh 2006 Dunkirk Fight to the Last Man London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 141 02437 0 Shirer William L 1959 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 330 70001 6 Taylor A J P Mayer S L 1974 A History of World War Two London Octopus Books ISBN 978 0 7064 0399 2 Thompson Julian 2009 Dunkirk Retreat to Victory London Pan Books ISBN 978 0 330 43796 7 Further reading Edit Franks Norman The Air Battle of Dunkirk 2008 1983 William Kimber London ISBN 0 7183 0349 0 Holland James The Rise of Germany New York NY Atlantic Monthly Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 8021 2397 8 Holmes Richard ed France Fall of The Oxford Companion to Military History New York Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 866209 2 Hooton E R Luftwaffe at War Blitzkrieg in the West London Chevron Ian Allan 2007 ISBN 978 1 85780 272 6 Keegan John The Second World War New York Viking Penguin 1989 ISBN 0 670 82359 7 Kilzer Louis Hitler s Traitor Martin Bormann and the Defeat of the Reich New York Presidio Press 2000 ISBN 0 89141 710 9 McEwan Ian Atonement London Jonathan Cape 2001 ISBN 0 224 06252 2 McGlashan Kenneth B with Owen P Zupp Down to Earth A Fighter Pilot Recounts His Experiences of Dunkirk the Battle of Britain Dieppe D Day and Beyond London Grub Street Publishing 2007 ISBN 1 904943 84 5 Murray Williamson and Allan R Millett A War to Be Won Fighting the Second World War Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap Press 2000 ISBN 0 674 00163 X Salmaggi Cesare and Alfredo Pallavisini 2194 Days of War An Illustrated Chronology of the Second World War New York Gallery Books 1993 ISBN 0 8317 8885 2 Smith Peter C 2011 The Junkers Ju 87 Stuka A Complete History London Crecy Publishing Limited ISBN 978 0 85979 156 4 Thomas Nick RAF Top Gun Teddy Donaldson CB DSO AFC and Bar Battle of Britain Ace and World Air Speed Record Holder London Pen and Sword 2008 ISBN 1 84415 685 0 Weinberg Gerhard L A World at Arms New York Cambridge University Press 1994 ISBN 0 521 44317 2 Wilmot Chester The Struggle for Europe Old Saybrook Connecticut Konecky amp Konecky 1952 ISBN 1 56852 525 7External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Operation Dynamo War Museum of Dunkirk Churchill We shall fight on the beaches UK Parliament Living Heritage Dunkirk Operation Dynamo A post blog of the Battle of Britain 1940 Battle of Dunkirk short documentary with footage from British Pathe Maps of the battle from the BBC Dunkirk 1940 museum Coordinates 51 02 03 N 2 22 37 E 51 0343 N 2 37682 E 51 0343 2 37682 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Dunkirk amp oldid 1128008352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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