Wednesday, August 11, 2010

This day in History #1

Yay! My new favorite day of the week! Wednesday! That's right kids, it's the first this day in history day and this one comes from The History Channel.

Let's go with some World War II history to kick this first segment off:
"On this day in 1943, German forces begin a six-day evacuation of the Italian island of Sicily, having been beaten back by the Allies, who invaded the island in July.

The Germans had maintained a presence in Sicily since the earliest days of the war. But with the arrival of Gen. George S. Patton and his 7th Army and Gen. Bernard Montgomery and his 8th Army, the Germans could no longer hold their position. The race began for the Strait of Messina, the 2-mile wide body of water that separated Sicily from the Italian mainland. The Germans needed to get out of Sicily and onto the Italian peninsula. While Patton had already reached his goal, Palermo, the Sicilian capital, on July 22 (to a hero's welcome, as the Sicilian people were more than happy to see an end to fascist rule), Montgomery, determined to head off the Germans at Messina, didn't make his goal in time. The German 29th Panzergrenadier Division and the 14th Panzer Corps were brought over from Africa for the sole purpose of slowing the Allies' progress and allowing the bulk of the German forces to get off the island. The delaying tactic succeeded. Despite the heavy bombing of railways leading to Messina, the Germans made it to the strait on August 11.

Over six days and seven nights, the Germans led 39,569 soldiers, 47 tanks, 94 heavy guns, 9,605 vehicles, and more than 2,000 tons of ammunition onto the Italian mainland. (Not to mention the 60,000 Italian soldiers who were also evacuated, in order to elude capture by the Allies.) Although the United States and Britain had succeeded in conquering Sicily, the Germans were now reinforced and heavily supplied, making the race for Rome more problematic." (History's This Day in History. history.com)

For additional history bloggage check out:
Cardinal Wolsey's Today in History which is all about "CARDINAL WOLSEY'S MUSINGS ON TUDOR HISTORY, MEDIEVAL HISTORY, EARLY-MODERN HISTORY AND ANYTHING ELSE THAT TAKES HIS FANCY".

I hope you enjoy today's reads. When topics that really strike home to me come around I will be able to write from a more knowledgeable stand point on the topic. I promise. :)

Olivia <3

2 comments:

  1. Cheers for the link..good luck with the blog. CW

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  2. Thank you! I'm working as hard as I can on it what with being at university now. :)

    ReplyDelete