In Dunkirk: Fight to the Last Man, we are given an unprecedented vision of these harrowing days. Hugh Sebag-Montefiore has described how the group of men who were left behind fended off the German army so that hundreds of thousands of their comrades could exit this doomed land. He makes clear that without these brave troops from the British Expeditionary Force and the French Army who held a series of strong points inland and fought to the last man, the other battered battalions could not have escaped to the coast...
IN MAY OF 1940, the armies of Nazi Germany were marching through France. In the face of this devastating advance, one of World War Irs greatest acts of heroism would be a retreat: the evacuation of the British Army from Dunkirk.
In Dunkirk: Fight to the Last Man, we are given an unprecedented vision of these harrowing days. Hugh Sebag-Montefiore has described how the group of men who were left behind fended off the German army so that hundreds of thousands of their comrades could exit this doomed land. He makes clear that without these brave troops from the British Expeditionary Force and the French Army who held a series of strong points inland and fought to the last man, the other battered battalions could not have escaped to the coast.
Much has been written about how the Royal Navy, helped by an armada of little ships, shuttled the entire British Army to safety. Here, however, we are given an unparalleled look inside this massive operation and the invaluable role played by the BEE Without the ferocity and bravery of the officers and ordinary soldiers on the ground,the German Army would likely have encircled nearly half a million Allied soldiers.Thisis an aspect of the story that has been overlooked by previous accounts. The loss of these battalions, Sebag-Monteflore argues,could have dramatically changed the direction of the war, and enabled Hitler to invade a weakened Britain.
Dunkirk: Fight to the Last Man offers a judicious analysis of the movement of the war, and a vivid feel of what it was like to be on the front line. Using new material from British, French, Belgian, German, Russian, and Czech Republic archives, and interviews with the last surviving witnesses of the campaigns,Sebag-Montefiore brings these men--the forgotten heroes of Dunkirk--to life. It is their valiant exploits and devotion to their brethren that form the heart of this ground breaking book.
Hugh Sebag-Monteflore was a former attorney and journalist and is now a full-time author. His last book was Enigma:The Battle for the Code. Two of his ancestors were rescued from Dunkirk.
List of Illustrations
List of Maps
Introduction
Note to Readers
Moment of Truth
The BEF Arrives in France
The Mechelen Affair
The Final Warning
The Matador's Cloak
Charging Bull
Into Battle
Over the River Meuse
Flight
Battle of the Bulge
Lambs to the Slaughter
The Arras Counter-Attack
We Stand and Fight
Escape from Arras
Boulogne and the Useless Mouths
Evacuation of Boulogne
Calais and the French Complaint
Calais - Fight to the Finish
Lucky Breaks
Siege at Cassel
Surrounded at Le Paradis
Massacre at Le Paradis
Manhunt
Crisis in the North
Up the Glosters
Massacre at Wormhout
Escape to Dunkirk
The Dunkirk Armada
Beached
Entente Cordiale
Evacuation
Rearguard
Mission Accomplished
Payback
Sacrifice of the 5Ist Highland Division
The Sinking of the Lancastria
Epilogue
Maps
Appendices
Dramatis Personae
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography and Sources
Acknowledgements
Index