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6th AIRBORNE DIVISION
'PEGASUS'

6st Airborne Division
(In the Second World War)

The British 6th Airborne Division is established in May 1943, under the command of Major-General R.N. ‘Windy’ Gale. It consists of the 3rd Parachute Brigade (the British use ‘brigade’ instead of the American term, ‘regiment’), the 5th Parachute Brigade and the Air-landing Brigade. The 22nd Independent Parachute Company (pathfinders), 6th Airborne Armoured Recc. Regiment (light tanks), the 53rd Air-landing Light Regiment Royal Artillery (75mm cannons), three anti-tank and anti-aircraft battery’s and Royal Engineers. are also added to this division.

6 JUNE 1944, D-DAY

While the American airborne divisions cover the western sector, the peninsula Cotentin, the British 6th Airborne Division is designated to take the eastern sector and protect the flanks in that area of Normandy. The first paratroopers to land, east of the river Orne, are ordered to clear secure the LZ for the gliders. They have to clear the fields from obstacles like the, so called, ‘Rommels Asparagus’, long stakes that are put up by the Germans to hinder the gliders. The task is split between the 3rd en 5th Parachute Brigade.

'What time is it?’ The watches are synchronised.

The 3rd Airborne Brigade Group falls under the command of Brigadier James Hill and consist of the units, the 8th, 9th Parachute Battalions and the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion. There specific orders are:

  • Capture the Merville Battery one and a half hour before the main force arrives.
  • Destroy a couple of bridges near Varaville, Robehomme, Bures and Troarn over the river Dives, to prevent that the Germans can bring in reinforcements from the east.

    The 5th Parachute Brigade Group, under command of Brigadier J.H.N.Poett, consists of the 7th, 12th en 13th Parachute Battalions and D.Company of the Oxfordshire and Bukinghamshire Light Infantry. These troops have the following targets:

  • Capture the bridges over the river Orne and the Caen canal. This commando unit will be flown in by 6 Horsa gliders.
  • After the capture of the bridges the area is to be cleared from obstacles that may hinder the main force. But the most important order is: 'Hold, unto relieved'

    The first group that lands in the night of 5 and 6 June are Pathfinders 22nd Independent Parachute Company. There task is to mark the DZ and LZ for the main force. The first British allied liberator to land that night is Lieutenant de Latour. On 20 June this officer, then Captain, is killed. His grave is located at the CWGC (Commonwealth War Grave Cemetery) at Ranville.

    At the same time as the Pathfinders land, six Horsa gliders, from the Oxs and Bucks, fly near their LZ, between the area of the river Orne and the Caen canal.

    The Pegasus Bridge in British hands, 6 June 1944

    Within 10 minutes the most famous of all bridges during the Normandy campaign is captured and in firm hands by the 6th Airborne Division. After the insignia of the division, the flying horse from the Greek mythology, the bridge adopts its name, and is now known as 'Pegasus'. (Not exactly properly. As codename, the bridge was to be called after the capture, ‘HAM and for the bridge over the river Orne ‘JAM’. The bridge ‘JAM’ lies a couple of hundred meters eastwards and is now called ‘Horsa’.)

    On the west shore of the Caen canal stands a tank near Pegasus Bridge. This Centaur version of the A27M Cromwell tank was used by the Royal Marine Commandos. The tank landed near Bręche d'Hermanville and put out of action shortly afterwards. In 1975 the tank was salvaged, restored and placed alongside the bridge.

    The Cromwell near Pegasus Bridge (In the background the old bridge)

    Near Merville all hell broke loos between the 9th Para Battalion and the defending Germans. With only 150 men, Lieutenant-Colonel Otway manages to overrun the battery. Seventy officers and lower ranks got killed or were wounded. They only took 22 Germans prison, the other defenders were killed.

    Battery of Merville, today it is silent

    When the first gliders arrived with the main force, it turned out that some beacons were wrongly placed. Gliders that should have landed in DZ ‘K’, south of Escoville, landed in DZ ‘N’, north of Ranville. The 8th Parachute Battalion is divided in two. Major J.C.A.Roseveare Royal Egineers, commander of the 3rd Para Sqn RE, on DZ ’N’ discovers the mistake and collects about forty engineers and thirty paratroopers. With six small lorries and a jeep they head for the bridges of Bures and Troarn. On the crossing D37 with the D37B they leave the paratroopers behind to put up a defence. A couple of engineers are sent to the bridges of Bures to destroy them (both are blown at 09.00 hours in the morning of the 6th). Major Rosevaere continues in the jeep with another officer and seven engineers the D37 to Troarn. Behind the jeep hangs a little trailer filled with explosives. At the (old) crossing with N875 the jeep runs into a roadblock and gets entangled n the barbed wire. The German guard fires a shot but than makes a run for it. After 20 minutes the men manage to on untangle their jeep from the wire. On the N175 they shoot a German soldier from his bike. When the small party drives into Troarn,…‘the fun started’ say’s Roseveare. They seem to be fired upon from every window and door. The engineers fire in return, one from the trailer uses a Bren machinegun to hose the streets. On the N175 to Samson they find the bridge across the river Dives. They place the explosives and five minutes later the blast creates a hole of 20 feet in the bridge, it is 05.00 hours. The men ditch the jeep and they head on foot for Mesnil. Here they arrive at 13.00 hours.

    A jeep with a 20mm cannon are unloaded from a Horsa

    At the end of the 6th of June, 4.800 paratroopers are brought in. Due to the wrongly placed beacons and the bad weather only 3000 men reach their objectives. The losses run high. From the 196 men of the Glider Pilot Regiment alone, 71 men perish that day. But the men retain their thin line of defence. When at last the breakthrough in August starts around Caen and the Second Army into Normandy flows, the 6th Airborne Division goes from the defensive in the offensive. Early September 1944, the 6th Airborne is pulled back and brought back to England. They lost 4457 men during the constant battle since their landing in June.

    'Battle of the Bulge' & 'Operation Varsity'

    When on 16 December 1944 the Germans start their offensive against the American 12th Army Group it is decided to bring in the 6th Airborne Division. Four days later the men arrive in Belgium. The plan is to take position in the north of the Ardennes. But when they reach their positions, on 26 December, the attack from the Germans has stopped. They pursue the fleeing Germans and this brings them into Germany and they capture Bure. Early February 1945, the 6th is once again pulled back via Holland and brought back to England. Here they are brought back to strength and made ready for a airborne operation

    During ‘Operation Varsity’, spring 1945, the 6th Airborne Division jumps together with the American 17th Airborne Division across the river Rhine to establish a bridgehead for the attacking allied land-forces. The 3rd Parachute Brigade fights on the left flank and secures the area against German counter attacks.

    The official website '6th Airborne Division'

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