- 21st Army Group
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=21st Army Group
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dates=July,1943 to August, 1945
country=flagicon|UK United Kingdom
Canada
flagicon|Poland Poland
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command_structure=Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF)
current_commander=
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notable_commanders=Bernard Montgomery
anniversaries=The 21st Army Group was a formation comprising British and Canadian forces stationed in the United Kingdom. who were assigned for the invasion of
Europe . The formation was established in London in July of 1943 under the command ofSupreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF). The Group was an important Allied force in the European Theatre ofWorld War II . The 21st Army Group operated in Northern France, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany.Normandy
Commanded by General (later Field Marshal) Sir Bernard Montgomery, 21st Army Group initially controlled all ground forces in Operation Overlord. When sufficient American forces had landed, their own 12th Army Group was activated, under General
Omar Bradley and the 21st Army Group was left with the British 2nd Army and theFirst Canadian Army under its control.Normandy was a battle of attrition for the British and Canadian armies, drawing in the available German reinforcements around
Caen at the eastern end of thelodgement . The German Wehrmacht lacked the ability to prevent the American breakout at the western end of the Normandy beachhead in early August 1944, and the Germans were nearly enveloped at the Falaise and were routed.Advance into the Netherlands
After the successful landings in the south of France by the U.S. 6th Army Group, the 21st Army Group formed the left flank of the three Allied army groups arrayed against German forces in the West. It was therefore responsible for securing the ports upon which Allied supply depended, and also with overrunning German
V-1 andV-2 launching sites along the coasts of westernFrance andBelgium .By
29 August , the Germans had largely withdrawn across theSeine River without their heavy equipment. The campaign through Northern France and Belgium was largely a pursuit, with the ports - formally designated "Fortress Towns" by the Germans - offering only limited opposition to the 1st Canadian Army. The advance was so rapid, 250 miles in four days, thatAntwerp, Belgium was captured on 4 September 1944, undefended, and with its port facilities intact.On 1 September 1944, the 21st Army Group was relieved of operational control of the American armies, and those armies formed the
12th Army Group .By mid-September, elements of 21st Army Group had reached the Dutch border, but were halted due to lack of supplies, and by flooding caused by the widespread German demoliton of Dutch dikes. German control of some of the channel ports, and previous Allied bombing of the French and Belgian railways, resulted in a long supply line from Normandy served mainly by
truck s.Operation Market Garden
After the break-out from Normandy, there were high hopes that the war could be ended in
1944 . In order to do so, the last great natural defensive barrier of Germany in the west, theRhine River had to be crossed.Operation Market Garden was orchestrated to attempt just this. It was staged in theNetherlands with two American and one British airborne divisions and a Polish parachute brigade being dropped to capture bridges over the lower Rhine before they were blown by the Germans. The airborne formations were then to be relieved by armored forces advancing rapidly northwards throughEindhoven andNijmegen toArnhem , opening the north German plains, and the industrialRuhr Valley , to the Allies.However, the British armored forces had only one main highway to operate on, and crucial information about the German forces in the operational area was either missing or ignored. The scratch forces remaining after the retreat from France were much stronger than expected, thus giving the armored units of the XXX Corps a much tougher fight than had been anticipated, slowing the advance. The American divisions and the Polish parachute brigade that had fought south of the Rhine were relieved but the British 1st Airborne Division in Arnhem was practically destroyed.
Battle of the Scheldt
Since the approaches to the port of
Antwerp had not been cleared when the city was captured it had allowed the German army time to reorganise and dig in along the approaches making the port completely unusable.Thus an operation was needed to clear the approaches and thereby ease the supply problem. The island ofWalcheren was strongly held by German forces and commanded the estuary of theMeuse which flows through Antwerp. Operations byII Canadian Corps cleared the approaches to Antwerp both north and south of the water during theBattle of the Scheldt . Walcheren itelf was captured in late 1944 by the last major amphibious assault in Europe in the Second World War. A combination of Canadian forces andRoyal Marines undertook the operation.Battle of the Bulge
After the capture of Walcheren came the last great German offensive of the war. In a repeat of their 1940 attack, German formations smashed through weak Allied lines in the
Ardennes in Belgium.The
Battle of the Bulge presented a command problem to General Eisenhower. It had sliced through US lines, leaving some American formations north and south of the new German salient. However, the headquarters of U.S. 12th Army Group lay to the south, and so Eisenhower decided to place American forces north of the "Bulge" salient were placed under 21st Army Group. They, with the American 3rd Army under GeneralGeorge S. Patton , reduced the salient.After the battle, control of the U.S. 1st Army which had been placed under Field Marshall Montgomery's temporary command was returned to Bradley's 12th Army Group. The U.S. 9th Army remained under Montgomery longer, before being returned to American command in Germany.
Battle for the Roer Triangle
Prior to the Rhineland Campaign the enemy had to be cleared from the Roer Triangle during
Operation Blackcock . This large methodical mopping up operation took place between 14 and 27 January 1945. It was not planned to make any deep thrust into the enemy defences or capture large numbers of prisoners. It proceeded from stage to stage almost entirely as planned and was completed with minimal casualties.Rhineland Campaign
Allied forces closed up to the Rhine by March 1945. Twenty-First Army Group at this time comprised the British Second Army under General Miles C Dempsey, the Canadian 1st Army under General
Harry Crerar and the US Ninth Army, under General William Simpson.The 1st Canadian Army had executed
Operation Veritable in difficult conditions fromNijmegen eastwards through the Reichswald Forest then southwards. This was to have been the northern part of a pincer movement with the US Ninth Army moving northwards towardsDüsseldorf andKrefeld (Operation Grenade ), to clear the west bank of the Rhine north ofCologne . The Americans were delayed by two weeks when the Germans destroyed the Roer dams and flooded the American route of advance. As a result the Canadians engaged and mauled, the German reserves intended to defend the Cologne Plain.In
Operation Plunder , starting on13 March 1945 , the British 2nd Army and the US 9th Army crossed the Rhine at various places north of the Ruhr and German resistance in the west quickly crumbled. The 1st Canadian Army wheeled left and liberated northern Holland, theBritish 2nd Army occupied much of north-west Germany and liberatedDenmark and the US 9th Army formed the northern arm of the envelopment of German forces in theRuhr Pocket and on4 April reverted to Bradley's 12th Army Group.British Army of the Rhine
After the German surrender, 21st Army Group was converted into the headquarters for the British zone of occupation in Germany. It was renamed the
British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) on25 August 1945 and eventually formed the nucleus of the British forces stationed in Germany throughout theCold War .Order of battle
The main constituent formations of 21st Army Group were the 1st Canadian Army and the British 2nd Army. In practice, neither of the two armies were homogeneously British or Canadian. Also included were Polish units, from Normandy onwards and small Dutch, Belgian, and Czech units; American Army forces were attached from time to time. Lines of communications units were predominantly British.
Attached U.S. units
American army units were placed under British command at various times. For political and personal rivalry reasons, these were never more than temporary. These arrangements occurred when
#theFirst Allied Airborne Army , including two U.S. airborne divisions (the 101st and 82nd), was deployed duringOperation Market Garden and subsequent holding actions;
#as a result of the disruption to the command chains during theBattle of the Bulge (the U.S. First and Ninth Armies);
#as reinforcement for the drive to the Rhine (Operations Veritable and Grenade) (U.S. Ninth Army ) and the subsequent Rhine crossings (Operations Plunder and Varsity) (U.S. Ninth Army and U.S. XVIII Airborne Corps;
#to allow an efficient command structure during the Geilenkirchen salient (84th Infantry Division).Notes
References
* "Defeat in the West"; Milton Shulman, first published 1947
* "The Struggle for Europe"; Chester Wilmot
* [http://www.canadiansoldiers.com/mediawiki-1.5.5/index.php?title=21st_Army_Group canadiansoldiers.com page, including uniform insignia images]
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