RARE! WWII Pattons U.S. Third Army Hand-Drawn Operation Cobra "Breakout of Normandy" Situation Map
RARE! WWII Pattons U.S. Third Army Hand-Drawn Operation Cobra "Breakout of Normandy" Situation Map
Comes with a hand-signed C.O.A.
This extremely rare and museum-grade original WWII Pattons U.S. Third Army situation map is hand-drawn and shows a clear and simplified strategic view of the U.S. Third Army’s movements as of August 31st, 1944. Situation maps like this were created using TOP SECRET and SECRET intelligence reports and front-line communications updates as the Allied forces pushed through France from the D-Day Normandy Beaches on June 6th, 1944. This situation was used by high-ranking officers of the U.S. Third Army and was used to make future strategic decisions during operations against Germans in France in 1944. Simplistic maps like this were hand-drawn to comprise more simplistic movement diagrams to see a more accurate picture of Division locations and movements on the front lines.
This situation map was preserved very well and remains in pristine condition given its age. This map shows Operation Cobra and Patton’s Breakout of Normandy. By July 25, with most of the German tanks drawn westward by the British Goodwood offensive, the Americans faced a front almost denuded of armour. Reinforcement gave them a clear superiority in tank and infantry divisions, while the Allied Expeditionary Force had the bombardment power to devastate the Germans in their path. Operation Cobra, scheduled for July 25, opened with a devastating air attack (some of which fell on the waiting GIs). Through the gap thus opened, the U.S. First Army sped toward Avranches, taken on July 30. At this point George S. Patton’s newly formed Third Army joined in the advance. A massive American spearhead now threatened to drive into Brittany and, by a left turn, to encircle the Germans in Normandy from the rear.
With St Lô finally in American hands and access to the road network now opened up to a successful attack, the American front line ran in a roughly straight line from Caumont in the east, which had been captured in the first week of June, through St Lô up to Periers on the Atlantic coast in the north west. General Bradley the commander of the US First Army knew that General Patton's Third Army was assembling in Normandy behind the lines, ready to be unleashed when given the opportunity. Bradley was determined to do his best to give Patton that chance if he could. The Allies knew that the German situation was becoming precarious as the German leader issued more and more unrealistic orders to units that had, without fresh reinforcements, almost ceased to exist. Bradley thought that there finally was a chance that with one hard push the German front may well collapse and determined to find out if he was right.
He decided to borrow an idea from the British that had been used in their assaults around Caen, namely heavy bombing of the enemy front line to be attacked, and chose the front line facing south across the Periers-St Lô road. Heavy bombing close to friendly lines was a very risky venture in 1944. The bombers needed 6,000 yards of clear space around their targets to allow for 'errors in bombing accuracy' and the myth that the airmen could 'drop a bomb in a pickle-barrel from ten thousand feet' had been proved to be just that- a myth. The heavy strategic bombers missed. A lot. Bradley decided to risk it and issued orders to the airmen to avoid this eventuality, countering the possibility of friendly casualties against the effect that 2,000 aeroplanes dropping 3,300 tons of bombs would have on the Germans. In order to successfully exploit the effects of the bombing it was necessary to follow up as rapidly as possible as soon as the last plane had gone and so Bradley only proposed pulled his front line troops back a little over one thousand yards from the German front lines.
The attack was initially set for the 18th of July, but was postponed several times. On July 24th the attack was set to go, but cancelled at the last moment. Some of the bombers, already en route to Normandy, did not receive the call-back sign and went on to the target. The fear of friendly casualties was borne out when several members of the 30th US Infantry Division were killed. The attack was re-scheduled for the following day. On the morning of the 25th of July the attack finally went in but friendly fire again resulted from bombing errors, this time causing more than 500 casualties with over 100 killed. But the bombing had indeed incapacitated the German Lehr Division in defense, destroying communications, upturning tanks, burying anti-tank guns, killing or wounding the defending German soldiers and in a lot of cases causing them to go mad craters from terror. However, as they American forces started to advance they found the ground impassable even to the Armoured vehicles. The bombing had cratered the ground so badly that a lot of tanks fell into craters and were unable to get out. The road was also completely destroyed and the engineers got to work repairing them as quickly as possible.
By the evening of July 25th, the American forces had advanced only two and a half miles (4km) from their start line, but the following day as they advanced south out of the zone of devastation caused by their bombers the American forces found the going easier. They realized that the Germans had not moved in reinforcements to oppose them since the previous day and managed to push on another five miles (7km) against light German resistance. By the morning of the 27th of July the full weight of three divisions of the US army VII Corps was being applied and the German front line disintegrated before the attacking US soldiers. On the 28th an advance of twelve miles (20km) by the 4th Armoured Division allowed them to capture Coutances under Patton's 'guidance' and the US forces pushed south to Pontaubault where they would finally be free of Normandy's claustrophobic Hedgerow countryside. They captured Avranches on the 30th of July and the following day as his Divisions pushed across the Pontaubault bridge into Brittany Patton's Third Army was officially activated. He turned his Divisions east, west and south behind the German lines and went looking for trouble
You will be driven out of St Lô along the road to Periers, the same road that was the front line between the American and German forces on the morning of July 25th 1944. You will see the German and American front line positions and the bombing zone for the US Air force and then follow the route taken by the 4th Armoured Division as they pushed towards Coutances. In Coutances you will see the monument to the American Liberators of the town and hear the stories of the Germans being surprised at their dinner by the American forces. Then you will be driven out along the road to Avranches, the key town for the US forces breaking out of Normandy and see the Huge Memorial to Patton's Third Army in the town centre and finally on to the railway bridge at Pontaubault over which 70,000 US troops in less than 3 days at the start of August 1944