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By the end of D-Day, the Allies had achieved their main
goal of carving out a beachhead along the Normandy coast. They were
then to move inland, with the Canadians and the British pushing south
towards Caen. Once again, however, Caen was not to be an easy prize.
From 7 to 12 June, the 3rd Canadian Division would encounter well-led
and effective German troops, including an SS Panzer Division.
On 7 June 1944, the Allied command assigned the North
Nova Scotia Highlanders of the 9th Brigade, with the tanks of the Sherbrooke
Fusiliers in support, the responsibility of conquering the towns of
Buron and Authie, near Caen. There the Canadians confronted the 12th
SS Panzer Division, comprised of Hitlerjugend (teenage Hitler Youth
troops) and a Panzer-Grenadier regiment led by Kurt "Panzer"
Meyer, a skilled, veteran commander from the Eastern Front.
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Copyright Canadian War Museum (CN 12485).
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Engineers Clearing Roads
Through Caen, by Captain Orville Norman Fisher.
The Corps of Royal Canadian Engineers
clear a path through the rubble and debris of Caen, France. Allied
bombs had leveled many of the structures before the Canadians
entered the town.
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National Archives of Canada (PA-131405, photo
by Ken Bell).
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Private J. Thomas, Caen, France,
10 July 1944.
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The green Canadians were no match for the well-led and
equipped Germans, troops that had been battle hardened by four years
of war. Kurt Meyer's soldiers took many Canadian prisoners. On the evening
of 7 June, Meyer ordered that some of the prisoners be executed. In
all, the Germans murdered 23 Canadians, most of whom were North Novas
and Fusiliers. "I saw seven men from C Company [of the North Nova
Scotia Highlanders]," recollected one soldier, "...just sitting
there... Then I heard firing and saw some of the boys tipping over towards
the road and a couple tipped over backwards. I could see the guards
standing on the road firing at them..."
Meyer was later found guilty of war crimes by a Canadian
court martial and sentenced to death. The reviewing officer, General
Chris Vokes, would ultimately commute Meyer's death sentence to life
imprisonment. He judged that Meyer's role was vicarious rather than
direct, but he admitted in his memoirs that the decision was also in
part due to the recognition that Canadian soldiers had murdered German
prisoners in reprisal.
By 12 June, the Canadian Division had been so battered
by intense fighting that it had to be removed from battle for two weeks
to recover. In six days of fighting, the Canadians suffered 2,831 casualties.
The Allies, however, had managed to extend their beachhead to a point
several kilometres inland.
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National Archives of Canada (PA-130175, photo
by Harold G. Aikman).
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Chaplains, Working with R.A.P.,
Evacuate Wounded of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division, Caen,
France, 15 July 1944.
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Soon back in action, the Canadians renewed their efforts
in the Caen sector. Initially, they attacked the SS (Schutzstaffeln,
an elite German unit that had its origins as Hitler's personal bodyguards)
at Carpiquet, a town located just outside of Caen. When the assault
at Carpiquet failed, they attempted to raid Caen itself. Again, however,
German defenders repelled the Canadians' attacks. Yet, only a month
later, they were able to achieve the objective they had been pursuing
since D-Day. On 8 July, the 3rd Division captured Buron and Authie.
The following day, it moved into Caen. Fighting slowly and cautiously
through the rubble-strewn streets, the Canadians were finally able to
take the city. They were able to do so despite the fact that the Germans
had deployed seven of their eight Panzer divisions in the Caen sector.
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National Archives of Canada (PA-162740, photo
by Micheal M. Dean).
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Ambulance Delivers Wounded
Soldier, Caen, France, 8 July 1944.
Members of the 14th Light Field
Ambulance unit aid a casualty from Le Régiment de la Chaudière.
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As the troops of the 3rd Canadian Division were fighting
through Caen, the 2nd Division was moving through the beachhead to take
its place at the front. Headquarters 2nd Canadian Corps took control
of both divisions on the 11th of July.
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