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Battle of Marseille

Battle of Marseille
Part of Mediterranean and Middle East Theatre and the European Theatre of World War II

(From left to right) André Diethelm, Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, Joseph de Goislard de Monsabert and Emmanuel d'Astier de La Vigerie reviewing the 7th Algerian Tirailleurs Regiment in liberated Marseille, 29 August 1944
Date21–28 August 1944
Location
Marseille, southern France
43°20′N 5°23′E / 43.33°N 5.38°E / 43.33; 5.38
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
Free France Germany
Commanders and leaders
Joseph de Goislard de Monsabert
Veli Dedi[1]
Hans Schäfer
Units involved
II Corps 244th Division
Strength
French Army: 12,000 13,000
Casualties and losses
1,400[2] 2,000 killed and wounded
11,000 captured

The Battle of Marseille was an urban battle of World War II that took place August 21–28, 1944, and led to the liberation of Marseille by Free French forces under the command of General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny. The groundwork was laid by the Allied invasion of southern France in Operation Dragoon on 15 August 1944 by the United States Seventh Army, with major support from the French First Army.

Background edit

Along with Toulon, the main port for the French Navy (French: Marine nationale), the Port of Marseilles was a vital objective.[2]: 88  The port, its facilities, and the rail and road links up the Rhone valley, being essential to the liberation of southern France and the ultimate defeat of German forces. After the successful execution of Operation Overlord (the Normandy landings), attention shifted to the south. Most ports in the north were unusable, or too heavily fortified (e.g. Cherbourg, Brest, Lorient, Saint Nazaire), which made seizure and control of the French ports at Marseille and Toulon increasingly attractive.[3] In addition, the French leaders pressed for an invasion in southern France. Finally, after many delays, on 14 July, Operation Dragoon was authorized by the Allied Combined Chiefs of Staff.[4][5] The groundwork was laid by the Allied invasion of southern France in Operation Dragoon on 15 August by the United States Seventh Army under General Patch, with support from the French First Army who began landing on 16 August and would within days amount to two thirds of the Dragoon troops on the ground. Patch gave the order to General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny to take the cities of Toulon and Marseille, which were to be attacked simultaneously with de Larminat in charge of attacking Toulon.

Defences edit

German defences centred on almost static infantry units guarding the coastal areas, with 11th Panzer Division providing a mobile reserve.

At Marseille the 244th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht) provided the main defence, comprising three Grenadier regiments, the 932nd, 933rd and 934th together with an artillery regiment.[2]: 112–3 

Existing French Army defensive points, including large artillery batteries, provided a reasonable seaward defence. The landward side defence was augmented with mines and the digging of weapons pits, trenches and tank obstacles.[2]: 77 

On 20 August the Germans scuttled the ships that were in the harbour: one tanker, one cable laying ship, three passenger ships, and 20 cargo ships.[6]

Resistance edit

 
The Marseille transporter bridge

Marseille played host to two major resistance movements, the non communist coalition known as Mouvements Unis de la Résistance (MUR) with 800 men and the French Communist Party Francs-Tireurs et Partisans (FTP) with 2,000 men.[2]: 95  Gaston Defferre was a leading figure in MUR as well as heading the Allied intelligence network. Both MUR and the Allies had operated a policy of non arming of communist groups. In February 1944 the creation of French Forces of the Interior (FFI) in theory merged the two groups, however they stayed opposed to each other until the FFI was absorbed into the regular French Army.

On 23 August, with French Army troops approaching the city suburbs, the Resistance took over the city's Prefecture. The German garrison could easily have destroyed this opposition, but seemed distracted by the regular French Army.[2]: 125 

15–29 August edit

Softening up using heavy bombers to attack gun positions around Marseilles began on 12 August, the city had few anti aircraft defences. The 23/24 attacks scored some direct hits on gun positions in the Marseille area and roaming fighter bombers took on targets of opportunity.[2]: 125 

On 21 August the approaches to Marseille were cut, isolating the Marseille garrison.[7] Units closed in on the suburbs. The Germans blew up the Marseille Transporter Bridge to try to block the port.

Ordered to clear the suburbs of Marseille, on 24 August 3rd Algerian Infantry Division occupied the centre of Marseilles.[8] General Joseph de Goislard de Monsabert decided that with the Resistance rising up and 1st Combat Command moving on the Old Port, he would call upon the Germans to surrender, but was refused.[2]: 125 

Pockets of resistance were mopped up on 26 August. A German explosive-controlled boat attack on minesweepers sweeping channels to the port was broken up, and eight were sunk.[9]

The main German resistance centred on the old fort of St Nicolas. French artillery opened up on the fort and after two days it was clear that resistance was futile and the Marseille garrison surrendered on 27 August. On 29 August marines from the cruisers USS Augusta and USS Philadelphia accepted the surrender of Germans on the fortified harbour islands.[2]: 126 

French casualties were over 1,800 and they took 11,000 prisoners.[10]

Port edit

The ports of Toulon and Marseille were captured in 14 days, when the plan of attack had estimated D+40.[2]: 126 

The Old Port of Marseille appeared to be in complete ruins. According to eye-witness accounts, in January 1943, the Germans, aided by the French police, dynamited much of the historic old town and demolished the gigantic aerial ferry or "transbordeur", an engineering tour de force that had become a major landmark of Marseille, comparable to the Eiffel tower in Paris. However, the harbour was still functional. In August 1944 Hitler ordered his troops under the command of General Hans Schäfer to hold Marseille "to the last man and last cartridge" and destroy the harbour beyond repair if defeat was inevitable. But Schäfer refused to let the majority of his men become casualties and allowed only partial demolition. He and his 11,000 surviving troops surrendered on August 28.[11]

The main Marseille-Fos Port facilities suffered damage from 2,000 mines that were used to destroy quays, bridges, moles, cranes and sheds,[12] however with hard work, two weeks later, the first ship entered the port to begin unloading supplies.[2]: 126 

The landing of supplies increased rapidly, with 57,000 tonnes (63,000 short tons) of rail freight moving from the port in September, plus 200,000 tonnes (220,000 short tons) by truck.[13]: 188 

A fuel pipe line was built,[13]: 191  it started at Martigues and utilising storage tanks in the La Mede refinery. The harbour was mined and it was 9 September when the first tanker docked. A tug assisting it dock hit a mine. Pipe laying started the same day. Six teams, each laying over three kilometres (two miles) of 100-millimetre (4 in) pipe a day. Interim storage and dispensing points were built. When completed it was capable of moving 450 tonnes (500 short tons) of petrol a day, which reduced the problems caused by a shortage of jerrycans and trucks. A second 150 mm (6 in) pipeline would be laid and it eventually reached the Sarrebourg, 850 km away. By Spring 1945, 4,500,000 litres (1,200,000 US gal) were being pumped every day. Meeting the requirements of both the Seventh United States Army and the First Army (France).[14]

By mid October, with the repairs to the railway lines, especially bridges, freight increased. The southern route would become a significant source of supplies to help the Allied advance into Germany, moving over 91,000 tonnes (100,000 short tons) a week[15] and providing about one third of the total Allied requirement.[16]

Aftermath edit

The left wing French resistance took over the city administration and the American forces did not have an easy time of getting their requirements met, using the city as a rest and relaxation centre was not appreciated.[2]: 126 

General Charles de Gaulle took a dim view of FTP and the part it played in the liberation. He ensured that these paramilitary units were absorbed into the regular army, so eliminating any threat against him. The French Army presence in southern France combined with the Leclerc's 2nd Armoured Liberation of Paris elevated De Gaulle to the leader of the Provisional Government of the French Republic in the eyes of the Allied Politicians.

The port of Marseille had been the prime route for the shipping of Red Cross parcels from Lisbon to the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva, for onward transport to PoW camps. Operation Dragoon put a stop to that,[17] although a few parcels did start arriving again through Toulon in November.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mucaj, Diana (2022). VELI DEDI Biografia e një njeriu që ia dedikoi jetën luftës për liri. Albania: Henrietta Leavitt. ISBN 978-9928-4543-8-6.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Tucker-Jones, Anthony (2009). Operation Dragoon. ISBN 978-1848841406.
  3. ^ Yeide (2007), p. 14
  4. ^ Yeide (2007), p. 13
  5. ^ Zaloga (2009), pp. 6–7
  6. ^ "WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944" (PDF). WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION. p. 67.
  7. ^ "WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944" (PDF). WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION. p. 68.
  8. ^ "WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944" (PDF). WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION. p. 79.
  9. ^ "WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944" (PDF). WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION. p. 88.
  10. ^ . p. 19. Archived from the original on 12 March 2007. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  11. ^ Hansen, Randall (2014). Disobeying Hitler: German Resistance After Operation Valkyrie, pp. 142-152.
  12. ^ "One City, One Port". marseille-port.
  13. ^ a b Devers, Jacob (18 February 2015). General Jacob Devers: World War II's Forgotten Four Star. ISBN 9780253015266.
  14. ^ "Fueling the Front lines" (PDF). p. 37.
  15. ^ "Victory's Foundation: US Logistical Support of the Allied Mediterranean Campaign, 1942-1945". p. 419.
  16. ^ Zaloga (2009), p. 71
  17. ^ "AMERICAN. PRISONEES OF WAR IN GERMANY Prepared by MILITARY INTELLIGENCB SERVICE WAR DEPARTMENT 15 July 1944". 486th.

Bibliography edit

  • Yeide, Harry (2007). First to the Rhine: The 6th Army Group In World War II. Zenith Press. ISBN 978-0-7603-3146-0.
  • Zaloga, Steven J. (2009). Operation Dragoon 1944: France's other D-Day. Osprey Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84603-367-4.
  • Gaujac, Paul (1985). L'Armée de la victoire [The Army of Victory]. Les Grandes batailles de France (in French). Vol. 3 De la Provence à l'Alsace. Paris: Charles-Lavauzelle. pp. 124–137. ISBN 978-2-702-50126-9. OCLC 461876740..
  • Jean de Lattre de Tassigny (1949). Histoire de la première armée française [History of the First French Army] (in French). Plon. ISBN 978-2258007055.
  • François de Linares (2005). Par les portes du Nord : la libération de Toulon et Marseille en 1944 [By the Northern Ports: the Liberation of Toulon and Marseilles in 1944] (in French). Paris: Nouvelles éditions latines. ISBN 978-2-723-32056-6. OCLC 62176140.

External links edit

  • La libération de Notre Dame de la Garde le 25 août 1944
  • Sur la Canebière, la jeep du colonel Chappuis arborant des drapeaux blancs, Marseille, 22-23 août 1944
  • Le général de Monsabert et le colonel Chappuis en août 1944 à Marseille

battle, marseille, confused, with, roundup, marseille, siege, massilia, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, french, july, 2015, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version. Not to be confused with Roundup of Marseille or Siege of Massilia You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French July 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the French article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Bataille de Marseille see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Bataille de Marseille to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Battle of MarseillePart of Mediterranean and Middle East Theatre and the European Theatre of World War II From left to right Andre Diethelm Jean de Lattre de Tassigny Joseph de Goislard de Monsabert and Emmanuel d Astier de La Vigerie reviewing the 7th Algerian Tirailleurs Regiment in liberated Marseille 29 August 1944Date21 28 August 1944LocationMarseille southern France43 20 N 5 23 E 43 33 N 5 38 E 43 33 5 38ResultAllied victoryBelligerentsFree FranceGermanyCommanders and leadersJoseph de Goislard de Monsabert Veli Dedi 1 Hans SchaferUnits involvedII Corps244th DivisionStrengthFrench Army 12 00013 000Casualties and losses1 400 2 2 000 killed and wounded11 000 captured The Battle of Marseille was an urban battle of World War II that took place August 21 28 1944 and led to the liberation of Marseille by Free French forces under the command of General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny The groundwork was laid by the Allied invasion of southern France in Operation Dragoon on 15 August 1944 by the United States Seventh Army with major support from the French First Army Contents 1 Background 2 Defences 3 Resistance 4 15 29 August 5 Port 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksBackground editAlong with Toulon the main port for the French Navy French Marine nationale the Port of Marseilles was a vital objective 2 88 The port its facilities and the rail and road links up the Rhone valley being essential to the liberation of southern France and the ultimate defeat of German forces After the successful execution of Operation Overlord the Normandy landings attention shifted to the south Most ports in the north were unusable or too heavily fortified e g Cherbourg Brest Lorient Saint Nazaire which made seizure and control of the French ports at Marseille and Toulon increasingly attractive 3 In addition the French leaders pressed for an invasion in southern France Finally after many delays on 14 July Operation Dragoon was authorized by the Allied Combined Chiefs of Staff 4 5 The groundwork was laid by the Allied invasion of southern France in Operation Dragoon on 15 August by the United States Seventh Army under General Patch with support from the French First Army who began landing on 16 August and would within days amount to two thirds of the Dragoon troops on the ground Patch gave the order to General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny to take the cities of Toulon and Marseille which were to be attacked simultaneously with de Larminat in charge of attacking Toulon Defences editGerman defences centred on almost static infantry units guarding the coastal areas with 11th Panzer Division providing a mobile reserve At Marseille the 244th Infantry Division Wehrmacht provided the main defence comprising three Grenadier regiments the 932nd 933rd and 934th together with an artillery regiment 2 112 3 Existing French Army defensive points including large artillery batteries provided a reasonable seaward defence The landward side defence was augmented with mines and the digging of weapons pits trenches and tank obstacles 2 77 On 20 August the Germans scuttled the ships that were in the harbour one tanker one cable laying ship three passenger ships and 20 cargo ships 6 Resistance edit nbsp The Marseille transporter bridgeMarseille played host to two major resistance movements the non communist coalition known as Mouvements Unis de la Resistance MUR with 800 men and the French Communist Party Francs Tireurs et Partisans FTP with 2 000 men 2 95 Gaston Defferre was a leading figure in MUR as well as heading the Allied intelligence network Both MUR and the Allies had operated a policy of non arming of communist groups In February 1944 the creation of French Forces of the Interior FFI in theory merged the two groups however they stayed opposed to each other until the FFI was absorbed into the regular French Army On 23 August with French Army troops approaching the city suburbs the Resistance took over the city s Prefecture The German garrison could easily have destroyed this opposition but seemed distracted by the regular French Army 2 125 15 29 August editSoftening up using heavy bombers to attack gun positions around Marseilles began on 12 August the city had few anti aircraft defences The 23 24 attacks scored some direct hits on gun positions in the Marseille area and roaming fighter bombers took on targets of opportunity 2 125 On 21 August the approaches to Marseille were cut isolating the Marseille garrison 7 Units closed in on the suburbs The Germans blew up the Marseille Transporter Bridge to try to block the port Ordered to clear the suburbs of Marseille on 24 August 3rd Algerian Infantry Division occupied the centre of Marseilles 8 General Joseph de Goislard de Monsabert decided that with the Resistance rising up and 1st Combat Command moving on the Old Port he would call upon the Germans to surrender but was refused 2 125 Pockets of resistance were mopped up on 26 August A German explosive controlled boat attack on minesweepers sweeping channels to the port was broken up and eight were sunk 9 The main German resistance centred on the old fort of St Nicolas French artillery opened up on the fort and after two days it was clear that resistance was futile and the Marseille garrison surrendered on 27 August On 29 August marines from the cruisers USS Augusta and USS Philadelphia accepted the surrender of Germans on the fortified harbour islands 2 126 French casualties were over 1 800 and they took 11 000 prisoners 10 Port editThe ports of Toulon and Marseille were captured in 14 days when the plan of attack had estimated D 40 2 126 The Old Port of Marseille appeared to be in complete ruins According to eye witness accounts in January 1943 the Germans aided by the French police dynamited much of the historic old town and demolished the gigantic aerial ferry or transbordeur an engineering tour de force that had become a major landmark of Marseille comparable to the Eiffel tower in Paris However the harbour was still functional In August 1944 Hitler ordered his troops under the command of General Hans Schafer to hold Marseille to the last man and last cartridge and destroy the harbour beyond repair if defeat was inevitable But Schafer refused to let the majority of his men become casualties and allowed only partial demolition He and his 11 000 surviving troops surrendered on August 28 11 The main Marseille Fos Port facilities suffered damage from 2 000 mines that were used to destroy quays bridges moles cranes and sheds 12 however with hard work two weeks later the first ship entered the port to begin unloading supplies 2 126 The landing of supplies increased rapidly with 57 000 tonnes 63 000 short tons of rail freight moving from the port in September plus 200 000 tonnes 220 000 short tons by truck 13 188 A fuel pipe line was built 13 191 it started at Martigues and utilising storage tanks in the La Mede refinery The harbour was mined and it was 9 September when the first tanker docked A tug assisting it dock hit a mine Pipe laying started the same day Six teams each laying over three kilometres two miles of 100 millimetre 4 in pipe a day Interim storage and dispensing points were built When completed it was capable of moving 450 tonnes 500 short tons of petrol a day which reduced the problems caused by a shortage of jerrycans and trucks A second 150 mm 6 in pipeline would be laid and it eventually reached the Sarrebourg 850 km away By Spring 1945 4 500 000 litres 1 200 000 US gal were being pumped every day Meeting the requirements of both the Seventh United States Army and the First Army France 14 By mid October with the repairs to the railway lines especially bridges freight increased The southern route would become a significant source of supplies to help the Allied advance into Germany moving over 91 000 tonnes 100 000 short tons a week 15 and providing about one third of the total Allied requirement 16 Aftermath editThe left wing French resistance took over the city administration and the American forces did not have an easy time of getting their requirements met using the city as a rest and relaxation centre was not appreciated 2 126 General Charles de Gaulle took a dim view of FTP and the part it played in the liberation He ensured that these paramilitary units were absorbed into the regular army so eliminating any threat against him The French Army presence in southern France combined with the Leclerc s 2nd Armoured Liberation of Paris elevated De Gaulle to the leader of the Provisional Government of the French Republic in the eyes of the Allied Politicians The port of Marseille had been the prime route for the shipping of Red Cross parcels from Lisbon to the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva for onward transport to PoW camps Operation Dragoon put a stop to that 17 although a few parcels did start arriving again through Toulon in November See also edit nbsp History portal nbsp France portal nbsp Germany portalBattle of Toulon 1944 FFI Nazi Germany Operation Dragoon Vichy France Zone libreReferences edit Mucaj Diana 2022 VELI DEDI Biografia e nje njeriu qe ia dedikoi jeten luftes per liri Albania Henrietta Leavitt ISBN 978 9928 4543 8 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l Tucker Jones Anthony 2009 Operation Dragoon ISBN 978 1848841406 Yeide 2007 p 14 Yeide 2007 p 13 Zaloga 2009 pp 6 7 WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944 PDF WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION p 67 WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944 PDF WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION p 68 WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944 PDF WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION p 79 WORLD WAR II A CHRONOLOGY AUGUST 1944 PDF WAR DEPARTMENT SPECIAL STAFF HISTORICAL DIVISION p 88 Southern France p 19 Archived from the original on 12 March 2007 Retrieved 19 November 2015 Hansen Randall 2014 Disobeying Hitler German Resistance After Operation Valkyrie pp 142 152 One City One Port marseille port a b Devers Jacob 18 February 2015 General Jacob Devers World War II s Forgotten Four Star ISBN 9780253015266 Fueling the Front lines PDF p 37 Victory s Foundation US Logistical Support of the Allied Mediterranean Campaign 1942 1945 p 419 Zaloga 2009 p 71 AMERICAN PRISONEES OF WAR IN GERMANY Prepared by MILITARY INTELLIGENCB SERVICE WAR DEPARTMENT 15 July 1944 486th Bibliography editYeide Harry 2007 First to the Rhine The 6th Army Group In World War II Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 3146 0 Zaloga Steven J 2009 Operation Dragoon 1944 France s other D Day Osprey Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 84603 367 4 Gaujac Paul 1985 L Armee de la victoire The Army of Victory Les Grandes batailles de France in French Vol 3 De la Provence a l Alsace Paris Charles Lavauzelle pp 124 137 ISBN 978 2 702 50126 9 OCLC 461876740 Jean de Lattre de Tassigny 1949 Histoire de la premiere armee francaise History of the First French Army in French Plon ISBN 978 2258007055 Francois de Linares 2005 Par les portes du Nord la liberation de Toulon et Marseille en 1944 By the Northern Ports the Liberation of Toulon and Marseilles in 1944 in French Paris Nouvelles editions latines ISBN 978 2 723 32056 6 OCLC 62176140 External links editLa liberation de Notre Dame de la Garde le 25 aout 1944 Sur la Canebiere la jeep du colonel Chappuis arborant des drapeaux blancs Marseille 22 23 aout 1944 Le general de Monsabert et le colonel Chappuis en aout 1944 a Marseille Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Marseille amp oldid 1212828190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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