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Battle of Merville Gun Battery

The Battle of Merville Gun Battery occurred on 6 June 1944, as part of Operation Tonga, part of the Normandy landings, during the Second World War. Allied intelligence believed the Merville Gun Battery was composed of heavy-calibre guns that could threaten the British landings at Sword Beach, only 8 miles (13 km) away.

Battle of Merville Gun Battery
Part of Operation Tonga

Overhead view of the battery, showing the damage caused by a bombing raid in May 1944
Date6 June 1944
Location
Merville, France
49°16′12″N 0°11′47″W / 49.27000°N 0.19639°W / 49.27000; -0.19639Coordinates: 49°16′12″N 0°11′47″W / 49.27000°N 0.19639°W / 49.27000; -0.19639
Result Inconclusive
Belligerents
 United Kingdom  Germany
Commanders and leaders
Terence Otway Raimund Steiner
Units involved

3rd Parachute Brigade

716th Infantry Division

  • Artillery Regiment 1716
    • 1st Battery
Strength
150 (assault force)
600 (in total)
130
Casualties and losses
75 (during the assault) 22 killed
22 captured
450 men failed to arrive at the battalion assembly area following the parachute landing

The 9th Parachute Battalion, part of the 3rd Parachute Brigade attached to 6th Airborne Division, was given the objective of destroying the battery. However, when the battalion arrived over Normandy, their parachute descent was dispersed over a large area, so instead of over 600 men, only 150 with no heavy weapons or equipment arrived at the battalion assembly point. Regardless, they pressed home their attack and succeeded in capturing the battery, only to discover that the guns were of a lower caliber than expected [French 75mm]. However, these still had the range (over 8000 metres) to hit targets on Sword and in Ouistreham. Using what explosives they had been able to recover, the surviving 75 men tried to disable the guns.

When the British paratroopers had withdrawn, two of the guns were put back into action by the Germans. Another attack the next day by British Commandos failed to recapture the battery, which remained under German control until 17 August, when the German Army started to withdraw from the area.

Background

On 6 June 1944, the British 6th Airborne Division was given the task of securing the left flank of the Allied seaborne landings. One of their objectives was the destruction of the Merville Gun Battery. Allied planners had judged from the size of the concrete gun emplacements that the guns must be around 150 mm in calibre. If so, the guns would have a range of about 8 miles (13 km). At this distance, they could threaten the 3rd British Infantry Division's landing area, codenamed Sword, to the west of Ouistreham, where were due to land later that day.[1]

British forces

The unit assigned to destroy the battery was the 9th Parachute Battalion, part of the 3rd Parachute Brigade, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Terence Otway. The battalion's normal complement of 600 men[2][nb 1] was supported by a troop of sappers from 591st (Antrim) Parachute Squadron, Royal Engineers, eight Airspeed Horsa glider loads transporting Jeeps and trailers, and stores including explosives, an anti-tank gun and flamethrowers. Three of the gliders, transporting 50 volunteers, were to carry out a coup de main landing onto the position to coincide with the ground assault.[4] In April 1944, the force was taken to Walbury Hill in Berkshire, where over seven days the Royal Engineers had built a full-scale replica of the battery, including obstacles and barbed wire fences. The following five days were spent holding briefings and getting acquainted with the layout of the battery. They carried out nine practice assaults, four of them at night.[3][5] Due to the nature of the mission, the battalion was given additional medical support from No. 3 Section 224th (Parachute) Field Ambulance.[6][nb 2] Another unit that would be present during the attack but not directly involved was A Company of the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion. This company was tasked to provide covering fire for the 9th Battalion's approach to and withdrawal from the battery.[9] The assault had to be completed and the battalion clear of the position by 05:00, when the Royal Navy cruiser HMS Arethusa would open fire on the battery in an attempt to destroy it with naval gunfire.[10]

Battery

 
2010 photograph of one of the concrete gun casemates

The Merville Battery was composed of four 6-foot-thick (1.8 m) steel-reinforced concrete gun casemates, built by the Todt Organisation. Each was designed to protect First World War-vintage Czech M.14/19 100 mm guns.[11] Other buildings on the site included a command bunker, a building to accommodate the men, and ammunition magazines. During a visit on 6 March 1944, to inspect the defences, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel ordered the builders to work faster, and by May 1944, the last two casemates were completed.[12]

The battery was defended by a 20 mm anti-aircraft gun and several machine guns in 15 gun positions, all enclosed in an area 700 by 500 yards (640 by 460 m) surrounded by two barbed wire obstacles 15 feet (4.6 m) thick by 5 feet (1.5 m) high,[4] which also acted as the exterior border for a 100-yard-deep (91 m) minefield. Another obstacle was an anti-tank ditch covering any approach from the nearby coast.[13] The original commander of the battery, Hauptmann Wolter, was killed during a Royal Air Force bombing raid on 19 May 1944. He was replaced by Oberleutnant Raimund Steiner, who commanded 50 engineers and 80 artillerymen from the 1st Battery, Artillery Regiment 1716, part of the 716th Static Infantry Division.[12][14]

Assault

Just after midnight on 6 June, the 9th Parachute Battalion's advance party landed with the brigade's pathfinders, and reached the battalion assembly area without any problems. While some men remained to mark out the company positions, the battalion's second in command, Major George Smith, and a reconnaissance party left to scout the battery.[15] At the same time, Royal Air Force Lancaster bombers started their bombing run, which completely missed the battery, their bombs landing further to the south. The pathfinders in the meantime were having problems. Those who had arrived at the correct drop zone found their Eureka beacons had been damaged when they landed, and in the smoke and debris left over from the bombing, their marker lights could not be seen by the pilots of the transport aircraft.[15] The main body of the 9th Parachute Battalion and their gliders were to land at drop zone 'V', located between the battery and Varaville from 01:00.[13] However, the battalion was scattered, with a number of paratroopers landing a considerable distance from the designated drop zone. Lieutenant Colonel Otway landed with the rest of his "stick" 400 yards (370 m) away from the drop zone at a farmhouse being used as a command post by a German battalion; after a brief fire-fight, they helped other scattered paratroopers, and reached the drop zone at 01:30.[16] By 02:50, only 150 men had arrived at the battalion's assembly point with 20 Bangalore torpedoes and a machine gun. The mortars, anti-tank gun, mine detectors, jeeps, sappers and field ambulance section were all missing.[3]

 
Plan of the battery and assault

Aware of the time constraints, Otway decided he could wait no longer, and the reduced battalion headed for the battery and joined up with Major Smith's reconnaissance party just outside the village of Gonneville en Auge. The reconnaissance party had cut a way through the barbed wire, and marked four routes through the minefield.[15] Otway divided his men into four assault groups, and settled down to await the arrival of the three gliders.[17]

In England, one of the gliders landed at RAF Odiham as its tow rope had snapped during bad weather. The other two gliders, unable to locate the battery, did not land where expected.[18] On their run in, both gliders were hit by anti-aircraft fire. One landed around 2 miles (3.2 km) away, the other at the edge of the minefield. The troops from this glider became involved in a fire fight with German troops heading to reinforce the battery garrison.[17]

Otway launched the assault as soon as the first glider overshot the battery, ordering the explosives to be detonated to form two paths through the outer perimeter through which the paratroopers attacked. The defenders were alerted by the explosions, and opened fire, inflicting heavy casualties; only four attackers survived to reach Casemate Four, which they disabled by firing into apertures and throwing grenades into air vents. The other casemates were cleared with fragmentation and white phosphorus grenades, as the crews had neglected to lock the doors leading into the battery.[19] During the bombing raid, the battery's guns had been moved inside the casemates and the steel doors left open for ventilation.[20] During the battle, 22 Germans were killed and a similar number made prisoners of war. The rest of the garrison escaped undetected by hiding in the underground bunkers.[17]

Steiner was not present during the bombing, but at a command bunker in Franceville-Plage. After the raid, he set out for the battery, but was unable to gain entry due to the volume of fire from the British paratroopers. At the same time, a reconnaissance patrol from an army Flak unit with a half-track mounting a large anti-aircraft gun arrived. The crew had intended to seek cover at the position, but instead used the gun to engage the paratroopers.[21]

With the battery in their hands, but no sappers or explosives, the British gathered together what plastic explosives they had been issued for use with their Gammon bombs to try to destroy the guns.[17] By this time, Steiner had returned to Franceville-Plage, and directed his regiment's 2nd and 3rd Batteries to fire onto the Merville Battery.[22]

Aftermath

 
Men of the 9th Parachute Battalion marching through Amfreville later in the month

Just before 05:00, the battalion's survivors, just 75 men of the 150 who had set out, left the battery and headed for their secondary objective, the village of La Plein.[23] The battalion, being too weak, only managed to liberate around half of the village, and had to await the arrival of the 1st Commando Brigade later in the day to complete its capture.[24]

After the British had withdrawn, the Germans reoccupied the battery position. Steiner was unable to see Sword from his command bunker, so even though he was able to get two of his guns back in action, he was unable to direct accurate fire onto the landings. However, observers with the 736th Infantry Regiment, holding out at La Brèche, were able to direct his guns until that position was neutralised.[25]

On 7 June, the battery was assaulted again by two troops of commandos from No. 3 Commando, part of the 1st Special Service Brigade. The attack in daylight was repulsed with heavy losses to the commandos. As they withdrew, they were engaged by the battery's guns firing over open sights. The British never succeeded in completely destroying the battery, and it remained under German control until 17 August, when the German Army started to withdraw from France.[26]

Notes

Footnotes
  1. ^ Other sources give the number as 635 paratroopers and sappers.[3]
  2. ^ A medical section was composed of: an officer (doctor) and a staff sergeant (nursing orderly); under their command were three nursing orderlies, a clerk, a dutyman and thirteen stretcher bearers.[7] All members of No. 3 Section attached to the 9th Parachute Battalion became casualties in the battle.[8]
Citations
  1. ^ Horn, p.44
  2. ^ Kershaw, p.135
  3. ^ a b c Ferguson, p.18
  4. ^ a b Ford, p.41
  5. ^ Nigl, p.72
  6. ^ Cole, p.81
  7. ^ Cole, pp.222–223
  8. ^ Cole, p.88
  9. ^ Horn, p.41
  10. ^ Ford, Zaloga and Badsey, p.224
  11. ^ Zaloga and Johnson, p.29
  12. ^ a b "The Merville Battery". Merville Battery Museum. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  13. ^ a b Gregory, p.108
  14. ^ Zaloga and Johnson, p.35
  15. ^ a b c Harclerode, p.318
  16. ^ Buckingham, pp.142–143
  17. ^ a b c d Harclerode, p.319
  18. ^ Nigl, p.71
  19. ^ Buckingham, p.145
  20. ^ Kershaw, p.149
  21. ^ Kershaw, p.148
  22. ^ Kershaw, p.150
  23. ^ Cole, p.83
  24. ^ Harclerode, p.320
  25. ^ Kershaw, p.307
  26. ^ Harclerode, pp.319–320

References

  • Buckingham, William F. (2005). D-Day The First 72 Hours. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-2842-X.
  • Cole, Howard N (1963). On wings of healing: the story of the Airborne Medical Services 1940–1960. Edinburgh, United Kingdom: William Blackwood. OCLC 29847628.
  • Ferguson, Gregor (1984). The Paras 1940–84. Volume 1 of Elite series. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-573-1.
  • Ford, Ken (2011). D-Day 1944 (3): Sword Beach & the British Airborne Landings. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84908-721-6.
  • Ford, Ken; Zaloga, Steven J; Badsey, Stephen (2009). Overlord: The D-Day Landings. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84603-424-4.
  • Gregory, Barry; Batchelor, John (1979). Airborne Warfare, 1918–1945. Exeter, UK: Exeter Books. ISBN 978-0-89673-025-0.
  • Harclerode, Peter (2005). Wings Of War –Airborne Warfare 1918–1945. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-304-36730-3.
  • Horn, Bernd (2010). Men of Steel: Canadian Paratroopers in Normandy, 1944. Toronto, ON: Dundurn Press Ltd. ISBN 978-1-55488-708-8.
  • Kershaw, Robert (2008). D-Day Piercing the Atlantic Wall. Hersham, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3323-8.
  • Nigl, Alfred J (2007). Silent Wings Savage Death. Santa Ana, CA: Graphic Publishers. ISBN 978-1-882824-31-1.
  • Zaloga, Steven J; Johnson, Hugh (2005). D-Day Fortifications in Normandy. Volume 37 of Fortress Series. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-876-2.

External links

  • Personal account of the battle at BBC Peoples War
  • Transcript of 9th Bn Report on the battle

battle, merville, battery, occurred, june, 1944, part, operation, tonga, part, normandy, landings, during, second, world, allied, intelligence, believed, merville, battery, composed, heavy, calibre, guns, that, could, threaten, british, landings, sword, beach,. The Battle of Merville Gun Battery occurred on 6 June 1944 as part of Operation Tonga part of the Normandy landings during the Second World War Allied intelligence believed the Merville Gun Battery was composed of heavy calibre guns that could threaten the British landings at Sword Beach only 8 miles 13 km away Battle of Merville Gun BatteryPart of Operation TongaOverhead view of the battery showing the damage caused by a bombing raid in May 1944Date6 June 1944LocationMerville France49 16 12 N 0 11 47 W 49 27000 N 0 19639 W 49 27000 0 19639 Coordinates 49 16 12 N 0 11 47 W 49 27000 N 0 19639 W 49 27000 0 19639ResultInconclusiveBelligerents United Kingdom GermanyCommanders and leadersTerence OtwayRaimund SteinerUnits involved3rd Parachute Brigade 9th Parachute Battalion716th Infantry Division Artillery Regiment 1716 1st BatteryStrength150 assault force 600 in total 130Casualties and losses75 during the assault 22 killed22 captured450 men failed to arrive at the battalion assembly area following the parachute landing The 9th Parachute Battalion part of the 3rd Parachute Brigade attached to 6th Airborne Division was given the objective of destroying the battery However when the battalion arrived over Normandy their parachute descent was dispersed over a large area so instead of over 600 men only 150 with no heavy weapons or equipment arrived at the battalion assembly point Regardless they pressed home their attack and succeeded in capturing the battery only to discover that the guns were of a lower caliber than expected French 75mm However these still had the range over 8000 metres to hit targets on Sword and in Ouistreham Using what explosives they had been able to recover the surviving 75 men tried to disable the guns When the British paratroopers had withdrawn two of the guns were put back into action by the Germans Another attack the next day by British Commandos failed to recapture the battery which remained under German control until 17 August when the German Army started to withdraw from the area Contents 1 Background 1 1 British forces 1 2 Battery 2 Assault 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksBackground EditOn 6 June 1944 the British 6th Airborne Division was given the task of securing the left flank of the Allied seaborne landings One of their objectives was the destruction of the Merville Gun Battery Allied planners had judged from the size of the concrete gun emplacements that the guns must be around 150 mm in calibre If so the guns would have a range of about 8 miles 13 km At this distance they could threaten the 3rd British Infantry Division s landing area codenamed Sword to the west of Ouistreham where were due to land later that day 1 British forces Edit The unit assigned to destroy the battery was the 9th Parachute Battalion part of the 3rd Parachute Brigade commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Terence Otway The battalion s normal complement of 600 men 2 nb 1 was supported by a troop of sappers from 591st Antrim Parachute Squadron Royal Engineers eight Airspeed Horsa glider loads transporting Jeeps and trailers and stores including explosives an anti tank gun and flamethrowers Three of the gliders transporting 50 volunteers were to carry out a coup de main landing onto the position to coincide with the ground assault 4 In April 1944 the force was taken to Walbury Hill in Berkshire where over seven days the Royal Engineers had built a full scale replica of the battery including obstacles and barbed wire fences The following five days were spent holding briefings and getting acquainted with the layout of the battery They carried out nine practice assaults four of them at night 3 5 Due to the nature of the mission the battalion was given additional medical support from No 3 Section 224th Parachute Field Ambulance 6 nb 2 Another unit that would be present during the attack but not directly involved was A Company of the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion This company was tasked to provide covering fire for the 9th Battalion s approach to and withdrawal from the battery 9 The assault had to be completed and the battalion clear of the position by 05 00 when the Royal Navy cruiser HMS Arethusa would open fire on the battery in an attempt to destroy it with naval gunfire 10 Battery Edit 2010 photograph of one of the concrete gun casemates The Merville Battery was composed of four 6 foot thick 1 8 m steel reinforced concrete gun casemates built by the Todt Organisation Each was designed to protect First World War vintage Czech M 14 19 100 mm guns 11 Other buildings on the site included a command bunker a building to accommodate the men and ammunition magazines During a visit on 6 March 1944 to inspect the defences Field Marshal Erwin Rommel ordered the builders to work faster and by May 1944 the last two casemates were completed 12 The battery was defended by a 20 mm anti aircraft gun and several machine guns in 15 gun positions all enclosed in an area 700 by 500 yards 640 by 460 m surrounded by two barbed wire obstacles 15 feet 4 6 m thick by 5 feet 1 5 m high 4 which also acted as the exterior border for a 100 yard deep 91 m minefield Another obstacle was an anti tank ditch covering any approach from the nearby coast 13 The original commander of the battery Hauptmann Wolter was killed during a Royal Air Force bombing raid on 19 May 1944 He was replaced by Oberleutnant Raimund Steiner who commanded 50 engineers and 80 artillerymen from the 1st Battery Artillery Regiment 1716 part of the 716th Static Infantry Division 12 14 Assault EditJust after midnight on 6 June the 9th Parachute Battalion s advance party landed with the brigade s pathfinders and reached the battalion assembly area without any problems While some men remained to mark out the company positions the battalion s second in command Major George Smith and a reconnaissance party left to scout the battery 15 At the same time Royal Air Force Lancaster bombers started their bombing run which completely missed the battery their bombs landing further to the south The pathfinders in the meantime were having problems Those who had arrived at the correct drop zone found their Eureka beacons had been damaged when they landed and in the smoke and debris left over from the bombing their marker lights could not be seen by the pilots of the transport aircraft 15 The main body of the 9th Parachute Battalion and their gliders were to land at drop zone V located between the battery and Varaville from 01 00 13 However the battalion was scattered with a number of paratroopers landing a considerable distance from the designated drop zone Lieutenant Colonel Otway landed with the rest of his stick 400 yards 370 m away from the drop zone at a farmhouse being used as a command post by a German battalion after a brief fire fight they helped other scattered paratroopers and reached the drop zone at 01 30 16 By 02 50 only 150 men had arrived at the battalion s assembly point with 20 Bangalore torpedoes and a machine gun The mortars anti tank gun mine detectors jeeps sappers and field ambulance section were all missing 3 Plan of the battery and assault Aware of the time constraints Otway decided he could wait no longer and the reduced battalion headed for the battery and joined up with Major Smith s reconnaissance party just outside the village of Gonneville en Auge The reconnaissance party had cut a way through the barbed wire and marked four routes through the minefield 15 Otway divided his men into four assault groups and settled down to await the arrival of the three gliders 17 In England one of the gliders landed at RAF Odiham as its tow rope had snapped during bad weather The other two gliders unable to locate the battery did not land where expected 18 On their run in both gliders were hit by anti aircraft fire One landed around 2 miles 3 2 km away the other at the edge of the minefield The troops from this glider became involved in a fire fight with German troops heading to reinforce the battery garrison 17 Otway launched the assault as soon as the first glider overshot the battery ordering the explosives to be detonated to form two paths through the outer perimeter through which the paratroopers attacked The defenders were alerted by the explosions and opened fire inflicting heavy casualties only four attackers survived to reach Casemate Four which they disabled by firing into apertures and throwing grenades into air vents The other casemates were cleared with fragmentation and white phosphorus grenades as the crews had neglected to lock the doors leading into the battery 19 During the bombing raid the battery s guns had been moved inside the casemates and the steel doors left open for ventilation 20 During the battle 22 Germans were killed and a similar number made prisoners of war The rest of the garrison escaped undetected by hiding in the underground bunkers 17 Steiner was not present during the bombing but at a command bunker in Franceville Plage After the raid he set out for the battery but was unable to gain entry due to the volume of fire from the British paratroopers At the same time a reconnaissance patrol from an army Flak unit with a half track mounting a large anti aircraft gun arrived The crew had intended to seek cover at the position but instead used the gun to engage the paratroopers 21 With the battery in their hands but no sappers or explosives the British gathered together what plastic explosives they had been issued for use with their Gammon bombs to try to destroy the guns 17 By this time Steiner had returned to Franceville Plage and directed his regiment s 2nd and 3rd Batteries to fire onto the Merville Battery 22 Aftermath Edit Men of the 9th Parachute Battalion marching through Amfreville later in the month Just before 05 00 the battalion s survivors just 75 men of the 150 who had set out left the battery and headed for their secondary objective the village of La Plein 23 The battalion being too weak only managed to liberate around half of the village and had to await the arrival of the 1st Commando Brigade later in the day to complete its capture 24 After the British had withdrawn the Germans reoccupied the battery position Steiner was unable to see Sword from his command bunker so even though he was able to get two of his guns back in action he was unable to direct accurate fire onto the landings However observers with the 736th Infantry Regiment holding out at La Breche were able to direct his guns until that position was neutralised 25 On 7 June the battery was assaulted again by two troops of commandos from No 3 Commando part of the 1st Special Service Brigade The attack in daylight was repulsed with heavy losses to the commandos As they withdrew they were engaged by the battery s guns firing over open sights The British never succeeded in completely destroying the battery and it remained under German control until 17 August when the German Army started to withdraw from France 26 Notes EditFootnotes Other sources give the number as 635 paratroopers and sappers 3 A medical section was composed of an officer doctor and a staff sergeant nursing orderly under their command were three nursing orderlies a clerk a dutyman and thirteen stretcher bearers 7 All members of No 3 Section attached to the 9th Parachute Battalion became casualties in the battle 8 Citations Horn p 44 Kershaw p 135 a b c Ferguson p 18 a b Ford p 41 Nigl p 72 Cole p 81 Cole pp 222 223 Cole p 88 Horn p 41 Ford Zaloga and Badsey p 224 Zaloga and Johnson p 29 a b The Merville Battery Merville Battery Museum Retrieved 22 August 2011 a b Gregory p 108 Zaloga and Johnson p 35 a b c Harclerode p 318 Buckingham pp 142 143 a b c d Harclerode p 319 Nigl p 71 Buckingham p 145 Kershaw p 149 Kershaw p 148 Kershaw p 150 Cole p 83 Harclerode p 320 Kershaw p 307 Harclerode pp 319 320References EditBuckingham William F 2005 D Day The First 72 Hours Stroud Gloucestershire Tempus Publishing ISBN 0 7524 2842 X Cole Howard N 1963 On wings of healing the story of the Airborne Medical Services 1940 1960 Edinburgh United Kingdom William Blackwood OCLC 29847628 Ferguson Gregor 1984 The Paras 1940 84 Volume 1 of Elite series Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 573 1 Ford Ken 2011 D Day 1944 3 Sword Beach amp the British Airborne Landings Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 721 6 Ford Ken Zaloga Steven J Badsey Stephen 2009 Overlord The D Day Landings Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 424 4 Gregory Barry Batchelor John 1979 Airborne Warfare 1918 1945 Exeter UK Exeter Books ISBN 978 0 89673 025 0 Harclerode Peter 2005 Wings Of War Airborne Warfare 1918 1945 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 304 36730 3 Horn Bernd 2010 Men of Steel Canadian Paratroopers in Normandy 1944 Toronto ON Dundurn Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 55488 708 8 Kershaw Robert 2008 D Day Piercing the Atlantic Wall Hersham Surrey Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3323 8 Nigl Alfred J 2007 Silent Wings Savage Death Santa Ana CA Graphic Publishers ISBN 978 1 882824 31 1 Zaloga Steven J Johnson Hugh 2005 D Day Fortifications in Normandy Volume 37 of Fortress Series Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 876 2 External links EditMerville Gun Battery Museum Personal account of the battle at BBC Peoples War Transcript of 9th Bn Report on the battle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Merville Gun Battery amp oldid 1126139064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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