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  2. Ludendorff Bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludendorff_Bridge

    The Ludendorff Bridge (sometimes referred to as the Bridge at Remagen) was a bridge across the river Rhine in Germany which was captured by United States Army forces in early March 1945 during the Battle of Remagen, in the closing weeks of World War II, when it was one of the few remaining bridges in the region and therefore a critical strategic point.

  3. Battle of Remagen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Remagen

    By the time the bridge collapsed 10 days later, more than 25,000 Allied troops had crossed the Ludendorff Bridge and three tactical bridges in the area above and below Remagen had been built. By then the Remagen bridgehead was 8 miles (13 km) deep and 25 miles (40 km) wide, including 11 kilometers (6.8 mi) of the vital Ruhr-Frankfurt autobahn.

  4. Remagen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remagen

    A large number of books and articles in newspapers and magazines on the battle for the bridge have been published. The best-known work on the battle is 1957's The Bridge at Remagen by the American author Ken Hechler. [8] In 1968 David L. Wolper produced an American motion picture, The Bridge at Remagen. The film depicts historical events, but ...

  5. 9th Armored Division (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9th_Armored_Division...

    "Here, on the Ludendorf Bridge crossing the Rhine at Remagen, Combat Command B, 9th Armored Division -- headed by the 27th Armored Infantry Battalion -- with 'superb skill, daring and esprit de corps' successfully effected the first bridgehead across Germany's formidable river barrier and so contributed decisively to the defeat of the enemy.

  6. Operation Lumberjack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Lumberjack

    Remagen should have been considered a basis for termination of the war. Remagen created a dangerous and unpleasant abscess within the last German defenses, and it provided an ideal springboard for the coming offensive east of the Rhine. The Remagen bridgehead made the other crossing of the Rhine a much easier task for the enemy.

  7. Karl H. Timmermann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_H._Timmermann

    "The Remagen Bridgehead, a US Army Armor School Study 7–17 March 1945 (scanned copy)" Palm Rolf (1985). Die Brücke von Remagen: der Kampf um den letzten Rheinübergang: ein dramatisches Stück deutscher Zeitgeschichte (in German). Scherz. ISBN 978-3-502-16552-1. Dittmer Luther A (1995). Die Ludendorff Brücke zu Remagen am 7.

  8. Remagen: Bridgehead on the Rhine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remagen:_Bridgehead_on_the...

    Remagen: Bridgehead on the Rhine, March 1945 is a board wargame published by Simulations Publications Inc. (SPI) in 1976 that simulates the Battle of Remagen during World War II. The game was originally published as part of the Westwall: Four Battles to Germany "quadrigame" — a gamebox containing four games simulating four separate battles ...

  9. 291st Engineer Combat Battalion (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/291st_Engineer_Combat...

    Sign erected by the 291st declaring their bridge the first over the Rhine at Remagen Army footage showing March 10 construction and bombing near the Rhine treadway bridge (1 minute). View of Barrage balloons above Omaha Beach on June 24, 1944 as seen by the 291st after arriving from Southampton, England aboard a Landing Ship .