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Bernard Montgomery

Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, KG, GCB, DSO, PC, DL (/məntˈɡʌməri ...ˈæləmn/; 17 November 1887 – 24 March 1976), nicknamed "Monty", was a senior British Army officer who served in the First World War, the Irish War of Independence and the Second World War.

The Viscount Montgomery of Alamein
Montgomery in 1943
Nickname(s)
  • "Monty"
  • "The Spartan General"
Born(1887-11-17)17 November 1887[1]
Kennington, Surrey, England
Died24 March 1976(1976-03-24) (aged 88)
Alton, Hampshire, England
Buried
Holy Cross Churchyard, Binsted, Hampshire
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Service/branchBritish Army
Years of service1908–1958
RankField marshal
Service number8742
UnitRoyal Warwickshire Regiment
Commands held
Battles/wars
Awards
Spouse(s)
Betty Carver
(m. 1927; died 1937)
Other work
  • Colonel Commandant, Royal Tank Regiment
  • Colonel Commandant, Parachute Regiment (?−1956)[2]
  • Representative Colonel Commandant, Royal Armoured Corps (1947–1957)[3][4]
  • Colonel Commandant, Army Physical Training Corps (1946–1960)[5][6]
  • Colonel Royal Warwickshire Regiment (1947–1963)[7][8]
  • Deputy Lieutenant of Southampton (1958–76)[9]
Signature

Montgomery first saw action in the First World War as a junior officer of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. At Méteren, near the Belgian border at Bailleul, he was shot through the right lung by a sniper, during the First Battle of Ypres. On returning to the Western Front as a general staff officer, he took part in the Battle of Arras in April–May 1917. He also took part in the Battle of Passchendaele in late 1917 before finishing the war as chief of staff of the 47th (2nd London) Division.

In the inter-war years he commanded the 17th (Service) Battalion, Royal Fusiliers and, later, the 1st Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment before becoming commander of the 9th Infantry Brigade and then general officer commanding (GOC), 8th Infantry Division.

During the Western Desert campaign of the Second World War, Montgomery commanded the British Eighth Army from August 1942, through the Second Battle of El Alamein and on to the final Allied victory in Tunisia in May 1943. He subsequently commanded the British Eighth Army during the Allied invasion of Sicily and the Allied invasion of Italy and was in command of all Allied ground forces during the Battle of Normandy (Operation Overlord), from D-Day on 6 June 1944 until 1 September 1944. He then continued in command of the 21st Army Group for the rest of the North West Europe campaign, including the failed attempt to cross the Rhine during Operation Market Garden.

When German armoured forces broke through the US lines in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge, Montgomery received command of the northern shoulder of the Bulge. This included temporary command of the US First Army and the US Ninth Army, which held up the German advance to the north of the Bulge while the US Third Army under Lieutenant General George Patton relieved Bastogne from the south.

Montgomery's 21st Army Group, including the US Ninth Army and the First Allied Airborne Army, crossed the Rhine in Operation Plunder in March 1945, two weeks after the US First Army had crossed the Rhine in the Battle of Remagen. By the end of the war, troops under Montgomery's command had taken part in the encirclement of the Ruhr Pocket, liberated the Netherlands, and captured much of north-west Germany. On 4 May 1945, Montgomery accepted the surrender of the German forces in north-western Europe at Lüneburg Heath, south of Hamburg, after the surrender of Berlin to the USSR on 2 May.

After the war he became Commander-in-Chief of the British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) in Germany and then Chief of the Imperial General Staff (1946–1948). From 1948 to 1951, he served as Chairman of the Commanders-in-Chief Committee of the Western Union. He then served as NATO's Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe until his retirement in 1958.

Early life edit

Montgomery was born in Kennington, Surrey, in 1887, the fourth child of nine, to a Church of Ireland minister, Henry Montgomery, and his wife, Maud (née Farrar).[11] The Montgomerys, an 'Ascendancy' gentry family, were the County Donegal branch of the Clan Montgomery. The Rev. Henry Montgomery, at that time Vicar of St Mark's Church, Kennington, was the second son of Sir Robert Montgomery, a native of Inishowen in County Donegal in the north-west of Ulster,[12] the noted colonial administrator in British India; Sir Robert died a month after his grandson's birth.[13] He was probably a descendant of Colonel Alexander Montgomery (1686–1729). Bernard's mother, Maud, was the daughter of Frederic William Canon Farrar, the famous preacher, and was eighteen years younger than her husband.[14]

After the death of Sir Robert Montgomery, Henry inherited the Montgomery ancestral estate of New Park in Moville, a small town in Inishowen in the north of County Donegal in Ulster, the northern province in Ireland. There was still £13,000 to pay on a mortgage, a large debt in the 1880s (equivalent to £1,537,946 in 2021)[15] and Henry was at the time still only an Anglican vicar. Despite selling off all the farms that were in the townland of Ballynally, on the north-western shores of Lough Foyle,[16] "there was barely enough to keep up New Park and pay for the blasted summer holiday" (i.e., at New Park).[17]

It was a financial relief of some magnitude when, in 1889, Henry was made Bishop of Tasmania, then still a British colony, and Bernard spent his formative years there. Bishop Montgomery considered it his duty to spend as much time as possible in the rural areas of Tasmania and was away for up to six months at a time. While he was away, his wife, still in her mid-twenties, gave her children "constant" beatings,[18] then ignored them most of the time as she performed the public duties of the bishop's wife. Of Bernard's siblings, Sibyl died prematurely in Tasmania, and Harold, Donald and Una all emigrated.[19] Maud Montgomery took little active interest in the education of her young children other than to have them taught by tutors brought from Britain, although he briefly attended the then coeducational St Michael's Collegiate School.[20] The loveless environment made Bernard something of a bully, as he himself recalled, "I was a dreadful little boy. I don't suppose anybody would put up with my sort of behaviour these days."[21] Later in life Montgomery refused to allow his son David to have anything to do with his grandmother, and refused to attend her funeral in 1949.[22]

The family returned to England once for a Lambeth Conference in 1897, and Bernard and his brother Harold were educated at The King's School, Canterbury.[23] In 1901, Bishop Montgomery became secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, and the family returned to London. Montgomery attended St Paul's School and then the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, from which he was almost expelled for rowdiness and violence.[24] On graduation in September 1908 he was commissioned into the 1st Battalion the Royal Warwickshire Regiment as a second lieutenant,[25] and first saw overseas service later that year in India.[24] He was promoted to lieutenant in 1910,[26] and in 1912 became adjutant of the 1st Battalion of his regiment at Shorncliffe Army Camp.[24]

First World War edit

 
Captain Bernard Montgomery (right) with Brigadier-General J. W. Sandilands, commander of the 104th Brigade, 35th Division. Montgomery served as brigade major with the 104th Brigade from January 1915 until early 1917.

The Great War began in August 1914 and Montgomery moved to France with his battalion that month, which was at the time part of the 10th Brigade of the 4th Division.[24] He saw action at the Battle of Le Cateau that month and during the retreat from Mons.[24] At Méteren, near the Belgian border at Bailleul on 13 October 1914, during an Allied counter-offensive, he was shot through the right lung by a sniper.[24] Lying in the open, he remained still and pretended to be dead, in the hope that he would not receive any more enemy attention.[27] One of his men did attempt to rescue him but was shot dead by a hidden enemy sniper and collapsed over Montgomery. The sniper continued to fire and Montgomery was hit once more, in the knee,[22] but the dead soldier, in Montgomery's words, "received many bullets meant for me."[27] Assuming them to both be dead, the officers and men of Montgomery's battalion chose to leave them where they were until darkness arrived and stretcher bearers managed to recover the two bodies, with Montgomery by this time barely clinging on to life. The doctors at the Advanced Dressing Station, too, had no hope for him and ordered a grave to be dug. Miraculously, however, Montgomery was still alive and, after being placed in an ambulance and then being sent to a hospital, was treated and eventually evacuated to England, where he would remain for well over a year.[28] He was appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order, for his gallant leadership during this period: the citation for this award, published in The London Gazette in December 1914 reads:

Conspicuous gallant leading on 13th October, when he turned the enemy out of their trenches with the bayonet. He was severely wounded.[29]

After recovering in early 1915, he was appointed brigade major,[30] first of the 112th Brigade, and then with 104th Brigade training in Lancashire.[31] He returned to the Western Front in early 1916 as a general staff officer in the 33rd Division and took part in the Battle of Arras in April–May 1917.[31] He became a general staff officer with IX Corps, part of General Sir Herbert Plumer's Second Army, in July 1917.[31]

 
The Minister of Munitions, Winston Churchill, watching the march past of the 47th (2nd London) Division in the Grande Place, Lille, France, October 1918. In front of him is the 47th Division's chief of staff, Lieutenant Colonel Bernard Montgomery.

Montgomery served at the Battle of Passchendaele in late 1917 before finishing the war as GSO1 (effectively chief of staff) of the 47th (2nd London) Division,[31] with the temporary rank of lieutenant-colonel.[32] A photograph from October 1918, reproduced in many biographies, shows the then unknown Lieutenant-Colonel Montgomery standing in front of Winston Churchill (then the Minister of Munitions) at the parade following the liberation of Lille.[33]

Montgomery was profoundly influenced by his experiences during the war, in particular by the leadership, or rather the lack of it, being displayed by the senior commanders. He later wrote:

There was little contact between the generals and the soldiers. I went through the whole war on the Western Front, except during the period I was in England after being wounded; I never once saw the British Commander-in-Chief, neither French nor Haig, and only twice did I see an Army Commander.

The higher staffs were out of touch with the regimental officers and with the troops. The former lived in comfort, which became greater as the distance of their headquarters behind the lines increased. There was no harm in this provided there was touch and sympathy between the staff and the troops. This was often lacking. At most large headquarters in back areas the doctrine seemed to me to be that the troops existed for the benefit of the staff. My war experience led me to believe that the staff must be the servant of the troops, and that a good staff officer must serve his commander and the troops but himself be anonymous.

The frightful casualties appalled me. The so-called "good fighting generals" of the war appeared to me to be those who had a complete disregard for human life. There were of course exceptions and I suppose one such was Plumer; I had only once seen him and had never spoken to him.[34]

Between the world wars edit

1920s edit

After the First World War, Montgomery commanded the 17th (Service) Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers,[35] a battalion in the British Army of the Rhine, before reverting to his substantive rank of captain (brevet major) in November 1919.[36] He had not at first been selected for the Staff College in Camberley, Surrey (his only hope of ever achieving high command). But at a tennis party in Cologne, he was able to persuade the Commander-in-chief (C-in-C) of the British Army of Occupation, Field Marshal Sir William Robertson, to add his name to the list.[37]

After graduating from the Staff College, he was appointed brigade major in the 17th Infantry Brigade in January 1921.[38] The brigade was stationed in County Cork, Ireland, carrying out counter-guerilla operations during the final stages of the Irish War of Independence.[31]

Montgomery came to the conclusion that the conflict could not be won without harsh measures, and that self-government for Ireland was the only feasible solution; in 1923, after the establishment of the Irish Free State and during the Irish Civil War, Montgomery wrote to Colonel Arthur Ernest Percival of the Essex Regiment:

Personally, my whole attention was given to defeating the rebels but it never bothered me a bit how many houses were burnt. I think I regarded all civilians as 'Shinners' and I never had any dealings with any of them. My own view is that to win a war of this sort, you must be ruthless. Oliver Cromwell, or the Germans, would have settled it in a very short time. Nowadays public opinion precludes such methods, the nation would never allow it, and the politicians would lose their jobs if they sanctioned it. That being so, I consider that Lloyd George was right in what he did, if we had gone on we could probably have squashed the rebellion as a temporary measure, but it would have broken out again like an ulcer the moment we removed the troops. I think the rebels would probably [have] refused battles, and hidden their arms etc. until we had gone.[39]

In one noteworthy incident on 2 May 1922, Montgomery led a force of 60 soldiers and 4 armoured cars to the town of Macroom to search for four British officers who were missing in the area. While he had hoped the show of force would assist in finding the men, he was under strict orders not to attack the IRA. On arriving in the town square in front of Macroom Castle, he summoned the IRA commander, Charlie Browne, to parley. At the castle gates Montgomery spoke to Browne explaining what would happen should the officers not be released. Once finished, Browne responded with his own ultimatum to Montgomery to "leave town within 10 minutes". Browne then turned heels and returned to the Castle. At this point another IRA officer, Pat O'Sullivan, whistled to Montgomery drawing his attention to scores of IRA volunteers who had quietly taken up firing positions all around the square—surrounding Montgomery's forces. Realising his precarious position, Montgomery led his troops out of the town, a decision which raised hostile questions in the House of Commons but was later approved by Montgomery's own superiors. Unknown to Montgomery at this time, the four missing officers had already been executed.[40]

In May 1923, Montgomery was posted to the 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division, a Territorial Army (TA) formation.[31] He returned to the 1st Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment in 1925 as a company commander[31] and was promoted to major in July 1925.[41] From January 1926 to January 1929 he served as Deputy Assistant Adjutant General at the Staff College, Camberley, in the temporary rank of lieutenant-colonel.[42]

Marriage and family edit

In 1925, in his first known courtship of a woman, Montgomery, then in his late thirties, proposed to a 17-year-old girl, Betty Anderson. His approach included drawing diagrams in the sand of how he would deploy his tanks and infantry in a future war, a contingency which seemed very remote at that time. She respected his ambition and single-mindedness but declined his proposal of marriage.[43]

In 1927, he met and married Elizabeth (Betty) Carver, née Hobart.[31] She was the sister of the future Second World War commander Major-General Sir Percy Hobart.[31] Betty Carver had two sons in their early teens, John and Dick, from her first marriage to Oswald Carver. Dick Carver later wrote that it had been "a very brave thing" for Montgomery to take on a widow with two children.[44] Montgomery's son, David, was born in August 1928.[31]

While on holiday in Burnham-on-Sea in 1937, Betty suffered an insect bite which became infected, and she died in her husband's arms from septicaemia following amputation of her leg.[31] The loss devastated Montgomery, who was then serving as a brigadier, but he insisted on throwing himself back into his work immediately after the funeral.[22] Montgomery's marriage had been extremely happy. Much of his correspondence with his wife was destroyed when his quarters at Portsmouth were bombed during the Second World War.[45] After Montgomery's death, John Carver wrote that his mother had arguably done the country a favour by keeping his personal oddities—his extreme single-mindedness, and his intolerance of and suspicion of the motives of others—within reasonable bounds long enough for him to have a chance of attaining high command.[46]

Both of Montgomery's stepsons became army officers in the 1930s (both were serving in India at the time of their mother's death), and both served in the Second World War, each eventually attaining the rank of colonel.[47] While serving as a GSO2[48] with Eighth Army, Dick Carver was sent forward during the pursuit after El Alamein to help identify a new site for Eighth Army HQ. He was taken prisoner at Mersa Matruh on 7 November 1942.[49] Montgomery wrote to his contacts in England asking that inquiries be made via the Red Cross as to where his stepson was being held, and that parcels be sent to him.[50] Like many British POWs, the most famous being General Richard O'Connor, Dick Carver escaped in September 1943 during the brief hiatus between Italy's departure from the war and the German seizure of the country. He eventually reached British lines on 5 December 1943, to the delight of his stepfather, who sent him home to Britain to recuperate.[51]

1930s edit

In January 1929 Montgomery was promoted to brevet lieutenant-colonel.[52] That month he returned to the 1st Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment again, as Commander of Headquarters Company; he went to the War Office to help write the Infantry Training Manual in mid-1929.[31] In 1931 Montgomery was promoted to substantive lieutenant-colonel[53] and became the Commanding officer (CO) of the 1st Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment and saw service in Palestine and British India.[31] He was promoted to colonel in June 1934 (seniority from January 1932).[54] He attended and was then recommended to become an instructor at the Indian Army Staff College (now the Pakistan Command and Staff College) in Quetta, British India.[55]

On completion of his tour of duty in India, Montgomery returned to Britain in June 1937[56] where he took command of the 9th Infantry Brigade with the temporary rank of brigadier.[57] His wife died that year.[31]

In 1938, he organised an amphibious combined operations landing exercise that impressed the new C-in-C of Southern Command, General Sir Archibald Percival Wavell. He was promoted to major-general on 14 October 1938[58] and took command of the 8th Infantry Division[59] in the British mandate of Palestine.[31] In Palestine, Montgomery was involved in suppressing an Arab revolt which had broken out over opposition to Jewish emigration.[60] He returned in July 1939 to Britain, suffering a serious illness on the way, to command the 3rd Infantry Division.[31] Reporting the suppression of the revolt in April 1939, Montgomery wrote, "I shall be sorry to leave Palestine in many ways, as I have enjoyed the war out here".[22]

Second World War edit

British Expeditionary Force edit

Phoney war edit

Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939 and the 3rd Division, together with its new General Officer Commanding (GOC), was deployed to France as part of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), commanded by General Lord Gort. Shortly after the division's arrival overseas, Montgomery faced serious trouble from his military superiors and the clergy for his frank attitude regarding the sexual health of his soldiers, but was defended from dismissal by his superior Alan Brooke, commander of II Corps, of which Montgomery's division formed a part.[61] Montgomery had issued a circular on the prevention of venereal disease, worded in such "obscene language" that both the Church of England and Roman Catholic senior chaplains objected; Brooke told Monty that he did not want any further errors of this kind, though deciding not to get him to formally withdraw it as it would remove any "vestige of respect" left for him.[62]

 
Lieutenant-General Alan Brooke, GOC II Corps, with Major-General Bernard Montgomery, GOC 3rd Division, and Major-General Dudley Johnson, GOC 4th Infantry Division, pictured here in either 1939 or 1940

Although Montgomery's new command was a Regular Army formation, comprising the 7th (Guards), and the 8th and 9th Infantry Brigades along with supporting units, he was not impressed with its readiness for battle.[63] As a result, while most of the rest of the BEF set about preparing defences for an expected German attack sometime in the future, Montgomery began training his 3rd Division in offensive tactics, organising several exercises, each of which lasted for several days at a time. Mostly they revolved around the division advancing towards an objective, often a river line, only to come under attack and forced to withdraw to another position, usually behind another river.[63] These exercises usually occurred at night with only very minimal lighting being allowed. By the spring of 1940 Montgomery's division had gained a reputation of being a very agile and flexible formation.[63] By then the Allies had agreed to Plan D, where they would advance deep into Belgium and take up positions on the River Dyle by the time the German forces attacked. Brooke, Montgomery's corps commander, was pessimistic about the plan but Montgomery, in contrast, was not concerned, believing that he and his division would perform well regardless of the circumstances, particularly in a war of movement.[64]

Battle of France edit

Montgomery's training paid off when the Germans began their invasion of the Low Countries on 10 May 1940 and the 3rd Division advanced to its planned position, near the Belgian city of Louvain. Soon after arrival, the division was fired on by members of the Belgian 10th Infantry Division who mistook them for German paratroopers; Montgomery resolved the incident by approaching them and offering to place himself under Belgian command,[65] although Montgomery himself took control when the Germans arrived.[64] During this time he began to develop a particular habit, which he would keep throughout the war, of going to bed at 21:30 every night without fail and giving only a single order—that he was not to be disturbed—which was only very rarely disobeyed.[66]

The 3rd Division saw little action compared to many other units and formations in the BEF but, owing to the strict training methods of Montgomery, who ensured that his division was thoroughly well-trained, disciplined and rehearsed, the division always managed to be in the right place at the right time, especially so during the retreat into France.[66] By 27 May, when the Belgian Army on the left flank of the BEF began to disintegrate, the 3rd Division achieved something very difficult, the movement at night from the right to the left of another division and only 2,000 yards behind it. This was performed with great professionalism and occurred without any incidents and thereby filled a very vulnerable gap in the BEF's defensive line.[67][66] On 29/30 May, as the 3rd Division moved into the Dunkirk bridgehead, Montgomery temporarily took over from Brooke, who received orders to return to the United Kingdom, as GOC of II Corps for the final stages of the Dunkirk evacuation.[66]

The 3rd Division, temporarily commanded by Kenneth Anderson in Montgomery's absence, returned to Britain intact with minimal casualties. Operation Dynamo—codename for the Dunkirk evacuation—saw 330,000 Allied military personnel, including most of the BEF, to Britain, although the BEF was forced to leave behind a significant amount of equipment.[68][66]

Service in the United Kingdom 1940−1942 edit

 
Montgomery, GOC V Corps, with war correspondents during a large-scale exercise in Southern Command, March 1941

On his return Montgomery antagonised the War Office with trenchant criticisms of the command of the BEF[22] and was briefly relegated to divisional command of 3rd Division, which was the only fully equipped division in Britain.[69] He was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath.[70]

 
Montgomery inspecting men of the 7th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment, at Sandbanks near Poole, Dorset, 22 March 1941. To his right, wearing a peaked cap, is Brigadier Gerald Templer, commanding the 210th Brigade, the 7th Suffolks' parent formation.

Montgomery was ordered to make ready the 3rd Division to invade the neutral Portuguese Azores.[69] Models of the islands were prepared and detailed plans worked out for the invasion.[69] The invasion plans did not go ahead and plans switched to invading Cape Verde island also belonging to neutral Portugal.[71] These invasion plans also did not go ahead. Montgomery was then ordered to prepare plans for the invasion of neutral Ireland and to seize Cork, Cobh and Cork harbour.[71] These invasion plans, like those of the Portuguese islands, also did not go ahead and in July 1940, Montgomery was appointed acting lieutenant-general and after handing over command of his division to James Gammell, he was placed in command of V Corps, responsible for the defence of Hampshire and Dorset and started a long-running feud with the new Commander-in-chief (C-in-C) of Southern Command, Lieutenant-General Claude Auchinleck.[72][22]

 
During Exercise 'Bumper' on 2 October 1941 Montgomery, the Chief Umpire, talks to General Sir Alan Brooke (C-in-C Home Forces).

In April 1941, he became commander of XII Corps responsible for the defence of Kent.[68] During this period he instituted a regime of continuous training and insisted on high levels of physical fitness for both officers and other ranks. He was ruthless in sacking officers he considered unfit for command in action.[73] Promoted to temporary lieutenant-general in July, overseeing the defence of Kent, Sussex and Surrey.[73][74] In December Montgomery was given command of South-Eastern Command[75] He renamed his command the South-Eastern Army to promote offensive spirit. During this time he further developed and rehearsed his ideas and trained his soldiers, culminating in Exercise Tiger in May 1942, a combined forces exercise involving 100,000 troops.[76]

North Africa and Italy edit

Montgomery's early command edit

 
Montgomery in a Grant tank in North Africa, November 1942

In 1942, a new field commander was required in the Middle East, where Auchinleck was fulfilling both the role of C-in-C of Middle East Command and commander Eighth Army. He had stabilised the Allied position at the First Battle of El Alamein, but after a visit in August 1942, the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, replaced him as C-in-C with General Sir Harold Alexander and William Gott as commander of the Eighth Army in the Western Desert. However, after Gott was killed flying back to Cairo, Churchill was persuaded by Brooke, who by this time was Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS), to appoint Montgomery, who had only just been nominated to replace Alexander, as commander of the British First Army for Operation Torch, the invasion of French North Africa.[77]

A story, probably apocryphal but popular at the time, is that the appointment caused Montgomery to remark that "After having an easy war, things have now got much more difficult." A colleague is supposed to have told him to cheer up—at which point Montgomery said "I'm not talking about me, I'm talking about Rommel!"[78]

Montgomery's assumption of command transformed the fighting spirit and abilities of the Eighth Army.[79] Taking command on 13 August 1942, he immediately became a whirlwind of activity. He ordered the creation of the X Corps, which contained all armoured divisions, to fight alongside his XXX Corps, which was all infantry divisions. This arrangement differed from the German Panzer Corps: one of Rommel's Panzer Corps combined infantry, armour and artillery units under one corps commander. The only common commander for Montgomery's all-infantry and all-armour corps was the Eighth Army Commander himself. Writing post-war the English historian Correlli Barnett commented that Montgomery's solution "... was in every way opposite to Auchinleck's and in every way wrong, for it carried the existing dangerous separatism still further."[80] Montgomery reinforced the 30 miles (48 km) long front line at El Alamein, something that would take two months to accomplish. He asked Alexander to send him two new British divisions (51st Highland and 44th Home Counties) that were then arriving in Egypt and were scheduled to be deployed in defence of the Nile Delta. He moved his field HQ to Burg al Arab, close to the Air Force command post in order to better coordinate combined operations.[79]

Montgomery was determined that the army, navy and air forces should fight their battles in a unified, focused manner according to a detailed plan. He ordered immediate reinforcement of the vital heights of Alam Halfa, just behind his own lines, expecting the German commander, Erwin Rommel, to attack with the heights as his objective, something that Rommel soon did. Montgomery ordered all contingency plans for retreat to be destroyed. "I have cancelled the plan for withdrawal. If we are attacked, then there will be no retreat. If we cannot stay here alive, then we will stay here dead",[81] he told his officers at the first meeting he held with them in the desert, though, in fact, Auchinleck had no plans to withdraw from the strong defensive position he had chosen and established at El Alamein.[82]

 
Lieutenant-General Bernard Montgomery, the new commander of the British Eighth Army, and Lieutenant-General Brian Horrocks, the new GOC XIII Corps, discussing troop dispositions at 22nd Armoured Brigade HQ, 20 August 1942. The brigade commander, Brigadier George Roberts is on the right (in beret).

Montgomery made a great effort to appear before troops as often as possible, frequently visiting various units and making himself known to the men, often arranging for cigarettes to be distributed. Although he still wore a standard British officer's cap on arrival in the desert, he briefly wore an Australian broad-brimmed hat before switching to wearing the black beret (with the badge of the Royal Tank Regiment and the British General Officer's cap badge) for which he became notable. The black beret was offered to him by Jim Fraser while the latter was driving him on an inspection tour.[83] Both Brooke and Alexander were astonished by the transformation in atmosphere when they visited on 19 August, less than a week after Montgomery had taken command.[81]

Alan Brooke said that Churchill was always impatient for his generals to attack at once, and he wrote that Montgomery was always "my Monty" when Montgomery was out of favour with Churchill! Eden had some late night drinks with Churchill, and Eden said at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff the next day (29 October 1942) that the Middle East offensive was "petering out". Alanbrooke had told Churchill "fairly plainly" what he thought of Eden's ability to judge the tactical situation from a distance, and was supported at the Chiefs of Staff meeting by Smuts.[84]

First battles with Rommel edit

 
General Montgomery with his pets, the puppies "Hitler" (left) and "Rommel", and a cage of canaries which also travelled with him (at Blay, his second HQ in France in July 1944)

Rommel attempted to turn the left flank of the Eighth Army at the Battle of Alam el Halfa from 31 August 1942. The German/Italian armoured corps infantry attack was stopped in very heavy fighting. Rommel's forces had to withdraw urgently lest their retreat through the British minefields be cut off.[85] Montgomery was criticised for not counter-attacking the retreating forces immediately, but he felt strongly that his methodical build-up of British forces was not yet ready. A hasty counter-attack risked ruining his strategy for an offensive on his own terms in late October, planning for which had begun soon after he took command.[86] He was confirmed in the permanent rank of lieutenant-general in mid-October.[87]

The conquest of Libya was essential for airfields to support Malta and to threaten the rear of Axis forces opposing Operation Torch. Montgomery prepared meticulously for the new offensive after convincing Churchill that the time was not being wasted. (Churchill sent a telegram to Alexander on 23 September 1942 which began, "We are in your hands and of course a victorious battle makes amends for much delay."[88]) He was determined not to fight until he thought there had been sufficient preparation for a decisive victory, and put into action his beliefs with the gathering of resources, detailed planning, the training of troops—especially in clearing minefields and fighting at night[89]—and in the use of 252[90] of the latest American-built Sherman tanks, 90 M7 Priest self-propelled howitzers, and making a personal visit to every unit involved in the offensive. By the time the offensive was ready in late October, Eighth Army had 231,000 men on its ration strength.[91]

El Alamein edit

 
Men of the 9th Australian Division in a posed photograph during the Second Battle of El Alamein

The Second Battle of El Alamein began on 23 October 1942, and ended 12 days later with one of the first large-scale, decisive Allied land victories of the war. Montgomery correctly predicted both the length of the battle and the number of casualties (13,500).[92]

Historian Correlli Barnett has pointed out that the rain also fell on the Germans, and that the weather is therefore an inadequate explanation for the failure to exploit the breakthrough, but nevertheless the Battle of El Alamein had been a great success. Over 30,000 prisoners of war were taken,[93] including the German second-in-command, General von Thoma, as well as eight other general officers.[94] Rommel, having been in a hospital in Germany at the start of the battle, was forced to return on 25 October 1942 after Stumme—his replacement as German commander—died of a heart attack in the early hours of the battle.[95]

Tunisia edit

 
The British Prime Minister Winston Churchill with military leaders during his visit to Tripoli. The group includes: Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese, General Sir Harold Alexander, General Sir Alan Brooke and General Sir Bernard Montgomery.

Montgomery was advanced to KCB and promoted to full general.[96] He kept the initiative, applying superior strength when it suited him, forcing Rommel out of each successive defensive position. On 6 March 1943, Rommel's attack on the over-extended Eighth Army at Medenine (Operation Capri) with the largest concentration of German armour in North Africa was successfully repulsed.[97] At the Mareth Line, 20 to 27 March, when Montgomery encountered fiercer frontal opposition than he had anticipated, he switched his major effort into an outflanking inland pincer, backed by low-flying RAF fighter-bomber support.[98] For his role in North Africa he was awarded the Legion of Merit by the United States government in the rank of Chief Commander.[99]

Sicily edit

 
Montgomery visits Patton in Palermo, Sicily, July 1943.

The next major Allied attack was the Allied invasion of Sicily (Operation Husky). Montgomery considered the initial plans for the Allied invasion, which had been agreed in principle by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Allied Commander Allied Forces Headquarters, and General Alexander, the 15th Army Group commander, to be unworkable because of the dispersion of effort. He managed to have the plans recast to concentrate the Allied forces, having Lieutenant General George Patton's US Seventh Army land in the Gulf of Gela (on the Eighth Army's left flank, which landed around Syracuse in the south-east of Sicily) rather than near Palermo in the west and north of Sicily.[100] Inter-Allied tensions grew as the American commanders, Patton and Omar Bradley (then commanding US II Corps under Patton), took umbrage at what they saw as Montgomery's attitudes and boastfulness.[98] However, while they were considered three of the greatest soldiers of their time, due to their competitiveness they were renowned for "squabbling like three schoolgirls" thanks to their "bitchiness", "whining to their superiors" and "showing off".[101]

Italy edit

 
Wartime photograph of General Montgomery with his Miles Messenger aircraft (location and date unknown)
 
From left to right: Freddie de Guingand, Harry Broadhurst, Montgomery, Sir Bernard Freyberg, Miles Dempsey and Charles Allfrey

Montgomery's Eighth Army was then fully involved in the Allied invasion of Italy in early September 1943, becoming the first of the Allied forces to land in Western Europe.[102] Led by Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey's XIII Corps, the Eighth Army landed on the toe of Italy in Operation Baytown on 3 September, four years to the day after Britain declared war on Germany. They encountered little enemy resistance.[103] The Germans had made the decision to fall back and did what they could to stall the Eighth Army's advance, including blowing up bridges, laying mines, and setting up booby-traps. All of these slowed the Army's advance north on the awful Italian roads, although it was Montgomery who was later much criticised for the lack of progress.[102] On 9 September the British 1st Airborne Division landed at the key port of Taranto in the heel of Italy as part of Operation Slapstick, capturing the port unopposed.[103] On the same day the U.S. Fifth Army under Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark (which actually contained a large number of British troops) landed at Salerno, near Naples, as part of Operation Avalanche but soon found itself fighting for its very existence with the Germans launching several determined counterattacks to try and push the Allies back into the sea, with Montgomery's men being too far away to provide any real assistance.[102] The situation was tense over the next few days but the two armies (both of which formed the 15th Army Group under General Alexander) finally began to meet on 16 September, by which time the crisis at Salerno was virtually over.[102]

 
The time has come to deal the enemy a terrific blow ...

Clark's Fifth Army then began to advance to the west of the Apennine Mountains while Montgomery, with Lieutenant General Charles Allfrey's V Corps having arrived to reinforce Dempsey's XIII Corps, advanced to the east. The Foggia airfields soon fell to Allfrey's V Corps, but the Germans fought hard in the defence of Termoli and Biferno.[102] Movement soon came to an almost complete halt in the early part of November when the Eighth Army came up against a new defensive line established by the Germans on the River Sangro, which was to be the scene of much bitter and heavy fighting for the next month. While some ground was gained, it was often at the expense of heavy casualties and the Germans always managed to retreat to new defensive positions.[102]

Montgomery abhorred what he considered to be a lack of coordination, a dispersion of effort, a strategic muddle and a lack of opportunism in the Allied campaign in Italy, describing the whole affair as a "dog's breakfast".[98]

Normandy edit

 
Montgomery with officers of the First Canadian Army. From left, Major-General Vokes, General Crerar, Field Marshal Montgomery, Lieutenant-General Horrocks, Lieutenant-General Simonds, Major-General Spry, and Major-General Matthews

As a result of his dissatisfaction with Italy, he was delighted to receive the news that he was to return to Britain in January 1944.[104] He was assigned to command the 21st Army Group consisting of all Allied ground forces participating in Operation Overlord, codename for the Allied invasion of Normandy. Overall direction was assigned to the Supreme Allied Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces, American General Dwight D. Eisenhower.[103] Both Churchill and Eisenhower had found Montgomery difficult to work with in the past and wanted the position to go to the more affable General Sir Harold Alexander.[105] However Montgomery's patron, General Sir Alan Brooke, firmly argued that Montgomery was a much superior general to Alexander and ensured his appointment.[105] Without Brooke's support, Montgomery would have remained in Italy.[105] At St Paul's School on 7 April and 15 May Montgomery presented his strategy for the invasion. He envisaged a ninety-day battle, with all forces reaching the Seine. The campaign would pivot on an Allied-held Caen in the east of the Normandy bridgehead, with relatively static British and Canadian armies forming a shoulder to attract and defeat German counter-attacks, relieving the US armies who would move and seize the Cotentin Peninsula and Brittany, wheeling south and then east on the right forming a pincer.[98]

 
General Montgomery inspects men of the 5th/7th Battalion, Gordon Highlanders of the 51st (Highland) Division, at Beaconsfield, February 1944.

During the ten weeks of the Battle of Normandy, unfavourable autumnal weather conditions disrupted the Normandy landing areas.[98] Montgomery's initial plan was for the Anglo-Canadian troops under his command to break out immediately from their beachheads on the Calvados coast towards Caen with the aim of taking the city on either D Day or two days later.[106] Montgomery attempted to take Caen with the 3rd Infantry Division, 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division and the 3rd Canadian Division but was stopped from 6–8 June by 21st Panzer Division and 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, who hit the advancing Anglo-Canadian troops very hard.[107] Rommel followed up this success by ordering the 2nd Panzer Division to Caen while Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt asked for and received permission from Hitler to have the elite 1st Waffen SS Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler and 2nd Waffen SS Division Das Reich sent to Caen as well.[107] Montgomery thus had to face what Stephen Badsey called the "most formidable" of all the German divisions in France.[107] The 12th Waffen SS Division Hitlerjugend, as its name implies, was drawn entirely from the more fanatical elements of the Hitler Youth and commanded by the ruthless SS-Brigadeführer Kurt Meyer, aka "Panzer Meyer".[108]

 
General Montgomery passes German POWs while being driven along a road in a jeep, shortly after arriving in Normandy, 8 June 1944.

The failure to take Caen immediately has been the source of an immense historiographical dispute with bitter nationalist overtones.[109] Broadly, there has been a "British school" which accepts Montgomery's post-war claim that he never intended to take Caen at once, and instead the Anglo-Canadian operations around Caen were a "holding operation" intended to attract the bulk of the German forces towards the Caen sector to allow the Americans to stage the "break out operation" on the left flank of the German positions, which was all part of Montgomery's "Master Plan" that he had conceived long before the Normandy campaign.[109] By contrast, the "American school" argued that Montgomery's initial "master plan" was for the 21st Army Group to take Caen at once and move his tank divisions into the plains south of Caen, to then stage a breakout that would lead the 21st Army Group into the plains of northern France and hence into Antwerp and finally the Ruhr.[110] Letters written by Eisenhower at the time of the battle make it clear that Eisenhower was expecting from Montgomery "the early capture of the important focal point of Caen". Later, when this plan had clearly failed, Eisenhower wrote that Montgomery had "evolved" the plan to have the US forces achieve the break-out instead.[111]

 
General Montgomery in conversation with Major-General Douglas Graham, GOC 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division, pictured here in Normandy, 20 June 1944

As the campaign progressed, Montgomery altered his initial plan for the invasion and continued the strategy of attracting and holding German counter-attacks in the area north of Caen rather than to the south, to allow the U.S. First Army in the west to take Cherbourg. A memo summarising Montgomery's operations written by Eisenhower's chief of staff, General Walter Bedell Smith who met with Montgomery in late June 1944 says nothing about Montgomery conducting a "holding operation" in the Caen sector, and instead speaks of him seeking a "breakout" into the plains south of the Seine.[112] On 12 June, Montgomery ordered the 7th Armoured Division into an attack against the Panzer Lehr Division that made good progress at first but ended when the Panzer Lehr was joined by the 2nd Panzer Division.[113] At Villers Bocage on 14 June, the British lost twenty Cromwell tanks to five Tiger tanks led by SS Obersturmführer Michael Wittmann, in about five minutes.[113] Despite the setback at Villers Bocage, Montgomery was still optimistic as the Allies were landing more troops and supplies than they were losing in battle, and though the German lines were holding, the Wehrmacht and Waffen SS were suffering considerable attrition.[114] Air Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder complained that it was impossible to move fighter squadrons to France until Montgomery had captured some airfields, something he asserted that Montgomery appeared incapable of doing.[115] The first V-1 flying bomb attacks on London, which started on 13 June, further increased the pressure on Montgomery from Whitehall to speed up his advance.[115]

 
The King with Lieutenant-General Miles Dempsey, GOC British Second Army, and General Montgomery, at his HQ in Creullet, 16 June 1944

On 18 June, Montgomery ordered Bradley to take Cherbourg while the British were to take Caen by 23 June.[115] In Operation Epsom, the British VII Corps commanded by Sir Richard O'Connor attempted to outflank Caen from the west by breaking through the dividing line between the Panzer Lehr and the 12th SS to take the strategic Hill 112.[116] Epsom began well with O'Connor's assault force (the British 15th Scottish Division) breaking through and with the 11th Armoured Division stopping the counter-attacks of the 12th SS Division.[116] General Friedrich Dollmann of Seventh Army had to commit the newly arrived II SS Corps to stop the British offensive.[116] Dollmann, fearing that Epsom would be a success, committed suicide and was replaced by SS Oberstegruppenführer Paul Hausser. O'Connor, at the cost of about 4,000 men, had won a salient 5 miles (8.0 km) deep and 2 miles (3.2 km) wide but placed the Germans into an unviable long-term position.[116] There was a strong sense of crisis in the Allied command, as the Allies had advanced only about 15 miles (24 km) inland, at a time when their plans called for them to have already taken Rennes, Alençon and St. Malo.[116] After Epsom, Montgomery had to tell General Harry Crerar that the activation of the First Canadian Army would have to wait as there was only room at present, in the Caen sector, for the newly arrived XII Corps under Lieutenant-General Neil Ritchie, which caused some tension with Crerar, who was anxious to get into the field.[117] Epsom had forced further German forces into Caen but all through June and the first half of July Rommel, Rundstedt, and Hitler were engaged in planning for a great offensive to drive the British into the sea; it was never launched and would have required the commitment of a large number of German forces to the Caen sector.[118]

It was only after several failed attempts to break out in the Caen sector that Montgomery devised what he later called his "master plan" of having the 21st Army Group hold the bulk of the German forces, thus allowing the Americans to break out.[119] The Canadian historians Terry Copp and Robert Vogel wrote about the dispute between the "American school" and "British school" after having suffered several setbacks in June 1944:

Montgomery drew what was the indisputably correct conclusion from these events. If the British and Canadians could continue to hold the bulk of the German armoured divisions on their front through a series of limited attacks, they could wear down the Germans and create the conditions for an American breakout on the right. This is what Montgomery proposed in his Directive of June 30th and, if he and his admirers had let the record speak for itself, there would be little debate about his conduct of the first stages of the Normandy campaign. Instead, Montgomery insisted that this Directive was a consistent part of a master plan that he had devised long before the invasion. Curiously, this view does a great disservice to 'Monty' for any rigid planning of operations before the German response was known would have been bad generalship indeed!"[120]

Hampered by stormy weather and the bocage terrain, Montgomery had to ensure that Rommel focused on the British in the east rather than the Americans in the west, who had to take the Cotentin Peninsula and Brittany before the Germans could be trapped by a general swing east.[121] Montgomery told General Sir Miles Dempsey, the commander of Second British Army: "Go on hitting, drawing the German strength, especially some of the armour, onto yourself—so as to ease the way for Brad [Bradley]."[122] The Germans had deployed twelve divisions, of which six were Panzer divisions, against the British while deploying eight divisions, of which three were Panzer divisions, against the Americans.[122] By the middle of July Caen had not been taken, as Rommel continued to prioritise prevention of the break-out by British forces rather than the western territories being taken by the Americans.[123] This was broadly as Montgomery had planned, albeit not with the same speed as he outlined at St Paul's, although as the American historian Carlo D'Este pointed out the actual situation in Normandy was "vastly different" from what was envisioned at the St. Paul's conference, as only one of four goals outlined in May had been achieved by 10 July.[124]

 
Prime Minister Churchill with General Montgomery at the latter's HQ in Normandy, July 1944

On 7 July, Montgomery began Operation Charnwood with a carpet bombing offensive that turned much of the French countryside and the city of Caen into a wasteland.[125] The British and Canadians succeeded in advancing into northern Caen before the Germans, who used the ruins to their advantage and stopped the offensive.[126] On 10 July, Montgomery ordered Bradley to take Avranches, after which U.S. Third Army would be activated to drive towards Le Mans and Alençon.[127] On 14 July 1944, Montgomery wrote to his patron Brooke, saying he had chosen on a "real show down on the eastern flanks, and to loose a Corps of three armoured divisions in the open country about the Caen-Falaise road ... The possibilities are immense; with seven hundred tanks loosed to the South-east of Caen, and the armoured cars operating far ahead, anything can happen."[128] The French Resistance had launched Plan Violet in June 1944 to systematically destroy the telephone system of France, which forced the Germans to use their radios more and more to communicate, and as the code-breakers of Bletchley Park had broken many of the German codes, Montgomery had, thanks to "Ultra" intelligence, a good idea of the German situation.[129] Montgomery thus knew German Army Group B had lost 96,400 men while receiving 5,200 replacements and the Panzer Lehr Division now based at St. Lô was down to only 40 tanks.[127] Montgomery later wrote that he knew he had the Normandy campaign won at this point as the Germans had almost no reserves while he had three armoured divisions in reserve.[130]

An American break-out was achieved with Operation Cobra and the encirclement of German forces in the Falaise pocket at the cost of British losses with the diversionary Operation Goodwood.[131] On the early morning of 18 July 1944, Operation Goodwood began with British heavy bombers beginning carpet bombing attacks that further devastated what was left of Caen and the surrounding countryside.[132] A British tank crewman from the Guards Armoured Division later recalled: "At 0500 hours a distant thunder in the air brought all the sleepy-eyed tank crews out of their blankets. 1,000 Lancasters were flying from the sea in groups of three or four at 3,000 feet (910 m). Ahead of them the pathfinders were scattering their flares and before long the first bombs were dropping."[133] A German tankman from the 21st Panzer Division at the receiving end of this bombardment remembered: "We saw little dots detach themselves from the planes, so many of them that the crazy thought occurred to us: are those leaflets? ... Among the thunder of the explosions, we could hear the wounded scream and the insane howling of men who had [been] driven mad."[134] The British bombing had badly smashed the German front-line units; e.g., tanks were thrown up on the roofs of French farmhouses. Initially, the three British armoured divisions assigned to lead the offensive, the 7th, 11th and the Guards, made rapid progress and were soon approaching the Borguebus ridge, which dominated the landscape south of Caen, by noon.[135]

 
General Montgomery stops his car to chat with troops during a tour of I Corps area near Caen, 11 July 1944.

If the British could take the Borguebus Ridge, the way to the plains of northern France would be wide open, and potentially Paris could be taken, which explains the ferocity with which the Germans defended the ridge. One German officer, Lieutenant Baron von Rosen, recalled that to motivate a Luftwaffe officer commanding a battery of four 88 mm guns to fight against the British tanks, he had to hold his handgun to the officer's head "and asked him whether he would like to be killed immediately or get a high decoration. He decided for the latter."[136] The well dug-in 88 mm guns around the Borguebus Ridge began taking a toll on the British Sherman tanks, and the countryside was soon dotted with dozens of burning Shermans.[137] One British officer reported with worry: "I see palls of smoke and tanks brewing up with flames belching forth from their turrets. I see men climbing out, on fire like torches, rolling on the ground to try and douse the flames."[137] Despite Montgomery's orders to try to press on, fierce German counter-attacks stopped the British offensive.[137]

The objectives of Operation Goodwood were all achieved except the complete capture of the Bourgebus Ridge, which was only partially taken. The operation was a strategic Allied success in drawing in the last German reserves in Normandy towards the Caen sector away from the American sector, greatly assisting the American breakout in Operation Cobra. By the end of Goodwood on 25 July 1944, the Canadians had finally taken Caen while the British tanks had reached the plains south of Caen, giving Montgomery the "hinge" he had been seeking, while forcing the Germans to commit the last of their reserves to stop the Anglo-Canadian offensive.[138] "Ultra" decrypts indicated that the Germans now facing Bradley were seriously understrength, with Operation Cobra about to commence.[139] During Operation Goodwood, the British had 400 tanks knocked out, with many recovered returning to service. The casualties were 5,500 with 7 miles (11 km) of ground gained.[138] Bradley recognised Montgomery's plan to pin down German armour and allow U.S. forces to break out:

The British and Canadian armies were to decoy the enemy reserves and draw them to their front on the extreme eastern edge of the Allied beachhead. Thus, while Monty taunted the enemy at Caen, we [the Americans] were to make our break on the long roundabout road to Paris. When reckoned in terms of national pride, this British decoy mission became a sacrificial one, for while we tramped around the outside flank, the British were to sit in place and pin down the Germans. Yet strategically it fitted into a logical division of labors, for it was towards Caen that the enemy reserves would race once the alarm was sounded.[140]

The long-running dispute over what Montgomery's "master plan" in Normandy led historians to differ greatly about the purpose of Goodwood. The British journalist Mark Urban wrote that the purpose of Goodwood was to draw German troops to their left flank to allow the American forces to break out on the right flank, arguing that Montgomery had to lie to his soldiers about the purpose of Goodwood, as the average British soldier would not have understood why they were being asked to create a diversion to allow the Americans to have the glory of staging the breakout with Operation Cobra.[138] By contrast, the American historian Stephen Power argued that Goodwood was intended to be the "breakout" offensive and not a "holding operation", writing: "It is unrealistic to assert that an operation which called for the use of 4,500 Allied aircraft, 700 artillery pieces and over 8,000 armored vehicles and trucks and that cost the British over 5,500 casualties was conceived and executed for so limited an objective."[141] Power noted that Goodwood and Cobra were supposed to take effect on the same day, 18 July 1944, but Cobra was cancelled owing to heavy rain in the American sector, and argued that both operations were meant to be breakout operations to trap the German armies in Normandy. American military writer Drew Middleton wrote that there is no doubt that Montgomery wanted Goodwood to provide a "shield" for Bradley, but at the same time Montgomery was clearly hoping for more than merely diverting German attention away from the American sector.[142][143] British historian John Keegan pointed out that Montgomery made differing statements before Goodwood about the purpose of the operation.[144] Keegan wrote that Montgomery engaged in what he called a "hedging of his bets" when drafting his plans for Goodwood, with a plan for a "break out if the front collapsed, if not, sound documentary evidence that all he had intended in the first place was a battle of attrition".[145] Again Bradley confirmed Montgomery's plan and that the capture of Caen was only incidental to his mission, not critical. The American magazine LIFE quoted Bradley in 1951:

While Collins was hoisting his VII Corps flag over Cherbourg, Montgomery was spending his reputation in a bitter siege against the old university city of Caen. For three weeks he had rammed his troops against those panzer divisions he had deliberately drawn towards that city as part of our Allied strategy of diversion in the Normandy Campaign. Although Caen contained an important road junction that Montgomery would eventually need, for the moment the capture of that city was only incidental to his mission. For Monty's primary task was to attract German troops to the British front that we might more easily secure Cherbourg and get into position for the breakout. While this diversion of Monty's was brilliantly achieved, he nevertheless left himself open to criticism by overemphasising the importance of his thrust toward Caen. Had he limited himself simply to the containment without making Caen a symbol of it, he would have been credited with success instead of being charged, as he was, with failure.[146]

With Goodwood drawing the Wehrmacht towards the British sector, U.S. First Army enjoyed a two-to-one numerical superiority. Bradley accepted Montgomery's advice to begin the offensive by concentrating at one point instead of a "broad front" as Eisenhower would have preferred.[147]

Operation Goodwood almost cost Montgomery his job, as Eisenhower seriously considered sacking him and only chose not to do so because to sack the popular "Monty" would have caused such a political backlash in Britain against the Americans at a critical moment in the war that the resulting strains in the Atlantic alliance were not considered worth it.[148] Montgomery expressed his satisfaction at the results of Goodwood when calling the operation off. Eisenhower was under the impression that Goodwood was to be a break-out operation. Either there was a miscommunication between the two men or Eisenhower did not understand the strategy.[149] Bradley fully understood Montgomery's intentions. Both men would not give away to the press the true intentions of their strategy.[150]

 
General Montgomery with Lieutenant Generals George S. Patton (left) and Omar Bradley (centre) at 21st Army Group HQ, 7 July 1944

Many American officers had found Montgomery a difficult man to work with, and after Goodwood, pressured Eisenhower to fire Montgomery.[138] Although the Eisenhower–Montgomery dispute is sometimes depicted in nationalist terms as being an Anglo-American struggle, it was the British Air Marshal Arthur Tedder who was pressing Eisenhower most strongly after Goodwood to fire Montgomery.[151] An American officer wrote in his diary that Tedder had come to see Eisenhower to "pursue his current favourite subject, the sacking of Monty".[152] With Tedder leading the "sack Monty" campaign, it encouraged Montgomery's American enemies to press Eisenhower to fire Montgomery.[152] Brooke was sufficiently worried about the "sack Monty" campaign to visit Montgomery at his Tactical Headquarters (TAC) in France and as he wrote in his diary; "warned [Montgomery] of a tendency in the PM [Churchill] to listen to suggestions that Monty played for safety and was not prepared to take risks".[138] Brooke advised Montgomery to invite Churchill to Normandy, arguing that if the "sack Monty" campaign had won the Prime Minister over, then his career would be over, as having Churchill's backing would give Eisenhower the political "cover" to fire Montgomery.[152] On 20 July, Montgomery met Eisenhower and on 21 July, Churchill, at the TAC in France.[152] One of Montgomery's staff officers wrote afterwards that it was "common knowledge at Tac that Churchill had come to sack Monty".[152] No notes were taken at the Eisenhower–Montgomery and Churchill–Montgomery meetings, but Montgomery was able to persuade both men not to sack him.[147]

With the success of Cobra, which was soon followed by unleashing Patton's Third Army, Eisenhower wrote to Montgomery: "Am delighted that your basic plan has begun brilliantly to unfold with Bradley's initial success."[153] The success of Cobra was aided by Operation Spring, when the II Canadian Corps under General Guy Simonds (the only Canadian general whose skill Montgomery respected) began an offensive south of Caen that made little headway, but which the Germans regarded as the main offensive.[154] Once Third Army arrived, Bradley was promoted to take command of the newly created 12th Army Group, consisting of U.S. First and Third Armies. Following the American breakout, there followed the Battle of Falaise Gap. British, Canadian, and Polish soldiers of 21st Army Group commanded by Montgomery advanced south, while the American and French soldiers of Bradley's 12th Army Group advanced north to encircle the German Army Group B at Falaise, as Montgomery waged what Urban called "a huge battle of annihilation" in August 1944.[153] Montgomery began his offensive into the Suisse Normande region with Operation Bluecoat, with Sir Richard O'Connor's VIII Corps and Gerard Bucknall's XXX Corps heading south.[155] A dissatisfied Montgomery sacked Bucknall for being insufficiently aggressive and replaced him with General Brian Horrocks.[155] At the same time, Montgomery ordered Patton—whose Third Army was supposed to advance into Brittany—to instead capture Nantes, which was soon taken.[155]

Hitler waited too long to order his soldiers to retreat from Normandy, leading Montgomery to write: "He [Hitler] refused to face the only sound military course. As a result the Allies caused the enemy staggering losses in men and materials."[153] Knowing via "Ultra" that Hitler was not planning to retreat from Normandy, Montgomery, on 6 August 1944, ordered an envelopment operation against Army Group B—with the First Canadian Army under Harry Crerar to advance towards Falaise, British Second Army under Miles Dempsey to advance towards Argentan, and Patton's Third Army to advance to Alençon.[156] On 11 August, Montgomery changed his plan, with the Canadians to take Falaise and to meet the Americans at Argentan.[156] The First Canadian Army launched two operations, Operation Totalize on 7 August, which advanced only 9 miles (14 km) in four days in the face of fierce German resistance, and Operation Tractable on 14 August, which finally took Falaise on 17 August.[157] In view of the slow Canadian advance, Patton requested permission to take Falaise, but was refused by Bradley on 13 August. This prompted much controversy, many historians arguing that Bradley lacked aggression and that Montgomery should have overruled Bradley.[158]

The so-called Falaise Gap was closed on 22 August 1944, but several American generals, most notably Patton, accused Montgomery of being insufficiently aggressive in closing it. About 60,000 German soldiers were trapped in Normandy, but before 22 August, about 20,000 Germans had escaped through the Falaise Gap.[153] About 10,000 Germans had been killed in the Battle of the Falaise Gap, which led a stunned Eisenhower, who viewed the battlefield on 24 August, to comment with horror that it was impossible to walk without stepping on corpses.[159] The successful conclusion of the Normandy campaign saw the beginning of the debate between the "American school" and "British school" as both American and British generals started to advance claims about who was most responsible for this victory.[153] Brooke wrote in defence of his protégé Montgomery: "Ike knows nothing about strategy and is 'quite' unsuited to the post of Supreme Commander. It is no wonder that Monty's real high ability is not always realised. Especially so when 'national' spectacles pervert the perspective of the strategic landscape."[160] About Montgomery's conduct of the Normandy campaign, Badsey wrote:

Too much discussion on Normandy has centered on the controversial decisions of the Allied commanders. It was not good enough, apparently, to win such a complete and spectacular victory over an enemy that had conquered most of Europe unless it was done perfectly. Most of the blame for this lies with Montgomery, who was foolish enough to insist that it had been done perfectly, that Normandy—and all his other battles—had been fought accordingly to a precise master plan drawn up beforehand, from which he never deviated. It says much for his personality that Montgomery found others to agree with him, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. His handling of the Battle of Normandy was of a very high order, and as the person who would certainly have been blamed for losing the battle, he deserves the credit for winning it.[161]

Replaced as Ground Forces Commander edit

Eisenhower took over Ground Forces Command on 1 September, while continuing as Supreme Commander, with Montgomery continuing to command the 21st Army Group, now consisting mainly of British and Canadian units. Montgomery bitterly resented this change, although it had been agreed before the D-Day invasion.[162] The British journalist Mark Urban writes that Montgomery seemed unable to grasp that as the majority of the 2.2 million Allied soldiers fighting against Germany on the Western Front were now American (the ratio was 3:1) that it was politically unacceptable to American public opinion to have Montgomery remain as Land Forces Commander as: "Politics would not allow him to carry on giving orders to great armies of Americans simply because, in his view, he was better than their generals."[163]

Winston Churchill had Montgomery promoted to field marshal[164] by way of compensation.[162]

Advance to the Rhine edit

By September, ports like Cherbourg were too far away from the front line, causing the Allies great logistical problems. Antwerp was the third largest port in Europe. It was a deep water inland port connected to the North Sea via the river Scheldt. The Scheldt was wide enough and dredged deep enough to allow the passage of ocean-going ships.[165]

On 3 September 1944 Hitler ordered Fifteenth Army, which had been stationed in the Pas de Calais region and was withdrawing north into the Low Countries, to hold the mouth of the river Scheldt to deprive the Allies of the use of Antwerp.[166] Von Rundstedt, the German commander of the Western Front, ordered General Gustav-Adolf von Zangen, the commander of 15th Army, that: "The attempt of the enemy to occupy the West Scheldt in order to obtain the free use of the harbor of Antwerp must be resisted to the utmost" (emphasis in the original).[167] Rundstedt argued with Hitler that as long as the Allies could not use the port of Antwerp, the Allies would lack the logistical capacity for an invasion of Germany.[167]

The Witte Brigade (White Brigade) of the Belgian resistance had captured the Port of Antwerp before the Germans could destroy key port facilities,[168] and on 4 September, Antwerp was captured by Horrocks with its harbour mostly intact.[169] The British declined to immediately advance over the Albert Canal, and an opportunity to destroy the German Fifteenth Army was lost.[168] The Germans had mined the river Scheldt, the mouth of the Scheldt was still in German hands making it impossible for the Royal Navy to clear the mines in the river, and therefore the port of Antwerp was still useless to the Allies.[170]

On 5 September, SHAEF's naval commander, Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay, had urged Montgomery to make clearing the mouth of the Scheldt his number-one priority. Alone among the senior commanders, only Ramsay saw opening Antwerp as crucial.[171] Thanks to "Ultra," Montgomery was aware of Hitler's order by 5 September.[166]

On 9 September, Montgomery wrote to Brooke that "one good Pas de Calais port" would be sufficient to meet all the logistical needs of the 21st Army Group, but only the supply needs of the same formation.[172] At the same time, Montgomery noted that "one good Pas de Calais port" would be insufficient for the American armies in France, which would thus force Eisenhower, if for no other reasons than logistics, to favour Montgomery's plans for an invasion of northern Germany by the 21st Army Group, whereas if Antwerp were opened up, then all of the Allied armies could be supplied.[173]

The importance of ports closer to Germany was highlighted with the liberation of the city of Le Havre, which was assigned to John Crocker's I Corps.[172] To take Le Havre, two infantry divisions, two tank brigades, most of the artillery of the Second British Army, the specialised armoured "gadgets" of Percy Hobart's 79th Armoured Division, the battleship HMS Warspite and the monitor HMS Erebus were all committed.[172] On 10 September 1944, Bomber Command dropped 4,719 tons of bombs on Le Havre, which was the prelude to Operation Astonia, the assault on Le Havre by Crocker's men, which was taken two days later.[172] The Canadian historian Terry Copp wrote that the commitment of this much firepower and men to take only one French city might "seem excessive", but by this point, the Allies desperately needed ports closer to the front line to sustain their advance.[172]

In September 1944, Montgomery ordered Crerar and his First Canadian Army to take the French ports on the English Channel, namely Calais, Boulogne and Dunkirk,[172] and to clear the Scheldt, a task that Crerar stated was impossible as he lacked enough troops to perform both operations at once.[174] Montgomery refused Crerar's request to have British XII Corps under Neil Ritchie assigned to help clear the Scheldt as Montgomery stated he needed XII Corps for Operation Market Garden.[175] On 6 September 1944, Montgomery told Crerar that "I want Boulogne badly" and that city should be taken no matter what the cost.[172] On 22 September 1944, Simonds's II Canadian Corps took Boulogne, followed up by taking Calais on 1 October 1944.[176] Montgomery was highly impatient with Simonds, complaining that it had taken Crocker's I Corps only two days to take Le Havre while it took Simonds two weeks to take Boulogne and Calais, but Simonds noted that at Le Havre, three divisions and two brigades had been employed, whereas at both Boulogne and Calais, only two brigades were sent in to take both cities.[177] After an attempt to storm the Leopold Canal by the 4th Canadian Division had been badly smashed by the German defenders, Simonds ordered a stop to further attempts to clear the river Scheldt until his mission of capturing the French ports on the English Channel had been accomplished; this allowed the German Fifteenth Army ample time to dig into its new home on the Scheldt.[178] The only port that was not captured by the Canadians was Dunkirk, as Montgomery ordered the 2nd Canadian Division on 15 September to hold his flank at Antwerp as a prelude for an advance up the Scheldt.[165]

 
Holland, 13 October 1944: Montgomery outlines his future strategy to King George VI in his mobile headquarters.

Montgomery pulled away from the First Canadian Army (temporarily commanded now by Simonds as Crerar was ill), the British 51st Highland Division, 1st Polish Division, British 49th (West Riding) Division and 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade, and sent all of these formations to help the Second British Army to expand the Market Garden salient with Operations Constellation, Aintree, and towards the end of October Pheasant.[179] However, Simonds seems to have regarded the Scheldt campaign as a test of his ability, and he felt he could clear the Scheldt with only three Canadian divisions, namely the 2nd, the 3rd, and the 4th, despite having to take on the entire Fifteenth Army, which held strongly fortified positions in a landscape that favoured the defence.[180] Simonds never complained about the lack of air support (made worse by the cloudy October weather), shortages of ammunition or having insufficient troops, regarding these problems as challenges for him to overcome, rather than a cause for complaint.[180] As it was, Simonds made only slow progress in October 1944 during the fighting in the Battle of the Scheldt, although he was praised by Copp for imaginative and aggressive leadership who managed to achieve much, despite all of the odds against him.[181] Montgomery had little respect for the Canadian generals, whom he dismissed as mediocre, with the exception of Simonds, whom he consistently praised as Canada's only "first-rate" general in the entire war.[172]

 
Montgomery in conversation with Major General Stanisław Maczek during his visit to the 1st Polish Armoured Division Headquarters in Breda, 25 November 1944

Admiral Ramsay, who proved to be a far more articulate and forceful champion of the Canadians than their own generals, starting on 9 October demanded of Eisenhower in a meeting that he either order Montgomery to make supporting the First Canadian Army in the Scheldt fighting his number one priority or sack him.[182] Ramsay in very strong language argued to Eisenhower that the Allies could only invade Germany if Antwerp was opened, and that as long as the three Canadian divisions fighting in the Scheldt had shortages of ammunition and artillery shells because Montgomery made the Arnhem salient his first priority, then Antwerp would not be opened anytime soon.[182] Even Brooke wrote in his diary: "I feel that Monty's strategy for once is at fault. Instead of carrying out the advance to Arnhem he ought to have made certain of Antwerp".[182] On 9 October 1944, at Ramsay's urging, Eisenhower sent Montgomery a cable that emphasised the "supreme importance of Antwerp", that "the Canadian Army will not, repeat not, be able to attack until November unless immediately supplied with adequate ammunition", and warned that the Allied advance into Germany would totally stop by mid-November unless Antwerp was opened by October.[182] Montgomery replied by accusing Ramsay of making "wild statements" unsupported by the facts, denying the Canadians were having to ration ammunition, and claimed that he would soon take the Ruhr thereby making the Scheldt campaign a sideshow.[182] Montgomery further issued a memo entitled "Notes on Command in Western Europe" demanding that he once again be made Land Forces Commander. This led to an exasperated Eisenhower telling Montgomery that the question was not the command arrangement but rather his (Montgomery's) ability and willingness to obey orders. Eisenhower further told Montgomery to either obey orders to immediately clear the mouth of the Scheldt or be sacked.[183]

A chastised Montgomery told Eisenhower on 15 October 1944 that he was now making clearing the Scheldt his "top priority", and the ammunition shortages in the First Canadian Army, a problem which he denied even existed five days earlier, were now over as supplying the Canadians was henceforth his first concern.[183] Simonds, now reinforced with British troops and Royal Marines, cleared the Scheldt by taking Walcheren island, the last of the German "fortresses" on the Scheldt, on 8 November 1944.[184] With the Scheldt in Allied hands, Royal Navy minesweepers removed the German mines in the river, and Antwerp was finally opened to shipping on 28 November 1944.[184] Reflecting Antwerp's importance, the Germans spent the winter of 1944–45 firing V-1 flying bombs and V-2 rockets at it in an attempt to shut down the port, and the German offensive in December 1944 in the Ardennes had as its ultimate objective the capture of Antwerp.[184] Urban wrote that Montgomery's most "serious failure" in the entire war was not the well publicised Battle of Arnhem, but rather his lack of interest in opening up Antwerp, as without it the entire Allied advance from the North Sea to the Swiss Alps stalled in the autumn of 1944 for logistical reasons.[185]

Operation Market Garden edit

Montgomery was able to persuade Eisenhower to allow him to test his strategy of a single thrust to the Ruhr with Operation Market Garden in September 1944. The offensive was strategically bold.[186] Following the Allied breakout from Normandy, Eisenhower, favored pursuing the German armies northwards and eastwards to the Rhine on a broad front. Eisenhower relied on speed, which in turn depended on logistics, which were "stretched to the limit".[187] Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) did provide Montgomery with additional resources, principally additional locomotives and rolling stock, and priority for air supply.[188] Eisenhower's decision to launch Market Garden was influenced by his desire to keep the retreating Germans under pressure, and by the pressure from the United States to use the First Allied Airborne Army as soon as possible.[189]

Montgomery's plan for Operation Market Garden (17–25 September 1944) was to outflank the Siegfried Line and cross the Rhine, setting the stage for later offensives into the Ruhr region. The 21st Army Group would attack north from Belgium, 60 miles (97 km) through the Netherlands, across the Rhine and consolidate north of Arnhem on the far side of the Rhine. The risky plan required three Airborne Divisions to capture numerous intact bridges along a single-lane road, on which an entire Corps had to attack and use as its main supply route. The offensive failed to achieve its objectives.[190]

Both Churchill and Montgomery claimed that the operation was nearly or 90% successful, although in Montgomery's equivocal acceptance of responsibility he blames lack of support, and also refers to the Battle of the Scheldt which was undertaken by Canadian troops not involved in Market Garden. Montgomery later said:

It was a bad mistake on my part—I underestimated the difficulties of opening up the approaches to Antwerp ... I reckoned the Canadian Army could do it while we were going for the Ruhr. I was wrong ... In my—prejudiced—view, if the operation had been properly backed from its inception, and given the aircraft, ground forces, and administrative resources necessary for the job, it would have succeeded in spite of my mistakes, or the adverse weather, or the presence of the 2nd SS Panzer Corps in the Arnhem area. I remain Market Garden's unrepentant advocate.[191]

In the aftermath of Market Garden, Montgomery made holding the Arnhem salient his first priority, arguing that the Second British Army might still be able to break through and reach the wide open plains of northern Germany, and that he might be able to take the Ruhr by the end of October.[192] The Germans under Field Marshal Walther Model in early October attempted to retake the Nijmegen salient but were beaten back. In the meantime, the First Canadian Army finally achieved the task of clearing the mouth of the river Scheldt, despite the fact that in the words of Copp and Vogel "... that Montgomery's Directive required the Canadians to continue to fight alone for almost two weeks in a battle which everyone agreed could only be won with the aid of additional divisions".[193]

Battle of the Bulge edit

On 16 December 1944, at the start of the Battle of the Bulge, Montgomery's 21st Army Group was on the northern flank of the allied lines. Bradley's US 12th Army Group was to Montgomery's south, with William Simpson's U.S. Ninth Army adjacent to 21st Army Group, Courtney Hodges' U.S. First Army, holding the Ardennes and Patton's U.S. Third Army further south.[194]

 
Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery talking with Lieutenant General Simpson, GOC U.S. Ninth Army and Major General John Anderson, GOC U.S. XVI Corps. Behind are General Bradley and Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke.

SHAEF believed the Wehrmacht was no longer capable of launching a major offensive, and that no offensive could be launched through such rugged terrain as the Ardennes Forest. Because of this, the area was held by refitting and newly arrived American formations.[194] The Wehrmacht planned to exploit this by making a surprise attack through the Ardennes Forest whilst bad weather grounded Allied air power, splitting the Allied Armies in two. They would then turn north to recapture the port of Antwerp.[195] If the attack were to succeed in capturing Antwerp, the whole of 21st Army Group, along with U.S. Ninth Army and most of U.S. First Army would be trapped without supplies behind German lines.[196]

The attack initially advanced rapidly, splitting U.S. 12th Army Group in two, with all of U.S. Ninth Army and the bulk of U.S. First Army on the northern shoulder of the German 'bulge'. The 12th Army Group commander, Bradley, was located in Luxembourg, south of the bulge, making command of the U.S. forces north of the bulge problematic. As Montgomery was the nearest army group commander on the ground, on 20 December, Eisenhower temporarily transferred command of U.S. Ninth Army and U.S. First Army to Montgomery's 21st Army Group. Bradley was "concerned because it might discredit the American command" but that it might mean Montgomery would commit more of his reserves to the battle. In practice the change led to "great resentment on the part of many Americans, particularly at Headquarters, 12th Army Group, and Third Army".[197]

With the British and American forces under Montgomery's command holding the northern flank of the German assault, General Patton's Third Army, which was 90 miles (140 km) to the south, turned north and fought its way through the severe weather and German opposition to relieve the besieged American forces in Bastogne. Four days after Montgomery took command of the northern flank, the bad weather cleared and the USAAF and RAF[198] resumed operations, inflicting heavy casualties on German troops and vehicles. Six days after Montgomery took command of the northern flank, Patton's Third Army relieved the besieged American forces in Bastogne. Unable to advance further, and running out of fuel, the Wehrmacht abandoned the offensive.[194][199]

Morelock states that Montgomery was preoccupied with leading a "single thrust offensive" to Berlin as the overall commander of Allied ground forces, and that he accordingly treated the Ardennes counteroffensive "as a sideshow, to be finished with the least possible effort and expenditure of resources."[200]

Montgomery subsequently wrote of his actions:

The first thing to do was to see the battle on the northern flank as one whole, to ensure the vital areas were held securely, and to create reserves for counter-attack. I embarked on these measures: I put British troops under command of the Ninth Army to fight alongside American soldiers, and made that Army take over some of the First Army Front. I positioned British troops as reserves behind the First and Ninth Armies until such time as American reserves could be created.[201]

After the war Hasso von Manteuffel, who commanded the 5th Panzer Army in the Ardennes, was imprisoned awaiting trial for war crimes. During this period he was interviewed by B. H. Liddell Hart, a British author who has since been accused of putting words in the mouths of German generals, and attempting to "rewrite the historical record".[202][203][204][205] After conducting several interviews via an interpreter, Liddell Hart in a subsequent book attributed to Manteuffel the following statement about Montgomery's contribution to the battle in the Ardennes:

The operations of the American 1st Army had developed into a series of individual holding actions. Montgomery's contribution to restoring the situation was that he turned a series of isolated actions into a coherent battle fought according to a clear and definite plan. It was his refusal to engage in premature and piecemeal counter-attacks which enabled the Americans to gather their reserves and frustrate the German attempts to extend their breakthrough.[206]

However, American historian Stephen Ambrose, writing in 1997, maintained that "Putting Monty in command of the northern flank had no effect on the battle".[207] Ambrose wrote that: "Far from directing the victory, Montgomery had gotten in everyone's way, and had botched the counter-attack."[208] General Omar Bradley blamed Montgomery's "stagnating conservatism" for his failure to counter-attack when ordered to do so by Eisenhower.[209]

Command of U.S. First Army reverted to 12th Army Group on 17 January 1945,[210] whilst command of U.S. Ninth Army remained with 21st Army Group for the coming operations to cross the Rhine.[211]

Crossing the Rhine edit

 
Montgomery (left), Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham (centre) and the Commander of the British Second Army, Lieutenant-General Sir Miles Dempsey, talking after a conference in which Montgomery gave the order for the Second Army to begin Operation Plunder.
 
Montgomery was awarded the Order of Victory on 5 June 1945. Dwight Eisenhower, Georgy Zhukov and Sir Arthur Tedder were also present.

In February 1945, Montgomery's 21st Army Group advanced to the Rhine in Operation Veritable and Operation Grenade. It crossed the Rhine on 24 March 1945, in Operation Plunder, which took place two weeks after U.S. First Army had crossed the Rhine after capturing the Ludendorff Bridge during the Battle of Remagen.[212]

21st Army Group's river crossing was followed by the encirclement of the Ruhr Pocket. During this battle, U.S. Ninth Army, which had remained part of 21st Army Group after the Battle of the Bulge, formed the northern arm of the envelopment of German Army Group B, with U.S. First Army forming the southern arm. The two armies linked up on 1 April 1945, encircling 370,000 German troops, and on 4 April 1945, Ninth Army reverted to Omar Bradley's 12th Army Group.[213]

By the war's end, the remaining formations of 21st Army group, First Canadian Army and British Second Army, had liberated the northern part of the Netherlands and captured much of north-west Germany, occupied Hamburg and Rostock and sealed off the Danish peninsula.[214]

On 4 May 1945, on Lüneburg Heath, Montgomery accepted the surrender of German forces in north-west Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands.[215]

Casualty conservation policy edit

The British high command were not only concerned with winning the war and defeating Germany, but also with ensuring that it retained sufficient influence in the post-war world to govern global policy. Suffering heavy losses in Normandy would diminish British leadership and prestige within its empire and on post-war Europe in particular.[216] Many of Montgomery's clashes with Eisenhower were based on his determination to pursue the war "on lines most suitable to Britain".[217]

The fewer the number of combat-experienced divisions the British had left at the end of the war, the smaller Britain's influence in Europe was likely to be, compared to the emerging superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union. Montgomery was thus caught in a dilemma—the British Army needed to be seen to be pulling at least half the weight in the liberation of Europe, but without incurring the heavy casualties that such a role would inevitably produce. 21st Army Group scarcely possessed sufficient forces to achieve such a military prominence, and the remaining divisions had to be expended sparingly.[218]

Britain, in 1944, did not possess the manpower to rebuild shattered divisions and it was imperative for Montgomery to protect the viability of the British army so that Britain could still play an important part in the final victory. It was reported to the War Office that "Montgomery has to be very careful of what he does on his eastern flank because on that flank is the only British Army there is left in this part of the world". The context of British casualties and the shortage of reinforcements, prompted Montgomery to "excessive caution".[219] Dempsey wrote on 13 June, that Caen could only be taken by a "set piece assault and we did not have the men or the ammunition for that at the time".[220]

Montgomery's solution to the dilemma was to attempt to remain Commander of All Land Forces until the end of the war, so that any victory attained on the Western front—although achieved primarily by American formations—would accrue in part to him and thus to Britain. He would also be able to ensure that British units were spared some of the high-attrition actions, but would be most prominent when the final blows were struck.[221] When that strategy failed, he persuaded Eisenhower to occasionally put some American formations under the control of the 21st Army Group, so as to bolster his resources while still maintaining the outward appearance of successful British effort.[222]

Montgomery initially remained prepared to push Second (British) Army hard to capture the vital strategic town of Caen, and consequently incur heavy losses. In the original Overlord plan, Montgomery was determined to push past Caen to Falaise as quickly as possible. However, after the heavy casualties incurred in capturing Caen, he changed his mind.[223]

Personality edit

Montgomery was notorious for his lack of tact and diplomacy. Even his "patron", the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, General Sir Alan Brooke, frequently mentions it in his war diaries: "he is liable to commit untold errors in lack of tact" and "I had to haul him over the coals for his usual lack of tact and egotistical outlook which prevented him from appreciating other people's feelings".[224]

One incident that illustrated this occurred during the North African campaign when Montgomery bet Walter Bedell Smith that he could capture Sfax by the middle of April 1943. Smith jokingly replied that if Montgomery could do it he would give him a Flying Fortress complete with crew. Smith promptly forgot all about it, but Montgomery did not, and when Sfax was taken on 10 April he sent a message to Smith "claiming his winnings". Smith tried to laugh it off, but Montgomery was having none of it and insisted on his aircraft. It got as high as Eisenhower who, with his renowned skill in diplomacy, ensured Montgomery did get his Flying Fortress, though at a great cost in ill feeling.[225] Even Brooke thought it crass stupidity.[226]

Antony Beevor, in discussing Montgomery's counterproductive lack of tact in the final months of the war, described him as "insufferable". Beevor says that in January 1945 Montgomery had tried to claim far too much credit for the British (and for himself) in defeating the German counter-attack in the Ardennes in December 1944. This "crass and unpleasant blunder" helped make it impossible for Churchill and Alan Brooke to persuade Eisenhower of the need for an immediate thrust—to be led by Montgomery—through Germany to Berlin. Eisenhower did not accept the viability of the "dagger thrust" approach, it had already been agreed that Berlin would fall into the future Soviet occupation zone, and he was not willing to accept heavy casualties for no gain, so Eisenhower disregarded the British suggestions and continued with his conservative broad front strategy, and the Red Army reached Berlin well ahead of the Western Allies.[227]

In August 1945, while Brooke, Sir Andrew Cunningham and Sir Charles Portal were discussing their possible successors as "Chiefs of Staff", they concluded that Montgomery would be very efficient as CIGS from the Army's point of view but that he was also very unpopular with a large proportion of the Army. Despite this, Cunningham and Portal were strongly in favour of Montgomery succeeding Brooke after his retirement.[228] Churchill, by all accounts a faithful friend, is quoted as saying of Montgomery, "In defeat, unbeatable; in victory, unbearable."[229]

Montgomery suffered from "an overbearing conceit and an uncontrollable urge for self-promotion." General Hastings Ismay, who was at the time Winston Churchill's chief staff officer and trusted military adviser, once stated of Montgomery: "I have come to the conclusion that his love of publicity is a disease, like alcoholism or taking drugs, and that it sends him equally mad."[230][231][232]

Later life edit

Post-war military career edit

 
Montgomery and Soviet Marshals Zhukov (red sash) and Rokossovsky (medal with solid red ribbon) with General Sokolovsky (medal with red and white ribbon) leave the Brandenburg Gate on 12 July 1945 after being decorated by Montgomery.

After the war, Montgomery became the C-in-C of the British Army of the Rhine (BAOR), the name given to the British Occupation Forces, and was the British member of the Allied Control Council.[233]

Chief of the Imperial General Staff edit

Montgomery was Chief of the Imperial General Staff (CIGS) from 1946 to 1948, succeeding Alan Brooke.[215]

As CIGS, Montgomery toured Africa in 1947 and in a secret 1948 report to Prime Minister Clement Attlee's government proposed a "master plan" to amalgamate British Africa territories and to exploit the raw materials of Africa, thereby counteracting the loss of British influence in Asia.[215]

However, Montgomery was barely on speaking terms with his fellow service chiefs, sending his deputy Kenneth Crawford to attend their meetings[233] and he clashed particularly with Sir Arthur Tedder, who was by now Chief of the Air Staff (CAS).[215]

When Montgomery's term of office expired, Prime Minister Attlee appointed Sir William Slim from retirement with the rank of field marshal as his successor. When Montgomery protested that he had told his protégé, General Sir John Crocker, former commander of I Corps in the 1944–45 North-West Europe Campaign, that the job was to be his, Attlee is said to have retorted "Untell him".[234]

Western Union Defence Organization edit

 
Montgomery in New Zealand in 1947

Montgomery was then appointed Chairman of the Western Union Defence Organization's C-in-C committee.[233] Volume 3 of Nigel Hamilton's Life of Montgomery of Alamein gives an account of the bickering between Montgomery and his land forces chief, French General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny, which created splits through the Union headquarters.[235]

NATO edit

On the creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in 1951, Montgomery became Eisenhower's deputy.[236] He would continue to serve under Eisenhower's successors, Generals Matthew Ridgway and Al Gruenther, until his retirement, aged nearly 71, in 1958.[237]

Personal edit

Montgomery was created 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein in 1946.[238]

Montgomery's mother, Maude Montgomery, died at New Park in Moville in Inishowen in 1949. She was buried alongside her husband in the kirkyard behind St Columb's Church, the small Church of Ireland church beside New Park, overlooking Lough Foyle. Montgomery did not attend the funeral, claiming he was "too busy".[98]

Montgomery was an Honorary Member of the Winkle Club, a charity in Hastings, East Sussex, and introduced Winston Churchill to the club in 1955.[239]

He was chairman of the governing body of St. John's School in Leatherhead, Surrey, from 1951 to 1966, and a generous supporter.[240]

He was also President of Portsmouth Football Club between 1944 and 1961.[241]

In the mid-1950s, the Illustrated London News published sets of photographs taken by Montgomery while flying over the Swiss Alps. In February 1957, views of Mount Toedi taken with a Rolleiflex camera were reproduced.[242]

Opinions edit

Memoirs edit

 
Lord Montgomery as CIGS with Lord Wavell, Viceroy of India, and Auchinleck, Commander in Chief Indian Army. Delhi 1946

Montgomery's memoirs (1958) criticised many of his wartime comrades in harsh terms, including Eisenhower.[243] He was threatened with legal action by Field Marshal Auchinleck for suggesting that Auchinleck had intended to retreat from the Alamein position if attacked again, and had to give a radio broadcast (20 November 1958) expressing his gratitude to Auchinleck for having stabilised the front at the First Battle of Alamein.[244]

The 1960 paperback edition of Montgomery's memoirs contains a publisher's note drawing attention to that broadcast, and stating that although the reader might assume from Montgomery's text that Auchinleck had been planning to retreat "into the Nile Delta or beyond" in the publisher's view it had been Auchinleck's intention to launch an offensive as soon as the Eighth Army was "rested and regrouped".[245] Montgomery was stripped of his honorary citizenship of Montgomery, Alabama, and was challenged to a duel by an Italian lawyer.[246]

Montgomery mentioned to the American journalist John Gunther in April 1944 that (like Alanbrooke) he kept a secret diary. Gunther remarked that it would surely be an essential source for historians. When Montgomery asked whether it would be worth money one day, Gunther suggested "at least $100,000." This was converted into pounds sterling, and he is supposed to have grinned and said "Well, I guess I won't die in the poor house after all."[247]

Military opinions edit

Montgomery twice met Israeli general Moshe Dayan. After an initial meeting in the early 1950s, Montgomery met Dayan again in the 1960s to discuss the Vietnam War, which Dayan was studying. Montgomery was harshly critical of US strategy in Vietnam, which involved deploying large numbers of combat troops, aggressive bombing attacks, and uprooting entire village populations and forcing them into strategic hamlets. Montgomery said that the Americans' most important problem was that they had no clear-cut objective, and allowed local commanders to set military policy. At the end of their meeting, Montgomery asked Dayan to tell the Americans, in his name, that they were "insane".[248]

During a visit to the Alamein battlefields in May 1967, he bluntly told high-ranking Egyptian Army officers that they would lose any war with Israel, a warning that was shown to be justified only a few weeks later in the Six-Day War.[249]

Social opinions edit

In retirement, Montgomery publicly supported apartheid after a visit to South Africa in 1962, and after a visit to China declared himself impressed by the Chinese leadership led by Chairman Mao Tse-tung.[250][251] He spoke out against the legalisation of homosexuality in the United Kingdom, arguing that the Sexual Offences Act 1967 was a "charter for buggery"[252] and that "this sort of thing may be tolerated by the French, but we're British—thank God".[253]

Montgomery was a non-smoking teetotaller, a vegetarian,[254] and a Christian.[255]

Death edit

 
Statue of Montgomery in Whitehall, London, by Oscar Nemon, unveiled in 1980

Montgomery died from unspecified causes in 1976 at his home Isington Mill in Isington, Hampshire, aged 88.[256][257][258][259] After a funeral at St George's Chapel, Windsor, his body was buried in Holy Cross churchyard, in Binsted, Hampshire.[98] He was survived by his son and only child David Montgomery, 2nd Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (1928–2020), as well as two grandchildren. His wife Betty Carver died in 1937.[260]

His Garter banner, which had hung in St. George's Chapel in Windsor during his lifetime, is now on display in St Mary's, Warwick.[261]

Legacy edit

 
Montgomery's Grant command tank, on display at the Imperial War Museum in London
  • The Imperial War Museum holds a variety of material relating to Montgomery in its collections. These include Montgomery's Grant command tank (on display in the atrium at the Museum's London branch), his command caravans as used in North West Europe (on display at IWM Duxford), and his papers are held by the Museum's Department of Documents. The Museum maintains a permanent exhibition about Montgomery, entitled Monty: Master of the Battlefield.[265]
  • The World Champion Field Marshal Montgomery Pipe Band from Northern Ireland is named after him.[266]
  • Montgomery's Rolls-Royce staff car is on display at the Royal Logistic Corps Museum, Deepcut, Surrey.[267]
  • The Montgomery cocktail is a martini mixed at a ratio of 15 parts gin to 1 part vermouth, and popular with Ernest Hemingway at Harry's Bar in Venice.[268] The drink was facetiously named for Montgomery's supposed refusal to go into battle unless his numerical advantage was at least fifteen to one, and it appeared in Hemingway's 1950 novel Across the River and into the Trees. Ironically, following severe internal injuries received in the First World War, Montgomery himself could neither smoke nor drink.[186]

Honours and awards edit

 
Arms of Montgomery: Azure two lions passant guardant between three fleur-de-lis two in chief and one in base and two trefoils in fess all or.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Grossman, Mark (2007). World Military Leaders: A Biographical Dictionary. Infobase Publishing. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-8160-7477-8.
  2. ^ "No. 40729". The London Gazette (Supplement). 9 March 1956. p. 1504.
  3. ^ "No. 37983". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 June 1947. p. 2663.
  4. ^ "No. 41182". The London Gazette (Supplement). 20 September 1957. p. 5545.
  5. ^ "No. 37589". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 May 1946. p. 2665.
  6. ^ "No. 42240". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1960. p. 24.
  7. ^ "No. 37826". The London Gazette (Supplement). 20 December 1946. p. 6236.
  8. ^ "No. 43160". The London Gazette (Supplement). 15 November 1963. p. 9424.
  9. ^ "No. 41599". The London Gazette. 6 January 1959. p. 166.
  10. ^ "Viscount Montgomery of Alamein". Desert Island Discs. 20 December 1969. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  11. ^ Hamilton 1981, pp. 3, 12.
  12. ^ Hamilton 1981, pp. 13–15.
  13. ^ Hamilton 1894, p. 324.
  14. ^ Hamilton 1981, p. 3.
  15. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  16. ^ "Ballynally Townland, Co. Donegal". Townlands.ie. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  17. ^ Montgomery 1933, Chapter V.
  18. ^ Hamilton 1981, p. 31.
  19. ^ Hamilton 1981, p. 5.
  20. ^ "The Suffolk nun charged with teaching one of the world's most controversial military leaders". The Great British Life. 11 March 2020. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  21. ^ Chalfont 1976, p. 29.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Bierman & Smith 2002, pp. 223–230
  23. ^ Hamilton 1981, p. 36
  24. ^ a b c d e f Heathcote 1999, p. 213
  25. ^ "No. 28178". The London Gazette. 18 September 1908. p. 6762.
  26. ^ "No. 28382". The London Gazette. 7 June 1910. p. 3996.
  27. ^ a b Doherty 2004, p. 19.
  28. ^ Doherty 2004, p. 20.
  29. ^ a b "No. 28992". The London Gazette. 1 December 1914. p. 10188.
  30. ^ "No. 29080". The London Gazette. 23 February 1915. p. 1833.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Heathcote 1999, p. 214
  32. ^ "No. 30884". The London Gazette (Supplement). 3 September 1918. p. 10505.
  33. ^ Horne, Photo Plate No. 1 after p. 100
  34. ^ The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery (1958) p. 35
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  • Neillands, Robin (2005). The Battle for the Rhine 1944. Overlook Press. ISBN 978-1-59020-028-5.
  • Playfair, Major-General I.S.O.; Flynn, Captain F.C. (R.N.); Molony, Brigadier C.J.C. & Gleave, Group Captain T.P. (2004c) [1st. pub. HMSO:1960]. Butler, Sir James (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East, Vol. III: British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb (September 1941 to September 1942). History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Uckfield, UK: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84574-067-2.
  • Playfair, Major-General I.S.O.; Flynn, Captain F.C. (R.N.); Molony, Brigadier C.J.C. & Gleave, Group Captain T.P. (2004d) [1st. pub. HMSO:1966]. Butler, Sir James (ed.). The Mediterranean and Middle East, Volume IV: The Destruction of the Axis Forces in Africa. History of the Second World War, United Kingdom Military Series. Uckfield, UK: Naval & Military Press. ISBN 978-1-84574-068-9.
  • Powers, Stephen (July 1992). The Battle of Normandy: The Lingering Controversy. Vol. 56. The Journal of Military History.
  • Ryan, Cornelius (1974). A Bridge Too Far. Hodder. ISBN 978-0-684-80330-2.
  • Schultz, James (1998). A framework for military decision making under risks. Thesis. Air University, Maxwell Airforce Base, Alabama.
  • Shirer, William L. (2003). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. Gallery Books. ISBN 978-0-8317-7404-2.
  • Speer, Albert (1970). Inside the Third Reich. Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-299-61013-2.
  • Urban, Mark (2005). Generals Ten British Commanders Who Shaped The World. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-23249-9.
  • Weinberg, Gerhard (2004). A World in Arms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-61826-7.

Primary sources edit

  • Alanbrooke, Field Marshal Lord (2001). Danchev, Alex; Todman, Daniel (eds.). War Diaries 1939–1945. London: Phoenix Press. ISBN 978-1-84212-526-7.
  • Brett-James, Anthony (1984). Conversations with Montgomery. Irwin. ISBN 978-0-7183-0531-4.
  • Eisenhower, Dwight D. (1948). Crusade in Europe. London: William Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-306-70768-1. OCLC 219971286.
  • Montgomery, Bernard Law (2000) [1972]. A Concise History of Warfare. Wordsworth Military Library. Ware, Herts, UK: Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 978-1-84022-223-4.
  • Montgomery, Bernard Law (1958). The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery. Cleveland: The World Publishing Company.
  • Montgomery, Bernard Law (1960). The memoirs of field-marshall the viscount Montgomery of Alamein, K.G. Companion Book Club. OCLC 86057670.
  • Montgomery, Bernard Law (1961). The Path to Leadership. London: Collins. ISBN 978-81-8158-128-0. OCLC 464095648.
  • Montgomery, Bernard (2008). Brooks, Stephen (ed.). Montgomery and the Battle of Normandy: A Selection from the Diaries, Correspondence and Other Papers of Field Marshal the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, January to August 1944. Army Records Society series, 27. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7509-5123-4.
  • Zetterling, Niklas (2000). Normandy 1944: German Military Organization, Combat Power and Organizational Effectiveness. Fedorowicz (J.J.), Canada. ISBN 978-0-921991-56-4.

External links edit

  • British Army Officers 1939–1945
  • Generals of World War II
  • "NATO Declassified – Montgomery". NATO.
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein
  • Biography of Montgomery, Jewish Virtual Library website. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  • Profile, desertwar.net. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  • Viscount Montgomery of Alamein interview on BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs, 20 December 1969
  • Newspaper clippings about Bernard Montgomery in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Military offices
Preceded by Commander, 9th Infantry Brigade
1937–1938
Succeeded by
New title
Division reformed
Commander, 8th Infantry Division
1938–1939
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC, 3rd Infantry Division
1939–1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC II Corps, British Expeditionary Force
May–June 1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC, V Corps
1940–1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC, XII Corps
April–November 1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by GOC-in-C, South-Eastern Command
1941–1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Sir Claude Auchinleck
GOC-in-C, Eighth Army
1942–1943
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Sir Bernard Paget
GOC-in-C, 21st Army Group
1944–1945
Post disbanded
New title
New command
C-in-C British Army of the Rhine
1945–1946
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief of the Imperial General Staff
1946–1948
Succeeded by
New title Deputy Supreme Allied Commander, Europe
1951–1958
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Montgomery of Alamein
1946–1976
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by
Clement Thomes
Colonel of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment
1947–1963
Succeeded by
Ronald Macdonald

bernard, montgomery, general, montgomery, redirects, here, other, uses, general, montgomery, disambiguation, field, marshal, bernard, montgomery, viscount, montgomery, alamein, november, 1887, march, 1976, nicknamed, monty, senior, british, army, officer, serv. General Montgomery redirects here For other uses see General Montgomery disambiguation Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein KG GCB DSO PC DL m e n t ˈ ɡ ʌ m er i ˈ ae l e m eɪ n 17 November 1887 24 March 1976 nicknamed Monty was a senior British Army officer who served in the First World War the Irish War of Independence and the Second World War The Viscount Montgomery of AlameinMontgomery in 1943Nickname s Monty The Spartan General Born 1887 11 17 17 November 1887 1 Kennington Surrey EnglandDied24 March 1976 1976 03 24 aged 88 Alton Hampshire EnglandBuriedHoly Cross Churchyard Binsted HampshireAllegianceUnited KingdomService wbr branchBritish ArmyYears of service1908 1958RankField marshalService number8742UnitRoyal Warwickshire RegimentCommands heldDeputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe 1951 1958 Chairman of the Western Union Commanders in Chief Committee 1948 1951 Chief of the Imperial General Staff 1946 1948 British Army of the Rhine 1945 1946 21st Army Group 1944 1945 Allied Ground Forces Normandy 1944 Eighth Army 1942 1943 South Eastern Command 1941 1942 XII Corps 1941 V Corps 1940 1941 II Corps 1940 3rd Infantry Division 1939 1940 8th Infantry Division 1938 1939 9th Infantry Brigade 1937 1938 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment 1931 1934 17th Service Battalion Royal Fusiliers 1919 Battles warsFirst World War Anglo Irish War Arab revolt in Palestine Second World War Battle of France Battle of Dunkirk Dunkirk evacuation North African Campaign Battle of Alam el Halfa Second Battle of El Alamein Battle of El Agheila Tunisian Campaign Battle of Medenine Battle of the Mareth Line Italian campaign Sicilian Campaign Allied invasion of Italy Operation Overlord Battle for Caen Operation Goodwood Operation Cobra Battle of the Falaise Pocket Liberation of Paris Siegfried Line Campaign Operation Market Garden Clearing the Channel Coast Battle of the Bulge Western Allied invasion of Germany Operation Veritable Operation Varsity Operation Plunder Battle of the Ruhr Pocket Battle of Hamburg Palestine EmergencyAwardsKnight Companion of the Order of the GarterKnight Grand Cross of the Order of the BathDistinguished Service OrderMentioned in Despatches 9 Spouse s Betty Carver m 1927 died 1937 wbr Other workColonel Commandant Royal Tank RegimentColonel Commandant Parachute Regiment 1956 2 Representative Colonel Commandant Royal Armoured Corps 1947 1957 3 4 Colonel Commandant Army Physical Training Corps 1946 1960 5 6 Colonel Royal Warwickshire Regiment 1947 1963 7 8 Deputy Lieutenant of Southampton 1958 76 9 SignatureMontgomery s voice source source source from the BBC programme Desert Island Discs 20 December 1969 10 Montgomery first saw action in the First World War as a junior officer of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment At Meteren near the Belgian border at Bailleul he was shot through the right lung by a sniper during the First Battle of Ypres On returning to the Western Front as a general staff officer he took part in the Battle of Arras in April May 1917 He also took part in the Battle of Passchendaele in late 1917 before finishing the war as chief of staff of the 47th 2nd London Division In the inter war years he commanded the 17th Service Battalion Royal Fusiliers and later the 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment before becoming commander of the 9th Infantry Brigade and then general officer commanding GOC 8th Infantry Division During the Western Desert campaign of the Second World War Montgomery commanded the British Eighth Army from August 1942 through the Second Battle of El Alamein and on to the final Allied victory in Tunisia in May 1943 He subsequently commanded the British Eighth Army during the Allied invasion of Sicily and the Allied invasion of Italy and was in command of all Allied ground forces during the Battle of Normandy Operation Overlord from D Day on 6 June 1944 until 1 September 1944 He then continued in command of the 21st Army Group for the rest of the North West Europe campaign including the failed attempt to cross the Rhine during Operation Market Garden When German armoured forces broke through the US lines in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge Montgomery received command of the northern shoulder of the Bulge This included temporary command of the US First Army and the US Ninth Army which held up the German advance to the north of the Bulge while the US Third Army under Lieutenant General George Patton relieved Bastogne from the south Montgomery s 21st Army Group including the US Ninth Army and the First Allied Airborne Army crossed the Rhine in Operation Plunder in March 1945 two weeks after the US First Army had crossed the Rhine in the Battle of Remagen By the end of the war troops under Montgomery s command had taken part in the encirclement of the Ruhr Pocket liberated the Netherlands and captured much of north west Germany On 4 May 1945 Montgomery accepted the surrender of the German forces in north western Europe at Luneburg Heath south of Hamburg after the surrender of Berlin to the USSR on 2 May After the war he became Commander in Chief of the British Army of the Rhine BAOR in Germany and then Chief of the Imperial General Staff 1946 1948 From 1948 to 1951 he served as Chairman of the Commanders in Chief Committee of the Western Union He then served as NATO s Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe until his retirement in 1958 Contents 1 Early life 2 First World War 3 Between the world wars 3 1 1920s 3 2 Marriage and family 3 3 1930s 4 Second World War 4 1 British Expeditionary Force 4 1 1 Phoney war 4 1 2 Battle of France 4 2 Service in the United Kingdom 1940 1942 4 3 North Africa and Italy 4 3 1 Montgomery s early command 4 3 2 First battles with Rommel 4 3 3 El Alamein 4 3 4 Tunisia 4 3 5 Sicily 4 3 6 Italy 4 4 Normandy 4 5 Replaced as Ground Forces Commander 4 6 Advance to the Rhine 4 7 Operation Market Garden 4 8 Battle of the Bulge 4 9 Crossing the Rhine 5 Casualty conservation policy 6 Personality 7 Later life 7 1 Post war military career 7 1 1 Chief of the Imperial General Staff 7 1 2 Western Union Defence Organization 7 1 3 NATO 7 2 Personal 7 3 Opinions 7 3 1 Memoirs 7 3 2 Military opinions 7 3 3 Social opinions 8 Death 9 Legacy 10 Honours and awards 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Bibliography 12 2 1 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly life editMontgomery was born in Kennington Surrey in 1887 the fourth child of nine to a Church of Ireland minister Henry Montgomery and his wife Maud nee Farrar 11 The Montgomerys an Ascendancy gentry family were the County Donegal branch of the Clan Montgomery The Rev Henry Montgomery at that time Vicar of St Mark s Church Kennington was the second son of Sir Robert Montgomery a native of Inishowen in County Donegal in the north west of Ulster 12 the noted colonial administrator in British India Sir Robert died a month after his grandson s birth 13 He was probably a descendant of Colonel Alexander Montgomery 1686 1729 Bernard s mother Maud was the daughter of Frederic William Canon Farrar the famous preacher and was eighteen years younger than her husband 14 After the death of Sir Robert Montgomery Henry inherited the Montgomery ancestral estate of New Park in Moville a small town in Inishowen in the north of County Donegal in Ulster the northern province in Ireland There was still 13 000 to pay on a mortgage a large debt in the 1880s equivalent to 1 537 946 in 2021 15 and Henry was at the time still only an Anglican vicar Despite selling off all the farms that were in the townland of Ballynally on the north western shores of Lough Foyle 16 there was barely enough to keep up New Park and pay for the blasted summer holiday i e at New Park 17 It was a financial relief of some magnitude when in 1889 Henry was made Bishop of Tasmania then still a British colony and Bernard spent his formative years there Bishop Montgomery considered it his duty to spend as much time as possible in the rural areas of Tasmania and was away for up to six months at a time While he was away his wife still in her mid twenties gave her children constant beatings 18 then ignored them most of the time as she performed the public duties of the bishop s wife Of Bernard s siblings Sibyl died prematurely in Tasmania and Harold Donald and Una all emigrated 19 Maud Montgomery took little active interest in the education of her young children other than to have them taught by tutors brought from Britain although he briefly attended the then coeducational St Michael s Collegiate School 20 The loveless environment made Bernard something of a bully as he himself recalled I was a dreadful little boy I don t suppose anybody would put up with my sort of behaviour these days 21 Later in life Montgomery refused to allow his son David to have anything to do with his grandmother and refused to attend her funeral in 1949 22 The family returned to England once for a Lambeth Conference in 1897 and Bernard and his brother Harold were educated at The King s School Canterbury 23 In 1901 Bishop Montgomery became secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel and the family returned to London Montgomery attended St Paul s School and then the Royal Military College Sandhurst from which he was almost expelled for rowdiness and violence 24 On graduation in September 1908 he was commissioned into the 1st Battalion the Royal Warwickshire Regiment as a second lieutenant 25 and first saw overseas service later that year in India 24 He was promoted to lieutenant in 1910 26 and in 1912 became adjutant of the 1st Battalion of his regiment at Shorncliffe Army Camp 24 First World War edit nbsp Captain Bernard Montgomery right with Brigadier General J W Sandilands commander of the 104th Brigade 35th Division Montgomery served as brigade major with the 104th Brigade from January 1915 until early 1917 The Great War began in August 1914 and Montgomery moved to France with his battalion that month which was at the time part of the 10th Brigade of the 4th Division 24 He saw action at the Battle of Le Cateau that month and during the retreat from Mons 24 At Meteren near the Belgian border at Bailleul on 13 October 1914 during an Allied counter offensive he was shot through the right lung by a sniper 24 Lying in the open he remained still and pretended to be dead in the hope that he would not receive any more enemy attention 27 One of his men did attempt to rescue him but was shot dead by a hidden enemy sniper and collapsed over Montgomery The sniper continued to fire and Montgomery was hit once more in the knee 22 but the dead soldier in Montgomery s words received many bullets meant for me 27 Assuming them to both be dead the officers and men of Montgomery s battalion chose to leave them where they were until darkness arrived and stretcher bearers managed to recover the two bodies with Montgomery by this time barely clinging on to life The doctors at the Advanced Dressing Station too had no hope for him and ordered a grave to be dug Miraculously however Montgomery was still alive and after being placed in an ambulance and then being sent to a hospital was treated and eventually evacuated to England where he would remain for well over a year 28 He was appointed a Companion of the Distinguished Service Order for his gallant leadership during this period the citation for this award published in The London Gazette in December 1914 reads Conspicuous gallant leading on 13th October when he turned the enemy out of their trenches with the bayonet He was severely wounded 29 After recovering in early 1915 he was appointed brigade major 30 first of the 112th Brigade and then with 104th Brigade training in Lancashire 31 He returned to the Western Front in early 1916 as a general staff officer in the 33rd Division and took part in the Battle of Arras in April May 1917 31 He became a general staff officer with IX Corps part of General Sir Herbert Plumer s Second Army in July 1917 31 nbsp The Minister of Munitions Winston Churchill watching the march past of the 47th 2nd London Division in the Grande Place Lille France October 1918 In front of him is the 47th Division s chief of staff Lieutenant Colonel Bernard Montgomery Montgomery served at the Battle of Passchendaele in late 1917 before finishing the war as GSO1 effectively chief of staff of the 47th 2nd London Division 31 with the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel 32 A photograph from October 1918 reproduced in many biographies shows the then unknown Lieutenant Colonel Montgomery standing in front of Winston Churchill then the Minister of Munitions at the parade following the liberation of Lille 33 Montgomery was profoundly influenced by his experiences during the war in particular by the leadership or rather the lack of it being displayed by the senior commanders He later wrote There was little contact between the generals and the soldiers I went through the whole war on the Western Front except during the period I was in England after being wounded I never once saw the British Commander in Chief neither French nor Haig and only twice did I see an Army Commander The higher staffs were out of touch with the regimental officers and with the troops The former lived in comfort which became greater as the distance of their headquarters behind the lines increased There was no harm in this provided there was touch and sympathy between the staff and the troops This was often lacking At most large headquarters in back areas the doctrine seemed to me to be that the troops existed for the benefit of the staff My war experience led me to believe that the staff must be the servant of the troops and that a good staff officer must serve his commander and the troops but himself be anonymous The frightful casualties appalled me The so called good fighting generals of the war appeared to me to be those who had a complete disregard for human life There were of course exceptions and I suppose one such was Plumer I had only once seen him and had never spoken to him 34 Between the world wars edit1920s edit After the First World War Montgomery commanded the 17th Service Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers 35 a battalion in the British Army of the Rhine before reverting to his substantive rank of captain brevet major in November 1919 36 He had not at first been selected for the Staff College in Camberley Surrey his only hope of ever achieving high command But at a tennis party in Cologne he was able to persuade the Commander in chief C in C of the British Army of Occupation Field Marshal Sir William Robertson to add his name to the list 37 After graduating from the Staff College he was appointed brigade major in the 17th Infantry Brigade in January 1921 38 The brigade was stationed in County Cork Ireland carrying out counter guerilla operations during the final stages of the Irish War of Independence 31 Montgomery came to the conclusion that the conflict could not be won without harsh measures and that self government for Ireland was the only feasible solution in 1923 after the establishment of the Irish Free State and during the Irish Civil War Montgomery wrote to Colonel Arthur Ernest Percival of the Essex Regiment Personally my whole attention was given to defeating the rebels but it never bothered me a bit how many houses were burnt I think I regarded all civilians as Shinners and I never had any dealings with any of them My own view is that to win a war of this sort you must be ruthless Oliver Cromwell or the Germans would have settled it in a very short time Nowadays public opinion precludes such methods the nation would never allow it and the politicians would lose their jobs if they sanctioned it That being so I consider that Lloyd George was right in what he did if we had gone on we could probably have squashed the rebellion as a temporary measure but it would have broken out again like an ulcer the moment we removed the troops I think the rebels would probably have refused battles and hidden their arms etc until we had gone 39 In one noteworthy incident on 2 May 1922 Montgomery led a force of 60 soldiers and 4 armoured cars to the town of Macroom to search for four British officers who were missing in the area While he had hoped the show of force would assist in finding the men he was under strict orders not to attack the IRA On arriving in the town square in front of Macroom Castle he summoned the IRA commander Charlie Browne to parley At the castle gates Montgomery spoke to Browne explaining what would happen should the officers not be released Once finished Browne responded with his own ultimatum to Montgomery to leave town within 10 minutes Browne then turned heels and returned to the Castle At this point another IRA officer Pat O Sullivan whistled to Montgomery drawing his attention to scores of IRA volunteers who had quietly taken up firing positions all around the square surrounding Montgomery s forces Realising his precarious position Montgomery led his troops out of the town a decision which raised hostile questions in the House of Commons but was later approved by Montgomery s own superiors Unknown to Montgomery at this time the four missing officers had already been executed 40 In May 1923 Montgomery was posted to the 49th West Riding Infantry Division a Territorial Army TA formation 31 He returned to the 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment in 1925 as a company commander 31 and was promoted to major in July 1925 41 From January 1926 to January 1929 he served as Deputy Assistant Adjutant General at the Staff College Camberley in the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel 42 Marriage and family edit In 1925 in his first known courtship of a woman Montgomery then in his late thirties proposed to a 17 year old girl Betty Anderson His approach included drawing diagrams in the sand of how he would deploy his tanks and infantry in a future war a contingency which seemed very remote at that time She respected his ambition and single mindedness but declined his proposal of marriage 43 In 1927 he met and married Elizabeth Betty Carver nee Hobart 31 She was the sister of the future Second World War commander Major General Sir Percy Hobart 31 Betty Carver had two sons in their early teens John and Dick from her first marriage to Oswald Carver Dick Carver later wrote that it had been a very brave thing for Montgomery to take on a widow with two children 44 Montgomery s son David was born in August 1928 31 While on holiday in Burnham on Sea in 1937 Betty suffered an insect bite which became infected and she died in her husband s arms from septicaemia following amputation of her leg 31 The loss devastated Montgomery who was then serving as a brigadier but he insisted on throwing himself back into his work immediately after the funeral 22 Montgomery s marriage had been extremely happy Much of his correspondence with his wife was destroyed when his quarters at Portsmouth were bombed during the Second World War 45 After Montgomery s death John Carver wrote that his mother had arguably done the country a favour by keeping his personal oddities his extreme single mindedness and his intolerance of and suspicion of the motives of others within reasonable bounds long enough for him to have a chance of attaining high command 46 Both of Montgomery s stepsons became army officers in the 1930s both were serving in India at the time of their mother s death and both served in the Second World War each eventually attaining the rank of colonel 47 While serving as a GSO2 48 with Eighth Army Dick Carver was sent forward during the pursuit after El Alamein to help identify a new site for Eighth Army HQ He was taken prisoner at Mersa Matruh on 7 November 1942 49 Montgomery wrote to his contacts in England asking that inquiries be made via the Red Cross as to where his stepson was being held and that parcels be sent to him 50 Like many British POWs the most famous being General Richard O Connor Dick Carver escaped in September 1943 during the brief hiatus between Italy s departure from the war and the German seizure of the country He eventually reached British lines on 5 December 1943 to the delight of his stepfather who sent him home to Britain to recuperate 51 1930s edit In January 1929 Montgomery was promoted to brevet lieutenant colonel 52 That month he returned to the 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment again as Commander of Headquarters Company he went to the War Office to help write the Infantry Training Manual in mid 1929 31 In 1931 Montgomery was promoted to substantive lieutenant colonel 53 and became the Commanding officer CO of the 1st Battalion Royal Warwickshire Regiment and saw service in Palestine and British India 31 He was promoted to colonel in June 1934 seniority from January 1932 54 He attended and was then recommended to become an instructor at the Indian Army Staff College now the Pakistan Command and Staff College in Quetta British India 55 On completion of his tour of duty in India Montgomery returned to Britain in June 1937 56 where he took command of the 9th Infantry Brigade with the temporary rank of brigadier 57 His wife died that year 31 In 1938 he organised an amphibious combined operations landing exercise that impressed the new C in C of Southern Command General Sir Archibald Percival Wavell He was promoted to major general on 14 October 1938 58 and took command of the 8th Infantry Division 59 in the British mandate of Palestine 31 In Palestine Montgomery was involved in suppressing an Arab revolt which had broken out over opposition to Jewish emigration 60 He returned in July 1939 to Britain suffering a serious illness on the way to command the 3rd Infantry Division 31 Reporting the suppression of the revolt in April 1939 Montgomery wrote I shall be sorry to leave Palestine in many ways as I have enjoyed the war out here 22 Second World War editBritish Expeditionary Force edit Phoney war edit Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939 and the 3rd Division together with its new General Officer Commanding GOC was deployed to France as part of the British Expeditionary Force BEF commanded by General Lord Gort Shortly after the division s arrival overseas Montgomery faced serious trouble from his military superiors and the clergy for his frank attitude regarding the sexual health of his soldiers but was defended from dismissal by his superior Alan Brooke commander of II Corps of which Montgomery s division formed a part 61 Montgomery had issued a circular on the prevention of venereal disease worded in such obscene language that both the Church of England and Roman Catholic senior chaplains objected Brooke told Monty that he did not want any further errors of this kind though deciding not to get him to formally withdraw it as it would remove any vestige of respect left for him 62 nbsp Lieutenant General Alan Brooke GOC II Corps with Major General Bernard Montgomery GOC 3rd Division and Major General Dudley Johnson GOC 4th Infantry Division pictured here in either 1939 or 1940Although Montgomery s new command was a Regular Army formation comprising the 7th Guards and the 8th and 9th Infantry Brigades along with supporting units he was not impressed with its readiness for battle 63 As a result while most of the rest of the BEF set about preparing defences for an expected German attack sometime in the future Montgomery began training his 3rd Division in offensive tactics organising several exercises each of which lasted for several days at a time Mostly they revolved around the division advancing towards an objective often a river line only to come under attack and forced to withdraw to another position usually behind another river 63 These exercises usually occurred at night with only very minimal lighting being allowed By the spring of 1940 Montgomery s division had gained a reputation of being a very agile and flexible formation 63 By then the Allies had agreed to Plan D where they would advance deep into Belgium and take up positions on the River Dyle by the time the German forces attacked Brooke Montgomery s corps commander was pessimistic about the plan but Montgomery in contrast was not concerned believing that he and his division would perform well regardless of the circumstances particularly in a war of movement 64 Battle of France edit See also Battle of France Battle of Dunkirk and Dunkirk evacuation Montgomery s training paid off when the Germans began their invasion of the Low Countries on 10 May 1940 and the 3rd Division advanced to its planned position near the Belgian city of Louvain Soon after arrival the division was fired on by members of the Belgian 10th Infantry Division who mistook them for German paratroopers Montgomery resolved the incident by approaching them and offering to place himself under Belgian command 65 although Montgomery himself took control when the Germans arrived 64 During this time he began to develop a particular habit which he would keep throughout the war of going to bed at 21 30 every night without fail and giving only a single order that he was not to be disturbed which was only very rarely disobeyed 66 The 3rd Division saw little action compared to many other units and formations in the BEF but owing to the strict training methods of Montgomery who ensured that his division was thoroughly well trained disciplined and rehearsed the division always managed to be in the right place at the right time especially so during the retreat into France 66 By 27 May when the Belgian Army on the left flank of the BEF began to disintegrate the 3rd Division achieved something very difficult the movement at night from the right to the left of another division and only 2 000 yards behind it This was performed with great professionalism and occurred without any incidents and thereby filled a very vulnerable gap in the BEF s defensive line 67 66 On 29 30 May as the 3rd Division moved into the Dunkirk bridgehead Montgomery temporarily took over from Brooke who received orders to return to the United Kingdom as GOC of II Corps for the final stages of the Dunkirk evacuation 66 The 3rd Division temporarily commanded by Kenneth Anderson in Montgomery s absence returned to Britain intact with minimal casualties Operation Dynamo codename for the Dunkirk evacuation saw 330 000 Allied military personnel including most of the BEF to Britain although the BEF was forced to leave behind a significant amount of equipment 68 66 Service in the United Kingdom 1940 1942 edit nbsp Montgomery GOC V Corps with war correspondents during a large scale exercise in Southern Command March 1941On his return Montgomery antagonised the War Office with trenchant criticisms of the command of the BEF 22 and was briefly relegated to divisional command of 3rd Division which was the only fully equipped division in Britain 69 He was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath 70 nbsp Montgomery inspecting men of the 7th Battalion Suffolk Regiment at Sandbanks near Poole Dorset 22 March 1941 To his right wearing a peaked cap is Brigadier Gerald Templer commanding the 210th Brigade the 7th Suffolks parent formation Montgomery was ordered to make ready the 3rd Division to invade the neutral Portuguese Azores 69 Models of the islands were prepared and detailed plans worked out for the invasion 69 The invasion plans did not go ahead and plans switched to invading Cape Verde island also belonging to neutral Portugal 71 These invasion plans also did not go ahead Montgomery was then ordered to prepare plans for the invasion of neutral Ireland and to seize Cork Cobh and Cork harbour 71 These invasion plans like those of the Portuguese islands also did not go ahead and in July 1940 Montgomery was appointed acting lieutenant general and after handing over command of his division to James Gammell he was placed in command of V Corps responsible for the defence of Hampshire and Dorset and started a long running feud with the new Commander in chief C in C of Southern Command Lieutenant General Claude Auchinleck 72 22 nbsp During Exercise Bumper on 2 October 1941 Montgomery the Chief Umpire talks to General Sir Alan Brooke C in C Home Forces In April 1941 he became commander of XII Corps responsible for the defence of Kent 68 During this period he instituted a regime of continuous training and insisted on high levels of physical fitness for both officers and other ranks He was ruthless in sacking officers he considered unfit for command in action 73 Promoted to temporary lieutenant general in July overseeing the defence of Kent Sussex and Surrey 73 74 In December Montgomery was given command of South Eastern Command 75 He renamed his command the South Eastern Army to promote offensive spirit During this time he further developed and rehearsed his ideas and trained his soldiers culminating in Exercise Tiger in May 1942 a combined forces exercise involving 100 000 troops 76 North Africa and Italy edit Montgomery s early command edit See also North African campaign Western Desert campaign Tunisia campaign and Italian campaign World War II nbsp Montgomery in a Grant tank in North Africa November 1942In 1942 a new field commander was required in the Middle East where Auchinleck was fulfilling both the role of C in C of Middle East Command and commander Eighth Army He had stabilised the Allied position at the First Battle of El Alamein but after a visit in August 1942 the Prime Minister Winston Churchill replaced him as C in C with General Sir Harold Alexander and William Gott as commander of the Eighth Army in the Western Desert However after Gott was killed flying back to Cairo Churchill was persuaded by Brooke who by this time was Chief of the Imperial General Staff CIGS to appoint Montgomery who had only just been nominated to replace Alexander as commander of the British First Army for Operation Torch the invasion of French North Africa 77 A story probably apocryphal but popular at the time is that the appointment caused Montgomery to remark that After having an easy war things have now got much more difficult A colleague is supposed to have told him to cheer up at which point Montgomery said I m not talking about me I m talking about Rommel 78 Montgomery s assumption of command transformed the fighting spirit and abilities of the Eighth Army 79 Taking command on 13 August 1942 he immediately became a whirlwind of activity He ordered the creation of the X Corps which contained all armoured divisions to fight alongside his XXX Corps which was all infantry divisions This arrangement differed from the German Panzer Corps one of Rommel s Panzer Corps combined infantry armour and artillery units under one corps commander The only common commander for Montgomery s all infantry and all armour corps was the Eighth Army Commander himself Writing post war the English historian Correlli Barnett commented that Montgomery s solution was in every way opposite to Auchinleck s and in every way wrong for it carried the existing dangerous separatism still further 80 Montgomery reinforced the 30 miles 48 km long front line at El Alamein something that would take two months to accomplish He asked Alexander to send him two new British divisions 51st Highland and 44th Home Counties that were then arriving in Egypt and were scheduled to be deployed in defence of the Nile Delta He moved his field HQ to Burg al Arab close to the Air Force command post in order to better coordinate combined operations 79 Montgomery was determined that the army navy and air forces should fight their battles in a unified focused manner according to a detailed plan He ordered immediate reinforcement of the vital heights of Alam Halfa just behind his own lines expecting the German commander Erwin Rommel to attack with the heights as his objective something that Rommel soon did Montgomery ordered all contingency plans for retreat to be destroyed I have cancelled the plan for withdrawal If we are attacked then there will be no retreat If we cannot stay here alive then we will stay here dead 81 he told his officers at the first meeting he held with them in the desert though in fact Auchinleck had no plans to withdraw from the strong defensive position he had chosen and established at El Alamein 82 nbsp Lieutenant General Bernard Montgomery the new commander of the British Eighth Army and Lieutenant General Brian Horrocks the new GOC XIII Corps discussing troop dispositions at 22nd Armoured Brigade HQ 20 August 1942 The brigade commander Brigadier George Roberts is on the right in beret Montgomery made a great effort to appear before troops as often as possible frequently visiting various units and making himself known to the men often arranging for cigarettes to be distributed Although he still wore a standard British officer s cap on arrival in the desert he briefly wore an Australian broad brimmed hat before switching to wearing the black beret with the badge of the Royal Tank Regiment and the British General Officer s cap badge for which he became notable The black beret was offered to him by Jim Fraser while the latter was driving him on an inspection tour 83 Both Brooke and Alexander were astonished by the transformation in atmosphere when they visited on 19 August less than a week after Montgomery had taken command 81 Alan Brooke said that Churchill was always impatient for his generals to attack at once and he wrote that Montgomery was always my Monty when Montgomery was out of favour with Churchill Eden had some late night drinks with Churchill and Eden said at a meeting of the Chiefs of Staff the next day 29 October 1942 that the Middle East offensive was petering out Alanbrooke had told Churchill fairly plainly what he thought of Eden s ability to judge the tactical situation from a distance and was supported at the Chiefs of Staff meeting by Smuts 84 First battles with Rommel edit nbsp General Montgomery with his pets the puppies Hitler left and Rommel and a cage of canaries which also travelled with him at Blay his second HQ in France in July 1944 Rommel attempted to turn the left flank of the Eighth Army at the Battle of Alam el Halfa from 31 August 1942 The German Italian armoured corps infantry attack was stopped in very heavy fighting Rommel s forces had to withdraw urgently lest their retreat through the British minefields be cut off 85 Montgomery was criticised for not counter attacking the retreating forces immediately but he felt strongly that his methodical build up of British forces was not yet ready A hasty counter attack risked ruining his strategy for an offensive on his own terms in late October planning for which had begun soon after he took command 86 He was confirmed in the permanent rank of lieutenant general in mid October 87 The conquest of Libya was essential for airfields to support Malta and to threaten the rear of Axis forces opposing Operation Torch Montgomery prepared meticulously for the new offensive after convincing Churchill that the time was not being wasted Churchill sent a telegram to Alexander on 23 September 1942 which began We are in your hands and of course a victorious battle makes amends for much delay 88 He was determined not to fight until he thought there had been sufficient preparation for a decisive victory and put into action his beliefs with the gathering of resources detailed planning the training of troops especially in clearing minefields and fighting at night 89 and in the use of 252 90 of the latest American built Sherman tanks 90 M7 Priest self propelled howitzers and making a personal visit to every unit involved in the offensive By the time the offensive was ready in late October Eighth Army had 231 000 men on its ration strength 91 El Alamein edit nbsp Men of the 9th Australian Division in a posed photograph during the Second Battle of El AlameinThe Second Battle of El Alamein began on 23 October 1942 and ended 12 days later with one of the first large scale decisive Allied land victories of the war Montgomery correctly predicted both the length of the battle and the number of casualties 13 500 92 Historian Correlli Barnett has pointed out that the rain also fell on the Germans and that the weather is therefore an inadequate explanation for the failure to exploit the breakthrough but nevertheless the Battle of El Alamein had been a great success Over 30 000 prisoners of war were taken 93 including the German second in command General von Thoma as well as eight other general officers 94 Rommel having been in a hospital in Germany at the start of the battle was forced to return on 25 October 1942 after Stumme his replacement as German commander died of a heart attack in the early hours of the battle 95 Tunisia edit nbsp The British Prime Minister Winston Churchill with military leaders during his visit to Tripoli The group includes Lieutenant General Sir Oliver Leese General Sir Harold Alexander General Sir Alan Brooke and General Sir Bernard Montgomery Montgomery was advanced to KCB and promoted to full general 96 He kept the initiative applying superior strength when it suited him forcing Rommel out of each successive defensive position On 6 March 1943 Rommel s attack on the over extended Eighth Army at Medenine Operation Capri with the largest concentration of German armour in North Africa was successfully repulsed 97 At the Mareth Line 20 to 27 March when Montgomery encountered fiercer frontal opposition than he had anticipated he switched his major effort into an outflanking inland pincer backed by low flying RAF fighter bomber support 98 For his role in North Africa he was awarded the Legion of Merit by the United States government in the rank of Chief Commander 99 Sicily edit nbsp Montgomery visits Patton in Palermo Sicily July 1943 The next major Allied attack was the Allied invasion of Sicily Operation Husky Montgomery considered the initial plans for the Allied invasion which had been agreed in principle by General Dwight D Eisenhower the Supreme Allied Commander Allied Forces Headquarters and General Alexander the 15th Army Group commander to be unworkable because of the dispersion of effort He managed to have the plans recast to concentrate the Allied forces having Lieutenant General George Patton s US Seventh Army land in the Gulf of Gela on the Eighth Army s left flank which landed around Syracuse in the south east of Sicily rather than near Palermo in the west and north of Sicily 100 Inter Allied tensions grew as the American commanders Patton and Omar Bradley then commanding US II Corps under Patton took umbrage at what they saw as Montgomery s attitudes and boastfulness 98 However while they were considered three of the greatest soldiers of their time due to their competitiveness they were renowned for squabbling like three schoolgirls thanks to their bitchiness whining to their superiors and showing off 101 Italy edit nbsp Wartime photograph of General Montgomery with his Miles Messenger aircraft location and date unknown nbsp From left to right Freddie de Guingand Harry Broadhurst Montgomery Sir Bernard Freyberg Miles Dempsey and Charles AllfreyMontgomery s Eighth Army was then fully involved in the Allied invasion of Italy in early September 1943 becoming the first of the Allied forces to land in Western Europe 102 Led by Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey s XIII Corps the Eighth Army landed on the toe of Italy in Operation Baytown on 3 September four years to the day after Britain declared war on Germany They encountered little enemy resistance 103 The Germans had made the decision to fall back and did what they could to stall the Eighth Army s advance including blowing up bridges laying mines and setting up booby traps All of these slowed the Army s advance north on the awful Italian roads although it was Montgomery who was later much criticised for the lack of progress 102 On 9 September the British 1st Airborne Division landed at the key port of Taranto in the heel of Italy as part of Operation Slapstick capturing the port unopposed 103 On the same day the U S Fifth Army under Lieutenant General Mark W Clark which actually contained a large number of British troops landed at Salerno near Naples as part of Operation Avalanche but soon found itself fighting for its very existence with the Germans launching several determined counterattacks to try and push the Allies back into the sea with Montgomery s men being too far away to provide any real assistance 102 The situation was tense over the next few days but the two armies both of which formed the 15th Army Group under General Alexander finally began to meet on 16 September by which time the crisis at Salerno was virtually over 102 nbsp The time has come to deal the enemy a terrific blow Clark s Fifth Army then began to advance to the west of the Apennine Mountains while Montgomery with Lieutenant General Charles Allfrey s V Corps having arrived to reinforce Dempsey s XIII Corps advanced to the east The Foggia airfields soon fell to Allfrey s V Corps but the Germans fought hard in the defence of Termoli and Biferno 102 Movement soon came to an almost complete halt in the early part of November when the Eighth Army came up against a new defensive line established by the Germans on the River Sangro which was to be the scene of much bitter and heavy fighting for the next month While some ground was gained it was often at the expense of heavy casualties and the Germans always managed to retreat to new defensive positions 102 Montgomery abhorred what he considered to be a lack of coordination a dispersion of effort a strategic muddle and a lack of opportunism in the Allied campaign in Italy describing the whole affair as a dog s breakfast 98 Normandy edit See also Operation Overlord nbsp Montgomery with officers of the First Canadian Army From left Major General Vokes General Crerar Field Marshal Montgomery Lieutenant General Horrocks Lieutenant General Simonds Major General Spry and Major General MatthewsAs a result of his dissatisfaction with Italy he was delighted to receive the news that he was to return to Britain in January 1944 104 He was assigned to command the 21st Army Group consisting of all Allied ground forces participating in Operation Overlord codename for the Allied invasion of Normandy Overall direction was assigned to the Supreme Allied Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces American General Dwight D Eisenhower 103 Both Churchill and Eisenhower had found Montgomery difficult to work with in the past and wanted the position to go to the more affable General Sir Harold Alexander 105 However Montgomery s patron General Sir Alan Brooke firmly argued that Montgomery was a much superior general to Alexander and ensured his appointment 105 Without Brooke s support Montgomery would have remained in Italy 105 At St Paul s School on 7 April and 15 May Montgomery presented his strategy for the invasion He envisaged a ninety day battle with all forces reaching the Seine The campaign would pivot on an Allied held Caen in the east of the Normandy bridgehead with relatively static British and Canadian armies forming a shoulder to attract and defeat German counter attacks relieving the US armies who would move and seize the Cotentin Peninsula and Brittany wheeling south and then east on the right forming a pincer 98 nbsp General Montgomery inspects men of the 5th 7th Battalion Gordon Highlanders of the 51st Highland Division at Beaconsfield February 1944 During the ten weeks of the Battle of Normandy unfavourable autumnal weather conditions disrupted the Normandy landing areas 98 Montgomery s initial plan was for the Anglo Canadian troops under his command to break out immediately from their beachheads on the Calvados coast towards Caen with the aim of taking the city on either D Day or two days later 106 Montgomery attempted to take Caen with the 3rd Infantry Division 50th Northumbrian Infantry Division and the 3rd Canadian Division but was stopped from 6 8 June by 21st Panzer Division and 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend who hit the advancing Anglo Canadian troops very hard 107 Rommel followed up this success by ordering the 2nd Panzer Division to Caen while Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt asked for and received permission from Hitler to have the elite 1st Waffen SS Division Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler and 2nd Waffen SS Division Das Reich sent to Caen as well 107 Montgomery thus had to face what Stephen Badsey called the most formidable of all the German divisions in France 107 The 12th Waffen SS Division Hitlerjugend as its name implies was drawn entirely from the more fanatical elements of the Hitler Youth and commanded by the ruthless SS Brigadefuhrer Kurt Meyer aka Panzer Meyer 108 nbsp General Montgomery passes German POWs while being driven along a road in a jeep shortly after arriving in Normandy 8 June 1944 The failure to take Caen immediately has been the source of an immense historiographical dispute with bitter nationalist overtones 109 Broadly there has been a British school which accepts Montgomery s post war claim that he never intended to take Caen at once and instead the Anglo Canadian operations around Caen were a holding operation intended to attract the bulk of the German forces towards the Caen sector to allow the Americans to stage the break out operation on the left flank of the German positions which was all part of Montgomery s Master Plan that he had conceived long before the Normandy campaign 109 By contrast the American school argued that Montgomery s initial master plan was for the 21st Army Group to take Caen at once and move his tank divisions into the plains south of Caen to then stage a breakout that would lead the 21st Army Group into the plains of northern France and hence into Antwerp and finally the Ruhr 110 Letters written by Eisenhower at the time of the battle make it clear that Eisenhower was expecting from Montgomery the early capture of the important focal point of Caen Later when this plan had clearly failed Eisenhower wrote that Montgomery had evolved the plan to have the US forces achieve the break out instead 111 nbsp General Montgomery in conversation with Major General Douglas Graham GOC 50th Northumbrian Infantry Division pictured here in Normandy 20 June 1944As the campaign progressed Montgomery altered his initial plan for the invasion and continued the strategy of attracting and holding German counter attacks in the area north of Caen rather than to the south to allow the U S First Army in the west to take Cherbourg A memo summarising Montgomery s operations written by Eisenhower s chief of staff General Walter Bedell Smith who met with Montgomery in late June 1944 says nothing about Montgomery conducting a holding operation in the Caen sector and instead speaks of him seeking a breakout into the plains south of the Seine 112 On 12 June Montgomery ordered the 7th Armoured Division into an attack against the Panzer Lehr Division that made good progress at first but ended when the Panzer Lehr was joined by the 2nd Panzer Division 113 At Villers Bocage on 14 June the British lost twenty Cromwell tanks to five Tiger tanks led by SS Obersturmfuhrer Michael Wittmann in about five minutes 113 Despite the setback at Villers Bocage Montgomery was still optimistic as the Allies were landing more troops and supplies than they were losing in battle and though the German lines were holding the Wehrmacht and Waffen SS were suffering considerable attrition 114 Air Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder complained that it was impossible to move fighter squadrons to France until Montgomery had captured some airfields something he asserted that Montgomery appeared incapable of doing 115 The first V 1 flying bomb attacks on London which started on 13 June further increased the pressure on Montgomery from Whitehall to speed up his advance 115 nbsp The King with Lieutenant General Miles Dempsey GOC British Second Army and General Montgomery at his HQ in Creullet 16 June 1944On 18 June Montgomery ordered Bradley to take Cherbourg while the British were to take Caen by 23 June 115 In Operation Epsom the British VII Corps commanded by Sir Richard O Connor attempted to outflank Caen from the west by breaking through the dividing line between the Panzer Lehr and the 12th SS to take the strategic Hill 112 116 Epsom began well with O Connor s assault force the British 15th Scottish Division breaking through and with the 11th Armoured Division stopping the counter attacks of the 12th SS Division 116 General Friedrich Dollmann of Seventh Army had to commit the newly arrived II SS Corps to stop the British offensive 116 Dollmann fearing that Epsom would be a success committed suicide and was replaced by SS Oberstegruppenfuhrer Paul Hausser O Connor at the cost of about 4 000 men had won a salient 5 miles 8 0 km deep and 2 miles 3 2 km wide but placed the Germans into an unviable long term position 116 There was a strong sense of crisis in the Allied command as the Allies had advanced only about 15 miles 24 km inland at a time when their plans called for them to have already taken Rennes Alencon and St Malo 116 After Epsom Montgomery had to tell General Harry Crerar that the activation of the First Canadian Army would have to wait as there was only room at present in the Caen sector for the newly arrived XII Corps under Lieutenant General Neil Ritchie which caused some tension with Crerar who was anxious to get into the field 117 Epsom had forced further German forces into Caen but all through June and the first half of July Rommel Rundstedt and Hitler were engaged in planning for a great offensive to drive the British into the sea it was never launched and would have required the commitment of a large number of German forces to the Caen sector 118 It was only after several failed attempts to break out in the Caen sector that Montgomery devised what he later called his master plan of having the 21st Army Group hold the bulk of the German forces thus allowing the Americans to break out 119 The Canadian historians Terry Copp and Robert Vogel wrote about the dispute between the American school and British school after having suffered several setbacks in June 1944 Montgomery drew what was the indisputably correct conclusion from these events If the British and Canadians could continue to hold the bulk of the German armoured divisions on their front through a series of limited attacks they could wear down the Germans and create the conditions for an American breakout on the right This is what Montgomery proposed in his Directive of June 30th and if he and his admirers had let the record speak for itself there would be little debate about his conduct of the first stages of the Normandy campaign Instead Montgomery insisted that this Directive was a consistent part of a master plan that he had devised long before the invasion Curiously this view does a great disservice to Monty for any rigid planning of operations before the German response was known would have been bad generalship indeed 120 Hampered by stormy weather and the bocage terrain Montgomery had to ensure that Rommel focused on the British in the east rather than the Americans in the west who had to take the Cotentin Peninsula and Brittany before the Germans could be trapped by a general swing east 121 Montgomery told General Sir Miles Dempsey the commander of Second British Army Go on hitting drawing the German strength especially some of the armour onto yourself so as to ease the way for Brad Bradley 122 The Germans had deployed twelve divisions of which six were Panzer divisions against the British while deploying eight divisions of which three were Panzer divisions against the Americans 122 By the middle of July Caen had not been taken as Rommel continued to prioritise prevention of the break out by British forces rather than the western territories being taken by the Americans 123 This was broadly as Montgomery had planned albeit not with the same speed as he outlined at St Paul s although as the American historian Carlo D Este pointed out the actual situation in Normandy was vastly different from what was envisioned at the St Paul s conference as only one of four goals outlined in May had been achieved by 10 July 124 nbsp Prime Minister Churchill with General Montgomery at the latter s HQ in Normandy July 1944On 7 July Montgomery began Operation Charnwood with a carpet bombing offensive that turned much of the French countryside and the city of Caen into a wasteland 125 The British and Canadians succeeded in advancing into northern Caen before the Germans who used the ruins to their advantage and stopped the offensive 126 On 10 July Montgomery ordered Bradley to take Avranches after which U S Third Army would be activated to drive towards Le Mans and Alencon 127 On 14 July 1944 Montgomery wrote to his patron Brooke saying he had chosen on a real show down on the eastern flanks and to loose a Corps of three armoured divisions in the open country about the Caen Falaise road The possibilities are immense with seven hundred tanks loosed to the South east of Caen and the armoured cars operating far ahead anything can happen 128 The French Resistance had launched Plan Violet in June 1944 to systematically destroy the telephone system of France which forced the Germans to use their radios more and more to communicate and as the code breakers of Bletchley Park had broken many of the German codes Montgomery had thanks to Ultra intelligence a good idea of the German situation 129 Montgomery thus knew German Army Group B had lost 96 400 men while receiving 5 200 replacements and the Panzer Lehr Division now based at St Lo was down to only 40 tanks 127 Montgomery later wrote that he knew he had the Normandy campaign won at this point as the Germans had almost no reserves while he had three armoured divisions in reserve 130 An American break out was achieved with Operation Cobra and the encirclement of German forces in the Falaise pocket at the cost of British losses with the diversionary Operation Goodwood 131 On the early morning of 18 July 1944 Operation Goodwood began with British heavy bombers beginning carpet bombing attacks that further devastated what was left of Caen and the surrounding countryside 132 A British tank crewman from the Guards Armoured Division later recalled At 0500 hours a distant thunder in the air brought all the sleepy eyed tank crews out of their blankets 1 000 Lancasters were flying from the sea in groups of three or four at 3 000 feet 910 m Ahead of them the pathfinders were scattering their flares and before long the first bombs were dropping 133 A German tankman from the 21st Panzer Division at the receiving end of this bombardment remembered We saw little dots detach themselves from the planes so many of them that the crazy thought occurred to us are those leaflets Among the thunder of the explosions we could hear the wounded scream and the insane howling of men who had been driven mad 134 The British bombing had badly smashed the German front line units e g tanks were thrown up on the roofs of French farmhouses Initially the three British armoured divisions assigned to lead the offensive the 7th 11th and the Guards made rapid progress and were soon approaching the Borguebus ridge which dominated the landscape south of Caen by noon 135 nbsp General Montgomery stops his car to chat with troops during a tour of I Corps area near Caen 11 July 1944 If the British could take the Borguebus Ridge the way to the plains of northern France would be wide open and potentially Paris could be taken which explains the ferocity with which the Germans defended the ridge One German officer Lieutenant Baron von Rosen recalled that to motivate a Luftwaffe officer commanding a battery of four 88 mm guns to fight against the British tanks he had to hold his handgun to the officer s head and asked him whether he would like to be killed immediately or get a high decoration He decided for the latter 136 The well dug in 88 mm guns around the Borguebus Ridge began taking a toll on the British Sherman tanks and the countryside was soon dotted with dozens of burning Shermans 137 One British officer reported with worry I see palls of smoke and tanks brewing up with flames belching forth from their turrets I see men climbing out on fire like torches rolling on the ground to try and douse the flames 137 Despite Montgomery s orders to try to press on fierce German counter attacks stopped the British offensive 137 The objectives of Operation Goodwood were all achieved except the complete capture of the Bourgebus Ridge which was only partially taken The operation was a strategic Allied success in drawing in the last German reserves in Normandy towards the Caen sector away from the American sector greatly assisting the American breakout in Operation Cobra By the end of Goodwood on 25 July 1944 the Canadians had finally taken Caen while the British tanks had reached the plains south of Caen giving Montgomery the hinge he had been seeking while forcing the Germans to commit the last of their reserves to stop the Anglo Canadian offensive 138 Ultra decrypts indicated that the Germans now facing Bradley were seriously understrength with Operation Cobra about to commence 139 During Operation Goodwood the British had 400 tanks knocked out with many recovered returning to service The casualties were 5 500 with 7 miles 11 km of ground gained 138 Bradley recognised Montgomery s plan to pin down German armour and allow U S forces to break out The British and Canadian armies were to decoy the enemy reserves and draw them to their front on the extreme eastern edge of the Allied beachhead Thus while Monty taunted the enemy at Caen we the Americans were to make our break on the long roundabout road to Paris When reckoned in terms of national pride this British decoy mission became a sacrificial one for while we tramped around the outside flank the British were to sit in place and pin down the Germans Yet strategically it fitted into a logical division of labors for it was towards Caen that the enemy reserves would race once the alarm was sounded 140 The long running dispute over what Montgomery s master plan in Normandy led historians to differ greatly about the purpose of Goodwood The British journalist Mark Urban wrote that the purpose of Goodwood was to draw German troops to their left flank to allow the American forces to break out on the right flank arguing that Montgomery had to lie to his soldiers about the purpose of Goodwood as the average British soldier would not have understood why they were being asked to create a diversion to allow the Americans to have the glory of staging the breakout with Operation Cobra 138 By contrast the American historian Stephen Power argued that Goodwood was intended to be the breakout offensive and not a holding operation writing It is unrealistic to assert that an operation which called for the use of 4 500 Allied aircraft 700 artillery pieces and over 8 000 armored vehicles and trucks and that cost the British over 5 500 casualties was conceived and executed for so limited an objective 141 Power noted that Goodwood and Cobra were supposed to take effect on the same day 18 July 1944 but Cobra was cancelled owing to heavy rain in the American sector and argued that both operations were meant to be breakout operations to trap the German armies in Normandy American military writer Drew Middleton wrote that there is no doubt that Montgomery wanted Goodwood to provide a shield for Bradley but at the same time Montgomery was clearly hoping for more than merely diverting German attention away from the American sector 142 143 British historian John Keegan pointed out that Montgomery made differing statements before Goodwood about the purpose of the operation 144 Keegan wrote that Montgomery engaged in what he called a hedging of his bets when drafting his plans for Goodwood with a plan for a break out if the front collapsed if not sound documentary evidence that all he had intended in the first place was a battle of attrition 145 Again Bradley confirmed Montgomery s plan and that the capture of Caen was only incidental to his mission not critical The American magazine LIFE quoted Bradley in 1951 While Collins was hoisting his VII Corps flag over Cherbourg Montgomery was spending his reputation in a bitter siege against the old university city of Caen For three weeks he had rammed his troops against those panzer divisions he had deliberately drawn towards that city as part of our Allied strategy of diversion in the Normandy Campaign Although Caen contained an important road junction that Montgomery would eventually need for the moment the capture of that city was only incidental to his mission For Monty s primary task was to attract German troops to the British front that we might more easily secure Cherbourg and get into position for the breakout While this diversion of Monty s was brilliantly achieved he nevertheless left himself open to criticism by overemphasising the importance of his thrust toward Caen Had he limited himself simply to the containment without making Caen a symbol of it he would have been credited with success instead of being charged as he was with failure 146 With Goodwood drawing the Wehrmacht towards the British sector U S First Army enjoyed a two to one numerical superiority Bradley accepted Montgomery s advice to begin the offensive by concentrating at one point instead of a broad front as Eisenhower would have preferred 147 Operation Goodwood almost cost Montgomery his job as Eisenhower seriously considered sacking him and only chose not to do so because to sack the popular Monty would have caused such a political backlash in Britain against the Americans at a critical moment in the war that the resulting strains in the Atlantic alliance were not considered worth it 148 Montgomery expressed his satisfaction at the results of Goodwood when calling the operation off Eisenhower was under the impression that Goodwood was to be a break out operation Either there was a miscommunication between the two men or Eisenhower did not understand the strategy 149 Bradley fully understood Montgomery s intentions Both men would not give away to the press the true intentions of their strategy 150 nbsp General Montgomery with Lieutenant Generals George S Patton left and Omar Bradley centre at 21st Army Group HQ 7 July 1944Many American officers had found Montgomery a difficult man to work with and after Goodwood pressured Eisenhower to fire Montgomery 138 Although the Eisenhower Montgomery dispute is sometimes depicted in nationalist terms as being an Anglo American struggle it was the British Air Marshal Arthur Tedder who was pressing Eisenhower most strongly after Goodwood to fire Montgomery 151 An American officer wrote in his diary that Tedder had come to see Eisenhower to pursue his current favourite subject the sacking of Monty 152 With Tedder leading the sack Monty campaign it encouraged Montgomery s American enemies to press Eisenhower to fire Montgomery 152 Brooke was sufficiently worried about the sack Monty campaign to visit Montgomery at his Tactical Headquarters TAC in France and as he wrote in his diary warned Montgomery of a tendency in the PM Churchill to listen to suggestions that Monty played for safety and was not prepared to take risks 138 Brooke advised Montgomery to invite Churchill to Normandy arguing that if the sack Monty campaign had won the Prime Minister over then his career would be over as having Churchill s backing would give Eisenhower the political cover to fire Montgomery 152 On 20 July Montgomery met Eisenhower and on 21 July Churchill at the TAC in France 152 One of Montgomery s staff officers wrote afterwards that it was common knowledge at Tac that Churchill had come to sack Monty 152 No notes were taken at the Eisenhower Montgomery and Churchill Montgomery meetings but Montgomery was able to persuade both men not to sack him 147 With the success of Cobra which was soon followed by unleashing Patton s Third Army Eisenhower wrote to Montgomery Am delighted that your basic plan has begun brilliantly to unfold with Bradley s initial success 153 The success of Cobra was aided by Operation Spring when the II Canadian Corps under General Guy Simonds the only Canadian general whose skill Montgomery respected began an offensive south of Caen that made little headway but which the Germans regarded as the main offensive 154 Once Third Army arrived Bradley was promoted to take command of the newly created 12th Army Group consisting of U S First and Third Armies Following the American breakout there followed the Battle of Falaise Gap British Canadian and Polish soldiers of 21st Army Group commanded by Montgomery advanced south while the American and French soldiers of Bradley s 12th Army Group advanced north to encircle the German Army Group B at Falaise as Montgomery waged what Urban called a huge battle of annihilation in August 1944 153 Montgomery began his offensive into the Suisse Normande region with Operation Bluecoat with Sir Richard O Connor s VIII Corps and Gerard Bucknall s XXX Corps heading south 155 A dissatisfied Montgomery sacked Bucknall for being insufficiently aggressive and replaced him with General Brian Horrocks 155 At the same time Montgomery ordered Patton whose Third Army was supposed to advance into Brittany to instead capture Nantes which was soon taken 155 Hitler waited too long to order his soldiers to retreat from Normandy leading Montgomery to write He Hitler refused to face the only sound military course As a result the Allies caused the enemy staggering losses in men and materials 153 Knowing via Ultra that Hitler was not planning to retreat from Normandy Montgomery on 6 August 1944 ordered an envelopment operation against Army Group B with the First Canadian Army under Harry Crerar to advance towards Falaise British Second Army under Miles Dempsey to advance towards Argentan and Patton s Third Army to advance to Alencon 156 On 11 August Montgomery changed his plan with the Canadians to take Falaise and to meet the Americans at Argentan 156 The First Canadian Army launched two operations Operation Totalize on 7 August which advanced only 9 miles 14 km in four days in the face of fierce German resistance and Operation Tractable on 14 August which finally took Falaise on 17 August 157 In view of the slow Canadian advance Patton requested permission to take Falaise but was refused by Bradley on 13 August This prompted much controversy many historians arguing that Bradley lacked aggression and that Montgomery should have overruled Bradley 158 The so called Falaise Gap was closed on 22 August 1944 but several American generals most notably Patton accused Montgomery of being insufficiently aggressive in closing it About 60 000 German soldiers were trapped in Normandy but before 22 August about 20 000 Germans had escaped through the Falaise Gap 153 About 10 000 Germans had been killed in the Battle of the Falaise Gap which led a stunned Eisenhower who viewed the battlefield on 24 August to comment with horror that it was impossible to walk without stepping on corpses 159 The successful conclusion of the Normandy campaign saw the beginning of the debate between the American school and British school as both American and British generals started to advance claims about who was most responsible for this victory 153 Brooke wrote in defence of his protege Montgomery Ike knows nothing about strategy and is quite unsuited to the post of Supreme Commander It is no wonder that Monty s real high ability is not always realised Especially so when national spectacles pervert the perspective of the strategic landscape 160 About Montgomery s conduct of the Normandy campaign Badsey wrote Too much discussion on Normandy has centered on the controversial decisions of the Allied commanders It was not good enough apparently to win such a complete and spectacular victory over an enemy that had conquered most of Europe unless it was done perfectly Most of the blame for this lies with Montgomery who was foolish enough to insist that it had been done perfectly that Normandy and all his other battles had been fought accordingly to a precise master plan drawn up beforehand from which he never deviated It says much for his personality that Montgomery found others to agree with him despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary His handling of the Battle of Normandy was of a very high order and as the person who would certainly have been blamed for losing the battle he deserves the credit for winning it 161 Replaced as Ground Forces Commander edit Eisenhower took over Ground Forces Command on 1 September while continuing as Supreme Commander with Montgomery continuing to command the 21st Army Group now consisting mainly of British and Canadian units Montgomery bitterly resented this change although it had been agreed before the D Day invasion 162 The British journalist Mark Urban writes that Montgomery seemed unable to grasp that as the majority of the 2 2 million Allied soldiers fighting against Germany on the Western Front were now American the ratio was 3 1 that it was politically unacceptable to American public opinion to have Montgomery remain as Land Forces Commander as Politics would not allow him to carry on giving orders to great armies of Americans simply because in his view he was better than their generals 163 Winston Churchill had Montgomery promoted to field marshal 164 by way of compensation 162 Advance to the Rhine edit By September ports like Cherbourg were too far away from the front line causing the Allies great logistical problems Antwerp was the third largest port in Europe It was a deep water inland port connected to the North Sea via the river Scheldt The Scheldt was wide enough and dredged deep enough to allow the passage of ocean going ships 165 On 3 September 1944 Hitler ordered Fifteenth Army which had been stationed in the Pas de Calais region and was withdrawing north into the Low Countries to hold the mouth of the river Scheldt to deprive the Allies of the use of Antwerp 166 Von Rundstedt the German commander of the Western Front ordered General Gustav Adolf von Zangen the commander of 15th Army that The attempt of the enemy to occupy the West Scheldt in order to obtain the free use of the harbor of Antwerp must be resisted to the utmost emphasis in the original 167 Rundstedt argued with Hitler that as long as the Allies could not use the port of Antwerp the Allies would lack the logistical capacity for an invasion of Germany 167 The Witte Brigade White Brigade of the Belgian resistance had captured the Port of Antwerp before the Germans could destroy key port facilities 168 and on 4 September Antwerp was captured by Horrocks with its harbour mostly intact 169 The British declined to immediately advance over the Albert Canal and an opportunity to destroy the German Fifteenth Army was lost 168 The Germans had mined the river Scheldt the mouth of the Scheldt was still in German hands making it impossible for the Royal Navy to clear the mines in the river and therefore the port of Antwerp was still useless to the Allies 170 On 5 September SHAEF s naval commander Admiral Sir Bertram Ramsay had urged Montgomery to make clearing the mouth of the Scheldt his number one priority Alone among the senior commanders only Ramsay saw opening Antwerp as crucial 171 Thanks to Ultra Montgomery was aware of Hitler s order by 5 September 166 On 9 September Montgomery wrote to Brooke that one good Pas de Calais port would be sufficient to meet all the logistical needs of the 21st Army Group but only the supply needs of the same formation 172 At the same time Montgomery noted that one good Pas de Calais port would be insufficient for the American armies in France which would thus force Eisenhower if for no other reasons than logistics to favour Montgomery s plans for an invasion of northern Germany by the 21st Army Group whereas if Antwerp were opened up then all of the Allied armies could be supplied 173 The importance of ports closer to Germany was highlighted with the liberation of the city of Le Havre which was assigned to John Crocker s I Corps 172 To take Le Havre two infantry divisions two tank brigades most of the artillery of the Second British Army the specialised armoured gadgets of Percy Hobart s 79th Armoured Division the battleship HMS Warspite and the monitor HMS Erebus were all committed 172 On 10 September 1944 Bomber Command dropped 4 719 tons of bombs on Le Havre which was the prelude to Operation Astonia the assault on Le Havre by Crocker s men which was taken two days later 172 The Canadian historian Terry Copp wrote that the commitment of this much firepower and men to take only one French city might seem excessive but by this point the Allies desperately needed ports closer to the front line to sustain their advance 172 In September 1944 Montgomery ordered Crerar and his First Canadian Army to take the French ports on the English Channel namely Calais Boulogne and Dunkirk 172 and to clear the Scheldt a task that Crerar stated was impossible as he lacked enough troops to perform both operations at once 174 Montgomery refused Crerar s request to have British XII Corps under Neil Ritchie assigned to help clear the Scheldt as Montgomery stated he needed XII Corps for Operation Market Garden 175 On 6 September 1944 Montgomery told Crerar that I want Boulogne badly and that city should be taken no matter what the cost 172 On 22 September 1944 Simonds s II Canadian Corps took Boulogne followed up by taking Calais on 1 October 1944 176 Montgomery was highly impatient with Simonds complaining that it had taken Crocker s I Corps only two days to take Le Havre while it took Simonds two weeks to take Boulogne and Calais but Simonds noted that at Le Havre three divisions and two brigades had been employed whereas at both Boulogne and Calais only two brigades were sent in to take both cities 177 After an attempt to storm the Leopold Canal by the 4th Canadian Division had been badly smashed by the German defenders Simonds ordered a stop to further attempts to clear the river Scheldt until his mission of capturing the French ports on the English Channel had been accomplished this allowed the German Fifteenth Army ample time to dig into its new home on the Scheldt 178 The only port that was not captured by the Canadians was Dunkirk as Montgomery ordered the 2nd Canadian Division on 15 September to hold his flank at Antwerp as a prelude for an advance up the Scheldt 165 nbsp Holland 13 October 1944 Montgomery outlines his future strategy to King George VI in his mobile headquarters Montgomery pulled away from the First Canadian Army temporarily commanded now by Simonds as Crerar was ill the British 51st Highland Division 1st Polish Division British 49th West Riding Division and 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade and sent all of these formations to help the Second British Army to expand the Market Garden salient with Operations Constellation Aintree and towards the end of October Pheasant 179 However Simonds seems to have regarded the Scheldt campaign as a test of his ability and he felt he could clear the Scheldt with only three Canadian divisions namely the 2nd the 3rd and the 4th despite having to take on the entire Fifteenth Army which held strongly fortified positions in a landscape that favoured the defence 180 Simonds never complained about the lack of air support made worse by the cloudy October weather shortages of ammunition or having insufficient troops regarding these problems as challenges for him to overcome rather than a cause for complaint 180 As it was Simonds made only slow progress in October 1944 during the fighting in the Battle of the Scheldt although he was praised by Copp for imaginative and aggressive leadership who managed to achieve much despite all of the odds against him 181 Montgomery had little respect for the Canadian generals whom he dismissed as mediocre with the exception of Simonds whom he consistently praised as Canada s only first rate general in the entire war 172 nbsp Montgomery in conversation with Major General Stanislaw Maczek during his visit to the 1st Polish Armoured Division Headquarters in Breda 25 November 1944Admiral Ramsay who proved to be a far more articulate and forceful champion of the Canadians than their own generals starting on 9 October demanded of Eisenhower in a meeting that he either order Montgomery to make supporting the First Canadian Army in the Scheldt fighting his number one priority or sack him 182 Ramsay in very strong language argued to Eisenhower that the Allies could only invade Germany if Antwerp was opened and that as long as the three Canadian divisions fighting in the Scheldt had shortages of ammunition and artillery shells because Montgomery made the Arnhem salient his first priority then Antwerp would not be opened anytime soon 182 Even Brooke wrote in his diary I feel that Monty s strategy for once is at fault Instead of carrying out the advance to Arnhem he ought to have made certain of Antwerp 182 On 9 October 1944 at Ramsay s urging Eisenhower sent Montgomery a cable that emphasised the supreme importance of Antwerp that the Canadian Army will not repeat not be able to attack until November unless immediately supplied with adequate ammunition and warned that the Allied advance into Germany would totally stop by mid November unless Antwerp was opened by October 182 Montgomery replied by accusing Ramsay of making wild statements unsupported by the facts denying the Canadians were having to ration ammunition and claimed that he would soon take the Ruhr thereby making the Scheldt campaign a sideshow 182 Montgomery further issued a memo entitled Notes on Command in Western Europe demanding that he once again be made Land Forces Commander This led to an exasperated Eisenhower telling Montgomery that the question was not the command arrangement but rather his Montgomery s ability and willingness to obey orders Eisenhower further told Montgomery to either obey orders to immediately clear the mouth of the Scheldt or be sacked 183 A chastised Montgomery told Eisenhower on 15 October 1944 that he was now making clearing the Scheldt his top priority and the ammunition shortages in the First Canadian Army a problem which he denied even existed five days earlier were now over as supplying the Canadians was henceforth his first concern 183 Simonds now reinforced with British troops and Royal Marines cleared the Scheldt by taking Walcheren island the last of the German fortresses on the Scheldt on 8 November 1944 184 With the Scheldt in Allied hands Royal Navy minesweepers removed the German mines in the river and Antwerp was finally opened to shipping on 28 November 1944 184 Reflecting Antwerp s importance the Germans spent the winter of 1944 45 firing V 1 flying bombs and V 2 rockets at it in an attempt to shut down the port and the German offensive in December 1944 in the Ardennes had as its ultimate objective the capture of Antwerp 184 Urban wrote that Montgomery s most serious failure in the entire war was not the well publicised Battle of Arnhem but rather his lack of interest in opening up Antwerp as without it the entire Allied advance from the North Sea to the Swiss Alps stalled in the autumn of 1944 for logistical reasons 185 Operation Market Garden edit Montgomery was able to persuade Eisenhower to allow him to test his strategy of a single thrust to the Ruhr with Operation Market Garden in September 1944 The offensive was strategically bold 186 Following the Allied breakout from Normandy Eisenhower favored pursuing the German armies northwards and eastwards to the Rhine on a broad front Eisenhower relied on speed which in turn depended on logistics which were stretched to the limit 187 Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force SHAEF did provide Montgomery with additional resources principally additional locomotives and rolling stock and priority for air supply 188 Eisenhower s decision to launch Market Garden was influenced by his desire to keep the retreating Germans under pressure and by the pressure from the United States to use the First Allied Airborne Army as soon as possible 189 Montgomery s plan for Operation Market Garden 17 25 September 1944 was to outflank the Siegfried Line and cross the Rhine setting the stage for later offensives into the Ruhr region The 21st Army Group would attack north from Belgium 60 miles 97 km through the Netherlands across the Rhine and consolidate north of Arnhem on the far side of the Rhine The risky plan required three Airborne Divisions to capture numerous intact bridges along a single lane road on which an entire Corps had to attack and use as its main supply route The offensive failed to achieve its objectives 190 Both Churchill and Montgomery claimed that the operation was nearly or 90 successful although in Montgomery s equivocal acceptance of responsibility he blames lack of support and also refers to the Battle of the Scheldt which was undertaken by Canadian troops not involved in Market Garden Montgomery later said It was a bad mistake on my part I underestimated the difficulties of opening up the approaches to Antwerp I reckoned the Canadian Army could do it while we were going for the Ruhr I was wrong In my prejudiced view if the operation had been properly backed from its inception and given the aircraft ground forces and administrative resources necessary for the job it would have succeeded in spite of my mistakes or the adverse weather or the presence of the 2nd SS Panzer Corps in the Arnhem area I remain Market Garden s unrepentant advocate 191 In the aftermath of Market Garden Montgomery made holding the Arnhem salient his first priority arguing that the Second British Army might still be able to break through and reach the wide open plains of northern Germany and that he might be able to take the Ruhr by the end of October 192 The Germans under Field Marshal Walther Model in early October attempted to retake the Nijmegen salient but were beaten back In the meantime the First Canadian Army finally achieved the task of clearing the mouth of the river Scheldt despite the fact that in the words of Copp and Vogel that Montgomery s Directive required the Canadians to continue to fight alone for almost two weeks in a battle which everyone agreed could only be won with the aid of additional divisions 193 Battle of the Bulge edit On 16 December 1944 at the start of the Battle of the Bulge Montgomery s 21st Army Group was on the northern flank of the allied lines Bradley s US 12th Army Group was to Montgomery s south with William Simpson s U S Ninth Army adjacent to 21st Army Group Courtney Hodges U S First Army holding the Ardennes and Patton s U S Third Army further south 194 nbsp Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery talking with Lieutenant General Simpson GOC U S Ninth Army and Major General John Anderson GOC U S XVI Corps Behind are General Bradley and Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke SHAEF believed the Wehrmacht was no longer capable of launching a major offensive and that no offensive could be launched through such rugged terrain as the Ardennes Forest Because of this the area was held by refitting and newly arrived American formations 194 The Wehrmacht planned to exploit this by making a surprise attack through the Ardennes Forest whilst bad weather grounded Allied air power splitting the Allied Armies in two They would then turn north to recapture the port of Antwerp 195 If the attack were to succeed in capturing Antwerp the whole of 21st Army Group along with U S Ninth Army and most of U S First Army would be trapped without supplies behind German lines 196 The attack initially advanced rapidly splitting U S 12th Army Group in two with all of U S Ninth Army and the bulk of U S First Army on the northern shoulder of the German bulge The 12th Army Group commander Bradley was located in Luxembourg south of the bulge making command of the U S forces north of the bulge problematic As Montgomery was the nearest army group commander on the ground on 20 December Eisenhower temporarily transferred command of U S Ninth Army and U S First Army to Montgomery s 21st Army Group Bradley was concerned because it might discredit the American command but that it might mean Montgomery would commit more of his reserves to the battle In practice the change led to great resentment on the part of many Americans particularly at Headquarters 12th Army Group and Third Army 197 With the British and American forces under Montgomery s command holding the northern flank of the German assault General Patton s Third Army which was 90 miles 140 km to the south turned north and fought its way through the severe weather and German opposition to relieve the besieged American forces in Bastogne Four days after Montgomery took command of the northern flank the bad weather cleared and the USAAF and RAF 198 resumed operations inflicting heavy casualties on German troops and vehicles Six days after Montgomery took command of the northern flank Patton s Third Army relieved the besieged American forces in Bastogne Unable to advance further and running out of fuel the Wehrmacht abandoned the offensive 194 199 Morelock states that Montgomery was preoccupied with leading a single thrust offensive to Berlin as the overall commander of Allied ground forces and that he accordingly treated the Ardennes counteroffensive as a sideshow to be finished with the least possible effort and expenditure of resources 200 Montgomery subsequently wrote of his actions The first thing to do was to see the battle on the northern flank as one whole to ensure the vital areas were held securely and to create reserves for counter attack I embarked on these measures I put British troops under command of the Ninth Army to fight alongside American soldiers and made that Army take over some of the First Army Front I positioned British troops as reserves behind the First and Ninth Armies until such time as American reserves could be created 201 After the war Hasso von Manteuffel who commanded the 5th Panzer Army in the Ardennes was imprisoned awaiting trial for war crimes During this period he was interviewed by B H Liddell Hart a British author who has since been accused of putting words in the mouths of German generals and attempting to rewrite the historical record 202 203 204 205 After conducting several interviews via an interpreter Liddell Hart in a subsequent book attributed to Manteuffel the following statement about Montgomery s contribution to the battle in the Ardennes The operations of the American 1st Army had developed into a series of individual holding actions Montgomery s contribution to restoring the situation was that he turned a series of isolated actions into a coherent battle fought according to a clear and definite plan It was his refusal to engage in premature and piecemeal counter attacks which enabled the Americans to gather their reserves and frustrate the German attempts to extend their breakthrough 206 However American historian Stephen Ambrose writing in 1997 maintained that Putting Monty in command of the northern flank had no effect on the battle 207 Ambrose wrote that Far from directing the victory Montgomery had gotten in everyone s way and had botched the counter attack 208 General Omar Bradley blamed Montgomery s stagnating conservatism for his failure to counter attack when ordered to do so by Eisenhower 209 Command of U S First Army reverted to 12th Army Group on 17 January 1945 210 whilst command of U S Ninth Army remained with 21st Army Group for the coming operations to cross the Rhine 211 Crossing the Rhine edit nbsp Montgomery left Air Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham centre and the Commander of the British Second Army Lieutenant General Sir Miles Dempsey talking after a conference in which Montgomery gave the order for the Second Army to begin Operation Plunder nbsp Montgomery was awarded the Order of Victory on 5 June 1945 Dwight Eisenhower Georgy Zhukov and Sir Arthur Tedder were also present In February 1945 Montgomery s 21st Army Group advanced to the Rhine in Operation Veritable and Operation Grenade It crossed the Rhine on 24 March 1945 in Operation Plunder which took place two weeks after U S First Army had crossed the Rhine after capturing the Ludendorff Bridge during the Battle of Remagen 212 21st Army Group s river crossing was followed by the encirclement of the Ruhr Pocket During this battle U S Ninth Army which had remained part of 21st Army Group after the Battle of the Bulge formed the northern arm of the envelopment of German Army Group B with U S First Army forming the southern arm The two armies linked up on 1 April 1945 encircling 370 000 German troops and on 4 April 1945 Ninth Army reverted to Omar Bradley s 12th Army Group 213 By the war s end the remaining formations of 21st Army group First Canadian Army and British Second Army had liberated the northern part of the Netherlands and captured much of north west Germany occupied Hamburg and Rostock and sealed off the Danish peninsula 214 On 4 May 1945 on Luneburg Heath Montgomery accepted the surrender of German forces in north west Germany Denmark and the Netherlands 215 Casualty conservation policy editThe British high command were not only concerned with winning the war and defeating Germany but also with ensuring that it retained sufficient influence in the post war world to govern global policy Suffering heavy losses in Normandy would diminish British leadership and prestige within its empire and on post war Europe in particular 216 Many of Montgomery s clashes with Eisenhower were based on his determination to pursue the war on lines most suitable to Britain 217 The fewer the number of combat experienced divisions the British had left at the end of the war the smaller Britain s influence in Europe was likely to be compared to the emerging superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union Montgomery was thus caught in a dilemma the British Army needed to be seen to be pulling at least half the weight in the liberation of Europe but without incurring the heavy casualties that such a role would inevitably produce 21st Army Group scarcely possessed sufficient forces to achieve such a military prominence and the remaining divisions had to be expended sparingly 218 Britain in 1944 did not possess the manpower to rebuild shattered divisions and it was imperative for Montgomery to protect the viability of the British army so that Britain could still play an important part in the final victory It was reported to the War Office that Montgomery has to be very careful of what he does on his eastern flank because on that flank is the only British Army there is left in this part of the world The context of British casualties and the shortage of reinforcements prompted Montgomery to excessive caution 219 Dempsey wrote on 13 June that Caen could only be taken by a set piece assault and we did not have the men or the ammunition for that at the time 220 Montgomery s solution to the dilemma was to attempt to remain Commander of All Land Forces until the end of the war so that any victory attained on the Western front although achieved primarily by American formations would accrue in part to him and thus to Britain He would also be able to ensure that British units were spared some of the high attrition actions but would be most prominent when the final blows were struck 221 When that strategy failed he persuaded Eisenhower to occasionally put some American formations under the control of the 21st Army Group so as to bolster his resources while still maintaining the outward appearance of successful British effort 222 Montgomery initially remained prepared to push Second British Army hard to capture the vital strategic town of Caen and consequently incur heavy losses In the original Overlord plan Montgomery was determined to push past Caen to Falaise as quickly as possible However after the heavy casualties incurred in capturing Caen he changed his mind 223 Personality editMontgomery was notorious for his lack of tact and diplomacy Even his patron the Chief of the Imperial General Staff General Sir Alan Brooke frequently mentions it in his war diaries he is liable to commit untold errors in lack of tact and I had to haul him over the coals for his usual lack of tact and egotistical outlook which prevented him from appreciating other people s feelings 224 One incident that illustrated this occurred during the North African campaign when Montgomery bet Walter Bedell Smith that he could capture Sfax by the middle of April 1943 Smith jokingly replied that if Montgomery could do it he would give him a Flying Fortress complete with crew Smith promptly forgot all about it but Montgomery did not and when Sfax was taken on 10 April he sent a message to Smith claiming his winnings Smith tried to laugh it off but Montgomery was having none of it and insisted on his aircraft It got as high as Eisenhower who with his renowned skill in diplomacy ensured Montgomery did get his Flying Fortress though at a great cost in ill feeling 225 Even Brooke thought it crass stupidity 226 Antony Beevor in discussing Montgomery s counterproductive lack of tact in the final months of the war described him as insufferable Beevor says that in January 1945 Montgomery had tried to claim far too much credit for the British and for himself in defeating the German counter attack in the Ardennes in December 1944 This crass and unpleasant blunder helped make it impossible for Churchill and Alan Brooke to persuade Eisenhower of the need for an immediate thrust to be led by Montgomery through Germany to Berlin Eisenhower did not accept the viability of the dagger thrust approach it had already been agreed that Berlin would fall into the future Soviet occupation zone and he was not willing to accept heavy casualties for no gain so Eisenhower disregarded the British suggestions and continued with his conservative broad front strategy and the Red Army reached Berlin well ahead of the Western Allies 227 In August 1945 while Brooke Sir Andrew Cunningham and Sir Charles Portal were discussing their possible successors as Chiefs of Staff they concluded that Montgomery would be very efficient as CIGS from the Army s point of view but that he was also very unpopular with a large proportion of the Army Despite this Cunningham and Portal were strongly in favour of Montgomery succeeding Brooke after his retirement 228 Churchill by all accounts a faithful friend is quoted as saying of Montgomery In defeat unbeatable in victory unbearable 229 Montgomery suffered from an overbearing conceit and an uncontrollable urge for self promotion General Hastings Ismay who was at the time Winston Churchill s chief staff officer and trusted military adviser once stated of Montgomery I have come to the conclusion that his love of publicity is a disease like alcoholism or taking drugs and that it sends him equally mad 230 231 232 Later life editPost war military career edit nbsp Montgomery and Soviet Marshals Zhukov red sash and Rokossovsky medal with solid red ribbon with General Sokolovsky medal with red and white ribbon leave the Brandenburg Gate on 12 July 1945 after being decorated by Montgomery After the war Montgomery became the C in C of the British Army of the Rhine BAOR the name given to the British Occupation Forces and was the British member of the Allied Control Council 233 Chief of the Imperial General Staff edit Montgomery was Chief of the Imperial General Staff CIGS from 1946 to 1948 succeeding Alan Brooke 215 As CIGS Montgomery toured Africa in 1947 and in a secret 1948 report to Prime Minister Clement Attlee s government proposed a master plan to amalgamate British Africa territories and to exploit the raw materials of Africa thereby counteracting the loss of British influence in Asia 215 However Montgomery was barely on speaking terms with his fellow service chiefs sending his deputy Kenneth Crawford to attend their meetings 233 and he clashed particularly with Sir Arthur Tedder who was by now Chief of the Air Staff CAS 215 When Montgomery s term of office expired Prime Minister Attlee appointed Sir William Slim from retirement with the rank of field marshal as his successor When Montgomery protested that he had told his protege General Sir John Crocker former commander of I Corps in the 1944 45 North West Europe Campaign that the job was to be his Attlee is said to have retorted Untell him 234 Western Union Defence Organization edit nbsp Montgomery in New Zealand in 1947Montgomery was then appointed Chairman of the Western Union Defence Organization s C in C committee 233 Volume 3 of Nigel Hamilton s Life of Montgomery of Alamein gives an account of the bickering between Montgomery and his land forces chief French General Jean de Lattre de Tassigny which created splits through the Union headquarters 235 NATO edit On the creation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation s Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe in 1951 Montgomery became Eisenhower s deputy 236 He would continue to serve under Eisenhower s successors Generals Matthew Ridgway and Al Gruenther until his retirement aged nearly 71 in 1958 237 Personal edit Montgomery was created 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein in 1946 238 Montgomery s mother Maude Montgomery died at New Park in Moville in Inishowen in 1949 She was buried alongside her husband in the kirkyard behind St Columb s Church the small Church of Ireland church beside New Park overlooking Lough Foyle Montgomery did not attend the funeral claiming he was too busy 98 Montgomery was an Honorary Member of the Winkle Club a charity in Hastings East Sussex and introduced Winston Churchill to the club in 1955 239 He was chairman of the governing body of St John s School in Leatherhead Surrey from 1951 to 1966 and a generous supporter 240 He was also President of Portsmouth Football Club between 1944 and 1961 241 In the mid 1950s the Illustrated London News published sets of photographs taken by Montgomery while flying over the Swiss Alps In February 1957 views of Mount Toedi taken with a Rolleiflex camera were reproduced 242 Opinions edit Memoirs edit nbsp Lord Montgomery as CIGS with Lord Wavell Viceroy of India and Auchinleck Commander in Chief Indian Army Delhi 1946Montgomery s memoirs 1958 criticised many of his wartime comrades in harsh terms including Eisenhower 243 He was threatened with legal action by Field Marshal Auchinleck for suggesting that Auchinleck had intended to retreat from the Alamein position if attacked again and had to give a radio broadcast 20 November 1958 expressing his gratitude to Auchinleck for having stabilised the front at the First Battle of Alamein 244 The 1960 paperback edition of Montgomery s memoirs contains a publisher s note drawing attention to that broadcast and stating that although the reader might assume from Montgomery s text that Auchinleck had been planning to retreat into the Nile Delta or beyond in the publisher s view it had been Auchinleck s intention to launch an offensive as soon as the Eighth Army was rested and regrouped 245 Montgomery was stripped of his honorary citizenship of Montgomery Alabama and was challenged to a duel by an Italian lawyer 246 Montgomery mentioned to the American journalist John Gunther in April 1944 that like Alanbrooke he kept a secret diary Gunther remarked that it would surely be an essential source for historians When Montgomery asked whether it would be worth money one day Gunther suggested at least 100 000 This was converted into pounds sterling and he is supposed to have grinned and said Well I guess I won t die in the poor house after all 247 Military opinions edit Montgomery twice met Israeli general Moshe Dayan After an initial meeting in the early 1950s Montgomery met Dayan again in the 1960s to discuss the Vietnam War which Dayan was studying Montgomery was harshly critical of US strategy in Vietnam which involved deploying large numbers of combat troops aggressive bombing attacks and uprooting entire village populations and forcing them into strategic hamlets Montgomery said that the Americans most important problem was that they had no clear cut objective and allowed local commanders to set military policy At the end of their meeting Montgomery asked Dayan to tell the Americans in his name that they were insane 248 During a visit to the Alamein battlefields in May 1967 he bluntly told high ranking Egyptian Army officers that they would lose any war with Israel a warning that was shown to be justified only a few weeks later in the Six Day War 249 Social opinions edit In retirement Montgomery publicly supported apartheid after a visit to South Africa in 1962 and after a visit to China declared himself impressed by the Chinese leadership led by Chairman Mao Tse tung 250 251 He spoke out against the legalisation of homosexuality in the United Kingdom arguing that the Sexual Offences Act 1967 was a charter for buggery 252 and that this sort of thing may be tolerated by the French but we re British thank God 253 Montgomery was a non smoking teetotaller a vegetarian 254 and a Christian 255 Death edit nbsp Statue of Montgomery in Whitehall London by Oscar Nemon unveiled in 1980Montgomery died from unspecified causes in 1976 at his home Isington Mill in Isington Hampshire aged 88 256 257 258 259 After a funeral at St George s Chapel Windsor his body was buried in Holy Cross churchyard in Binsted Hampshire 98 He was survived by his son and only child David Montgomery 2nd Viscount Montgomery of Alamein 1928 2020 as well as two grandchildren His wife Betty Carver died in 1937 260 His Garter banner which had hung in St George s Chapel in Windsor during his lifetime is now on display in St Mary s Warwick 261 nbsp Montgomery s grave Holy Cross churchyard Binsted nbsp Montgomery s Garter banner on display in St Mary s Warwick nbsp Statue of Field Marshal The 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein in Montgomery Square BrusselsLegacy editMontgomery s portrait by Frank O Salisbury 1945 hangs in the National Portrait Gallery 262 A statue of Montgomery by Oscar Nemon stands outside the Ministry of Defence in Whitehall alongside those of Field Marshal Lord Slim and Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke 263 Montgomery gave his name to the French commune Colleville Montgomery in Normandy 264 nbsp Montgomery s Grant command tank on display at the Imperial War Museum in LondonThe Imperial War Museum holds a variety of material relating to Montgomery in its collections These include Montgomery s Grant command tank on display in the atrium at the Museum s London branch his command caravans as used in North West Europe on display at IWM Duxford and his papers are held by the Museum s Department of Documents The Museum maintains a permanent exhibition about Montgomery entitled Monty Master of the Battlefield 265 The World Champion Field Marshal Montgomery Pipe Band from Northern Ireland is named after him 266 Montgomery s Rolls Royce staff car is on display at the Royal Logistic Corps Museum Deepcut Surrey 267 The Montgomery cocktail is a martini mixed at a ratio of 15 parts gin to 1 part vermouth and popular with Ernest Hemingway at Harry s Bar in Venice 268 The drink was facetiously named for Montgomery s supposed refusal to go into battle unless his numerical advantage was at least fifteen to one and it appeared in Hemingway s 1950 novel Across the River and into the Trees Ironically following severe internal injuries received in the First World War Montgomery himself could neither smoke nor drink 186 Honours and awards edit nbsp Arms of Montgomery Azure two lions passant guardant between three fleur de lis two in chief and one in base and two trefoils in fess all or Viscountcy as Montgomery of Alamein UK January 1946 238 Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter UK 1946 269 Knight Grand Cross of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath UK 1945 270 KCB 11 November 1942 96 CB 11 July 1940 70 Companion of the Distinguished Service Order UK 1914 29 Mentioned in Despatches UK 17 February 1915 4 January 1917 11 December 1917 20 May 1918 20 December 1918 5 July 1919 15 July 1939 24 June 1943 271 13 January 1944 272 Croix de Guerre 1914 1918 France 1919 273 Grand Cross of the Legion d honneur France May 1945 Medaille militaire France 9 September 1958 274 Distinguished Service Medal US 1947 275 Chief Commander of the Legion of Merit US 10 August 1943 99 Member of the Order of Victory USSR 21 June 1945 276 Knight of the Order of the Elephant Denmark 2 August 1945 277 Grand Commander of the Order of George I Greece 20 June 1944 278 Silver Cross V Class of the Virtuti Militari Poland 31 October 1944 279 Grand Cross of the Military Order of the White Lion Czechoslovakia 1947 280 Grand Cordon of the Seal of Solomon Ethiopia 1949 281 Grand Officer with Palm of the Order of Leopold II Belgium 1947 282 Croix de Guerre 1940 with Palm Belgium 282 Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion Netherlands 16 January 1947 283 Grand Cross of the Royal Norwegian Order of St Olav Norway 1951 284 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp United Kingdom portalAfrika Korps M E Clifton James Montgomery s double during the World War II Tex Banwell another double Irish military diaspora Panzer Army Africa I Was Monty s Double 1958 film adapted from the autobiography of M E Clifton JamesReferences editCitations edit Grossman Mark 2007 World Military Leaders A Biographical Dictionary Infobase Publishing p 231 ISBN 978 0 8160 7477 8 No 40729 The London Gazette Supplement 9 March 1956 p 1504 No 37983 The London Gazette Supplement 10 June 1947 p 2663 No 41182 The London Gazette Supplement 20 September 1957 p 5545 No 37589 The London Gazette Supplement 31 May 1946 p 2665 No 42240 The London Gazette Supplement 30 December 1960 p 24 No 37826 The London Gazette Supplement 20 December 1946 p 6236 No 43160 The London Gazette Supplement 15 November 1963 p 9424 No 41599 The London Gazette 6 January 1959 p 166 Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Desert Island Discs 20 December 1969 BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 18 January 2014 Hamilton 1981 pp 3 12 Hamilton 1981 pp 13 15 Hamilton 1894 p 324 Hamilton 1981 p 3 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Ballynally Townland Co Donegal Townlands ie Retrieved 17 May 2023 Montgomery 1933 Chapter V Hamilton 1981 p 31 Hamilton 1981 p 5 The Suffolk nun charged with teaching one of the world s most controversial military leaders The Great British Life 11 March 2020 Retrieved 29 August 2022 Chalfont 1976 p 29 a b c d e f Bierman amp Smith 2002 pp 223 230 Hamilton 1981 p 36 a b c d e f Heathcote 1999 p 213 No 28178 The London Gazette 18 September 1908 p 6762 No 28382 The London Gazette 7 June 1910 p 3996 a b Doherty 2004 p 19 Doherty 2004 p 20 a b No 28992 The London Gazette 1 December 1914 p 10188 No 29080 The London Gazette 23 February 1915 p 1833 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Heathcote 1999 p 214 No 30884 The London Gazette Supplement 3 September 1918 p 10505 Horne Photo Plate No 1 after p 100 The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery 1958 p 35 No 31585 The London Gazette Supplement 3 October 1919 p 12398 No 31799 The London Gazette Supplement 27 February 1920 p 2406 Montgomery 1958 p 35 No 32207 The London Gazette Supplement 26 January 1921 p 760 Sheehan William 2005 British Voices from the Irish War of Independence Collins pp 151 152 ISBN 978 1 905172 37 5 Bielenberg Andy Borgonovo John 5 May 2022 The story behind Monty s Macroom Castle standoff with the IRA via www rte ie No 33083 The London Gazette 11 September 1925 p 5972 No 33128 The London Gazette 29 January 1926 p 691 Hamilton 1981 p 177 Hamilton 1981 p 200 Hamilton 1981 p 197 Hamilton 1981 p 278 Hamilton 1981 p 276 A staff post normally held by a major although the account does not give his specific rank at the time Hamilton 1984 p 40 Hamilton 1984 p 45 Hamilton 1984 p 426 No 33460 The London Gazette 25 January 1929 p 617 No 33681 The London Gazette 16 January 1931 p 378 No 34067 The London Gazette 6 July 1934 p 4340 No 34075 The London Gazette 3 August 1934 p 4975 No 34426 The London Gazette 13 August 1937 p 5181 No 34426 The London Gazette 13 August 1937 p 5178 No 34566 The London Gazette 1 November 1938 p 6814 No 34566 The London Gazette 1 November 1938 p 6815 Barr James 2011 A Line in the Sand Simon amp Schuster p 194 ISBN 978 1 84737 453 0 Heathcote 1999 p 218 Alanbrooke 2001 pp 18 19 a b c Mead 2015 p 39 a b Mead 2015 p 39 40 Bond Brian 1990 Britain France and Belgium 1939 1940 Brassey s UK p 44 ISBN 978 0 08 037700 1 a b c d e Mead 2015 p 40 Lord Walter 1999 The Miracle of Dunkirk London The Viking Press ISBN 978 1 85326 685 0 a b Heathcote 1999 p 216 a b c The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery p 64 a b No 34893 The London Gazette Supplement 9 July 1940 p 4244 a b The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery p 65 No 34909 The London Gazette Supplement 26 July 1940 p 4660 a b Mead 2007 p 303 No 35224 The London Gazette Supplement 22 July 1941 p 4202 No 35397 The London Gazette Supplement 26 December 1941 p 7369 Stacey Charles P Official History of the Canadian Army in the Second World War Six Years of War The Army in Canada Britain and the Pacific Ottawa Queen s Printer 1966 Playfair et al 2004c pp 367 369 Churchill p 420 According to J Toland Battle The Story of the Bulge 1959 p 157 this conversation was with Churchill s chief military assistant General Ismay beginning with Montgomery saying to Ismay It s a sad thing that a professional soldier can reach the peak of generalship and then suffer a reverse which ruins his career a b Playfair et al 2004c p 370 Barnett 1960 p 265 a b Moorehead 1973 pp 118 127 Caddick Adams 2012 p 461 Jim Fraser obituary The Guardian 27 May 2013 Retrieved 28 May 2013 Alanbrooke 2001 Churchill 1986 pp 546 548 Playfair et al 2004c p 388 No 35746 The London Gazette Supplement 13 October 1942 p 4481 Churchill 1986 p 588 Playfair et al 2004d pp 13 14 Playfair et al 2004d p 9 Playfair et al 2004d p 16 Playfair et al 2004d p 78 Playfair et al 2004d p 79 Moorehead 1973 pp 140 41 Churchill 1986 p 591 a b No 35782 The London Gazette Supplement 10 November 1942 p 4917 Stout 1956 Chapter 11 Tunisia The Battle of Medenine a b c d e f g Bernard Montgomery 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford 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Cornell University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 8014 7631 0 A Very Special Relationship Basil Liddell Hart Wehrmacht Generals and the Debate on West German Rearmament 1945 1953 by Alaric Searle War In History 1998 5 327 published by SAGE for the University of Salford Manchester doi 10 1177 096834459800500304 available at http usir salford ac uk id eprint 30779 and https journals sagepub com doi abs 10 1177 096834459800500304 Liddell Hart and the Mearsheimer Critique A Pupil s Retrospective PDF Strategic Studies Institute by Jay Luvaas 1990 pg 12 13 Delaforce 2004 p 318 Caddick Adams 2015 p 644 Baxter 1999 p 111 Morelock 2015 p 92 The Supreme Command Forrest C Pogue Chapter XX The Winter Counteroffensives pp 378 395 United States Army in World War II Part 3 Volume 4 United States Dept of the Army Office of Military History 1947 p 439 HyperWar The Last Offensive Chapter 11 www ibiblio org Archived from the original on 26 April 2015 The U S Ninth Army s Breakout Crossing the Roer and the Rhine 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actually came from Vincenzo Caputo a Sicilian lawyer Alanbrooke 2001 p xxiv Moshe Dayan Sounds the Alarm in Vietnam 15 September 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2012 James Laura 2005 Nasser and His Enemies Foreign Policy Decision Making in Egypt on the Eve of the Six Day War Herzliya Israel MERIA Journal Heathcote 1999 p 219 Baxter 1999 p 125 Hamilton 2002 p 169 Robert Andrews October 1990 The Columbia dictionary of quotations Columbia University Press p 419 ISBN 978 0 380 70932 8 Haswell Jock 1985 The Tangled Web The Art of Tactical and Strategic Deception J Goodchild p 106 ISBN 978 0 86391 030 2 How a Man of Prayer was used by God 8 December 2012 Archived from the original on 21 March 2023 Retrieved 28 June 2020 Field Marshal Montgomery Dead at 88 The New York Times 24 March 1976 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 11 December 2021 Bernard Law Montgomery 1st Viscount Montgomery British military commander Britannica Retrieved 11 December 2021 Bernard Law Montgomery Unbeatable and unbearable National Army Museum Retrieved 11 December 2021 Bernard Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Westminster Abbey Retrieved 11 December 2021 Steven Alasdair 30 March 2020 Obituary Viscount Montgomery of Alamein son of Monty who befriended the son of Edwin Rommel The Herald Archived from the original on 8 November 2023 Garter Banner Location PDF St George s Chapel Windsor June 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 18 November 2015 Retrieved 17 November 2015 Bernard Law Montgomery 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 1 July 2012 Field Marshal Montgomery and Oscar Nemon Getty Images Retrieved 13 November 2017 In pictures Tribute to Montgomery BBC Retrieved 1 July 2012 Monty Master of the Battlefield Imperial War Museum Archived from the original on 23 June 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 History Field Marshal Montgomery Pipe Band Archived from the original on 11 April 2023 RLC Museum publicity leaflet website John Taylor 19 October 1987 The Trouble With Harry s New York 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Bibliography edit Badsey Stephen 1990 Normandy 1944 Allied Landings and Breakout London ISBN 978 0 85045 921 0 Baxter Colin 1999 Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery 1887 1976 A Selected Bibliography Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29119 7 Bernage Georges 2000 The Panzers and the Battle of Normandy June 5th July 20th 1944 Editions Heimdal ISBN 978 2 84048 135 5 Bierman John Smith Colin 2002 Alamein War Without Hate Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 670 91109 7 Buckley J 2014 2013 Monty s Men The British Army and the Liberation of Europe pbk ed London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20534 3 Brereton Lewis 2011 The Brereton Diaries The War in the Air in the Pacific Middle East and Europe 3 October 1941 8 May 1945 Morrow ISBN 978 1 258 20290 3 Brighton Terry 2009 Masters of Battle Monty Patton and Rommel at War Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 102985 6 Bungay Stephen 2002 Alamein Auram ISBN 978 1 85410 929 3 Caddick Adams Peter 2012 Monty and Rommel Parallel Lives London Arrow Books ISBN 978 1 84809 152 8 Caddick Adams P 2015 Snow amp Steel The Battle of the Bulge 1944 45 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 933514 5 Carafano James Joy 2008 After D Day Operation Cobra and the Normandy Breakout Stackpole ISBN 978 0 8117 3487 5 Chalfont Alun 1976 Montgomery of Alamein Atheneum ISBN 0 689 10744 7 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Copp Terry Fall 1981 No Lack of Rational Speed First Canadian Army Operations September 1944 Journal of Canadian Studies 16 3 4 145 155 doi 10 3138 jcs 16 3 4 145 S2CID 151600903 Copp Terry 2004 Fields of Fire The Canadians in Normandy University of Toronto Press Copp J T 2006 Cinderella Army The Canadians in Northwest Europe 1944 1945 University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 3925 5 Copp Terry Vogel Robert 1983 Maple Leaf Route Caen Alma ISBN 978 0 919907 01 0 Copp Terry Vogel Robert 1984 Maple Leaf Route Antwerp Alma ISBN 978 0 919907 03 4 Copp Terry Vogel Robert 1985 Maple Leaf Route Scheldt Alma ISBN 978 0 919907 04 1 Corrigan Gordon 2010 The Second World War A Military History Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 84354 894 2 Barnett Correlli 1960 The Desert Generals London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 35280 7 D Este Carlo 1983 Decision in Normandy The Unwritten Story of Montgomery and the Allied Campaign London William Collins Sons ISBN 978 0 00 217056 7 Churchill Winston 1986 The Second World War Volume 4 The Hinge of Fate Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 144175 7 de Guingand Francis 1947 Operation Victory London Hodder and Stoughton Delaforce Patrick 2004 The Battle of the Bulge Hitler s Final Gamble Dixon Norman 1976 On the Psychology of Military Incompetence Pimlico ISBN 978 0 7126 5889 8 Doherty Richard 2004 Ireland s Generals in the Second World War Four Courts Press ISBN 978 1851828654 English John 2014 Surrender Invites Death Fighting the Waffen SS in Normandy Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 0763 3 Feldmann Daniel Mas Cedric 2014 Montgomery Paris editions Economica in French ISBN 978 2 717 86699 5 Fraser David 1988 And We Shall Shock Them The British Army in World War II Sceptre ISBN 978 0 340 42637 1 Hamilton J A 1894 Montgomery Robert 1809 1887 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol XXXVIII New York MacMillan and Co pp 323 324 Lehrman Lewis 2016 Churchill Roosevelt amp Company Studies in Character and Statecraft Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 1898 1 Hamilton Nigel 2001 The Full Monty Montgomery of Alamein 1887 1942 London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9334 9 Hamilton Nigel 1981 Monty The Making of a General London Hamish Hamilton Ltd ISBN 978 0 241 10583 2 Hamilton Nigel 1984 Monty Master of the Battlefield London Hamish Hamilton Ltd ISBN 978 0 241 11104 8 Hamilton Nigel 1986 Monty The Field Marshal 1944 1976 London Hamish Hamilton Ltd ISBN 978 0 241 11838 2 Hamilton Nigel 2002 The Full Monty Montgomery of Alamein 1887 1942 v 1 London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 028375 4 Harrison Mark 2004 Medicine and Victory British Military Medicine in the Second World War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926859 7 Hart Stephen 2007 Colossal Cracks Montgomery s 21st Army Group in Northwest Europe 1944 45 Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 3383 0 Hastings Max 2004 Armageddon The Battle for Germany 1944 1945 Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 41433 6 Heathcote Tony 1999 The British Field Marshals 1736 1997 Barnsley UK Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 0 85052 696 7 Jordan Jonathan W 2011 Brothers Rivals Victors Eisenhower Patton Bradley and the Partnership That Drove the Allied Conquest in Europe NAL ISBN 978 0 451 23212 0 Keegan John 1994 Six Armies in Normandy Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 023542 5 Lattimer Jon 2002 Alamein John Murray ISBN 978 0 674 01376 6 McKee Alexander 1984 Caen Anvil of Victory Papermac ISBN 978 0 333 38313 1 Mead Richard 2007 Churchill s Lions A biographical guide to the key British generals of World War II Stroud UK Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 431 0 Mead Richard 2015 The Men Behind Monty Barnsley Yorkshire Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 47382 716 5 OCLC 922926980 Montgomery Maud 1933 Bishop Montgomery A Memoir London Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Moorehead Alan 1973 Montgomery London White Lion Publishers ISBN 978 0 85617 357 8 Morelock Jerry D 2015 Generals of the Bulge Leadership in the U S Army s Greatest Battle Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0811761758 Neillands Robin 2005 The Battle for the Rhine 1944 Overlook Press ISBN 978 1 59020 028 5 Playfair Major General I S O Flynn Captain F C R N Molony Brigadier C J C amp Gleave Group Captain T P 2004c 1st pub HMSO 1960 Butler Sir James ed The Mediterranean and Middle East Vol III British Fortunes reach their Lowest Ebb September 1941 to September 1942 History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Uckfield UK Naval amp Military Press ISBN 978 1 84574 067 2 Playfair Major General I S O Flynn Captain F C R N Molony Brigadier C J C amp Gleave Group Captain T P 2004d 1st pub HMSO 1966 Butler Sir James ed The Mediterranean and Middle East Volume IV The Destruction of the Axis Forces in Africa History of the Second World War United Kingdom Military Series Uckfield UK Naval amp Military Press ISBN 978 1 84574 068 9 Powers Stephen July 1992 The Battle of Normandy The Lingering Controversy Vol 56 The Journal of Military History Ryan Cornelius 1974 A Bridge Too Far Hodder ISBN 978 0 684 80330 2 Schultz James 1998 A framework for military decision making under risks Thesis Air University Maxwell Airforce Base Alabama Shirer William L 2003 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Gallery Books ISBN 978 0 8317 7404 2 Speer Albert 1970 Inside the Third Reich Macmillan ISBN 978 1 299 61013 2 Urban Mark 2005 Generals Ten British Commanders Who Shaped The World London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 23249 9 Weinberg Gerhard 2004 A World in Arms Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61826 7 Primary sources edit Alanbrooke Field Marshal Lord 2001 Danchev Alex Todman Daniel eds War Diaries 1939 1945 London Phoenix Press ISBN 978 1 84212 526 7 Brett James Anthony 1984 Conversations with Montgomery Irwin ISBN 978 0 7183 0531 4 Eisenhower Dwight D 1948 Crusade in Europe London William Heinemann ISBN 978 0 306 70768 1 OCLC 219971286 Montgomery Bernard Law 2000 1972 A Concise History of Warfare Wordsworth Military Library Ware Herts UK Wordsworth Editions ISBN 978 1 84022 223 4 Montgomery Bernard Law 1958 The Memoirs of Field Marshal Montgomery Cleveland The World Publishing Company Montgomery Bernard Law 1960 The memoirs of field marshall the viscount Montgomery of Alamein K G Companion Book Club OCLC 86057670 Montgomery Bernard Law 1961 The Path to Leadership London Collins ISBN 978 81 8158 128 0 OCLC 464095648 Montgomery Bernard 2008 Brooks Stephen ed Montgomery and the Battle of Normandy A Selection from the Diaries Correspondence and Other Papers of Field Marshal the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein January to August 1944 Army Records Society series 27 Stroud UK Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 5123 4 Zetterling Niklas 2000 Normandy 1944 German Military Organization Combat Power and Organizational Effectiveness Fedorowicz J J Canada ISBN 978 0 921991 56 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bernard Montgomery nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Bernard Montgomery British Army Officers 1939 1945 Generals of World War II NATO Declassified Montgomery NATO Montgomery and Anglo Polish relations during WWII Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Biography of Montgomery Jewish Virtual Library website Retrieved 10 April 2014 Profile desertwar net Retrieved 10 April 2014 Viscount Montgomery of Alamein interview on BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs 20 December 1969 Newspaper clippings about Bernard Montgomery in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byGeoffrey Raikes Commander 9th Infantry Brigade1937 1938 Succeeded byWilliam RobbNew titleDivision reformed Commander 8th Infantry Division1938 1939 Succeeded byReade Godwin AustenPreceded byDenis Bernard GOC 3rd Infantry Division1939 1940 Succeeded byJames GammellPreceded bySir Alan Brooke GOC II Corps British Expeditionary ForceMay June 1940 Succeeded byEdmund OsbornePreceded bySir Claude Auchinleck GOC V Corps1940 1941 Succeeded byEdmond SchreiberPreceded byAndrew Thorne GOC XII CorpsApril November 1941 Succeeded byJames GammellPreceded byBernard Paget GOC in C South Eastern Command1941 1942 Succeeded byJohn SwaynePreceded bySir Claude Auchinleck GOC in C Eighth Army1942 1943 Succeeded bySir Oliver LeesePreceded bySir Bernard Paget GOC in C 21st Army Group1944 1945 Post disbandedNew titleNew command C in C British Army of the Rhine1945 1946 Succeeded bySir Richard McCreeryPreceded byThe Lord Alanbrooke Chief of the Imperial General Staff1946 1948 Succeeded bySir William SlimNew title Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe1951 1958 Succeeded bySir Richard GalePeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Viscount Montgomery of Alamein1946 1976 Succeeded byDavid MontgomeryHonorary titlesPreceded byClement Thomes Colonel of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment1947 1963 Succeeded byRonald Macdonald Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bernard Montgomery amp oldid 1218165618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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