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  2. George S. Patton's speech to the Third Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_S._Patton's_speech...

    Patton's words were later written down by a number of troops who witnessed his remarks, and so a number of iterations exist with differences in wording. [21] Historian Terry Brighton constructed a full speech from a number of soldiers who recounted the speech in their memoirs, including Gilbert R. Cook, Hobart R. Gay, and other junior soldiers ...

  3. George S. Patton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_S._Patton

    George Smith Patton Jr. (11 November 1885 – 21 December 1945) was a general in the United States Army who commanded the Seventh Army in the Mediterranean Theater of World War II, then the Third Army in France and Germany after the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944.

  4. Siegfried Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siegfried_Line

    The Siegfried Line, known in German as the Westwall (= western bulwark), was a German defensive line built during the late 1930s. Started in 1936, opposite the French Maginot Line, it stretched more than 630 km (390 mi) from Kleve on the border with the Netherlands, along the western border of Nazi Germany, to the town of Weil am Rhein on the border with Switzerland.

  5. Siegfried Line campaign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siegfried_Line_campaign

    The Siegfried Line campaign was a phase in the Western European campaign of World War II, which involved engagments near the German defensive Siegfried Line.. This campaign spanned from the end of Operation Overlord and the push across northern France, which ended on 15 September 1944, and concluded with the opening of the German Ardennes counteroffensive, better known as the Battle of the Bulge.

  6. Hindenburg Line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindenburg_Line

    Fields of barbed wire up to 100 yd (91 m) deep, were fixed with screw pickets in three belts 10–15 yd (9.1–13.7 m) wide and 5 yd (4.6 m) apart, in a zig-zag so that machine-guns could sweep the sides, placed in front of the trench system. Artillery observation posts and machine-gun nests were built in front of and behind the trench lines.

  7. Military victories against the odds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_victories_against...

    The English adopted a defensive stance, erecting wooden fortifications and raining down arrows on the advancing French army. When the English archers ran out of arrows, they dropped their bows and using hatchets, swords, and the mallets they had used to drive their wooden stakes in, counterattacked the now shaken, fatigued, and wounded French ...

  8. Flexible defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flexible_defense

    A section of the Mannerheim Line. The flexible defense is a military theory about the design of modern fortifications.The examples of "flexible" defense-lines (Mannerheim Line, Árpád Line, Bar Lev Line) are not based on dense lines of heavily armed, large and expensive concrete fortifications as the systems such as the Maginot Line were.

  9. File:George Patton - Letter to Springfield Armory, 26 Jan ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:George_Patton...

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