Nonfiction
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Made available through hoopla
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1 online resource (177 pages)
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Early morning, 19 March 1944. Tanks manned by New Zealanders, Indians and Americans launch a daring attack along a narrow mountain track on German positions north of Monte Cassino. So began, one of the most audacious Allied attempts to break through the Gustav Line and advance on Rome, and it almost succeeded. Yet the extraordinary story has, seldom been, told, and it has never been, told before in the vivid detail Jeffrey Plowman brings to this new account. Using operational orders, combat reports, unit diaries, post-battle photos from private and public archives and the graphic personal accounts of those who took part, he describes the construction of Cavendish Road and the course of the entire operation that followed. The planning for the attack and the men involved are described in a gripping and clear-sighted way, as is the attack itself, its initial rapid success and its ultimate failure. Eighty-years later, Jeffrey Plowman, reveals exactly what happened and shows how and why this bold thrust against the German strongpoints at Monte Cassino, which could have turned the course of the battle, ended in retreat
Mode of access: World Wide Web