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►Boer
War
►First
World War
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Front
►►►Trench
Warfare: 1914-1916
►►►Allied
Offensive: 1916
►►►Allied
Offensives: 1917
►►►German
Offensive: 1918
►►►Advance
to Victory: 1918
►►Siberia
►Second
World War
►►War
Against Japan
►►North
Africa
►►Italian
Campaign
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Italy
►►►The
Sangro and Moro
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of the FSSF
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►►►Liri
Valley
►►►Advance
to Florence
►►►Gothic
Line
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Lines
►►North-West
Europe
►►►Normandy
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France
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Ports
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Salient
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Phase
►Korean
War
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War
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War |
Operations |
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Battle Honours |
Boer War
First World War
Western Front
Trench Warfare: 1914-1916
Allied Offensive: 1916
►Somme, 1916 |
1
Jul-18 Nov 16 |
►Albert |
.1-13
Jul 16 |
►Bazentin |
.14-17
Jul 16 |
►Pozieres |
.23
Jul-3 Sep 16 |
►Guillemont |
.3-6
Sep 16 |
►Ginchy |
.9
Sep 16 |
►Flers-Courcelette |
15-22
Sep 16 |
►Thiepval |
26-29
Sep 16 |
►Le Transloy |
.
1-18 Oct 16 |
Allied
Offensives: 1917
►Arras 1917 |
8
Apr-4 May 17 |
►Vimy, 1917 |
.9-14
Apr 17 |
►Arleux |
28-29 Apr 17 |
►Scarpe, 1917 |
.3-4
May17 |
►Hill 70 |
.15-25
Aug 17 |
►Messines, 1917 |
.7-14
Jun 17 |
►Ypres, 1917 |
..31
Jul-10 Nov 17 |
►Pilckem |
31
Jul-2 Aug 17 |
►Langemarck, 1917 |
.16-18
Aug 17 |
►Menin Road |
.20-25
Sep 17 |
►Polygon Wood |
26
Sep-3 Oct 17 |
►Broodseinde |
.4
Oct 17 |
►Poelcapelle |
.9
Oct 17 |
►Passchendaele |
.12
Oct 17 |
►Cambrai, 1917 |
20
Nov-3 Dec 17 |
German Offensive: 1918
►Somme, 1918 |
.21
Mar-5 Apr 18 |
►St. Quentin |
.21-23
Mar 18 |
►Bapaume, 1918 |
.24-25
Mar 18 |
►Rosieres |
.26-27
Mar 18 |
►Avre |
.4
Apr 18 |
►Lys |
.9-29
Apr 18 |
►Estaires |
.9-11
Apr 18 |
►Messines, 1918 |
.10-11
Apr 18 |
►Bailleul |
.13-15
Apr 18 |
►Kemmel |
.17-19
Apr 18 |
Advance to Victory: 1918
►Arras, 1918 |
.26
Aug-3 Sep 18 |
►Scarpe, 1918 |
26-30 Aug 18. |
►Drocourt-Queant |
.2-3
Sep 18 |
►Hindenburg Line |
.12
Sep-9 Oct 18 |
►Canal du Nord |
.27
Sep-2 Oct 18 |
►St. Quentin Canal |
.29
Sep-2 Oct 18 |
►Epehy |
3-5
Oct 18 |
►Cambrai, 1918 |
.8-9
Oct 18 |
►Valenciennes |
.1-2
Nov 18 |
►Sambre |
.4
Nov 18 |
►Pursuit to Mons |
.28 Sep-11Nov |
Second World War
War Against Japan
South-East Asia
Italian Campaign
Battle of Sicily
Southern
Italy
The Sangro and Moro
Battles of the FSSF
►Anzio |
22
Jan-22 May 44 |
►Rome |
.22
May-4 Jun 44 |
►Advance
|
.22
May-22 Jun 44 |
to the Tiber |
. |
►Monte Arrestino |
25
May 44 |
►Rocca Massima |
27
May 44 |
►Colle Ferro |
2
Jun 44 |
Cassino
►Cassino II |
11-18
May 44 |
►Gustav Line |
11-18
May 44 |
►Sant' Angelo in
|
13
May 44 |
Teodice |
. |
►Pignataro |
14-15 May 44 |
Liri Valley
►Hitler Line |
18-24 May 44 |
►Melfa Crossing |
24-25 May 44 |
►Torrice Crossroads |
30
May 44 |
Advance to Florence
Gothic Line
►Gothic Line |
25 Aug-22 Sep 44 |
►Monteciccardo |
27-28 Aug 44 |
►Point 204 (Pozzo Alto) |
31 Aug 44 |
►Borgo Santa Maria |
1 Sep 44 |
►Tomba di Pesaro |
1-2 Sep 44 |
Winter Lines
►Rimini Line |
14-21 Sep 44 |
►San Martino- |
14-18 Sep 44 |
San Lorenzo |
. |
►San Fortunato |
18-20 Sep 44 |
►Sant' Angelo |
11-15 Sep 44 |
in Salute |
. |
►Bulgaria Village |
13-14 Sep 44 |
►Pisciatello |
16-19 Sep 44 |
►Savio Bridgehead |
20-23
Sep 44 |
►Monte La Pieve |
13-19
Oct 44 |
►Monte Spaduro |
19-24 Oct 44 |
►Monte San Bartolo |
11-14
Nov 44 |
►Lamone Crossing |
2-13
Dec 44 |
►Capture of Ravenna |
3-4
Dec 44 |
►Naviglio Canal |
12-15 Dec 44 |
►Fosso Vecchio |
16-18 Dec 44 |
►Fosso Munio |
19-21 Dec 44 |
►Conventello- |
2-6 Jan 45 |
Comacchio |
. |
Northwest Europe
Battle of Normandy
►Quesnay Road |
10-11 Aug 44 |
►St. Lambert-sur- |
19-22 Aug 44 |
Southern France
Channel Ports
The Scheldt
Nijmegen Salient
Rhineland
►The
Reichswald |
8-13 Feb 45 |
►Waal
Flats |
8-15 Feb 45 |
►Moyland
Wood |
14-21 Feb 45 |
►Goch-Calcar
Road |
19-21 Feb 45 |
►The
Hochwald |
26
Feb- |
. |
4
Mar 45 |
►Veen |
6-10 Mar 45 |
►Xanten |
8-9
Mar 45 |
Final Phase
►The
Rhine |
23
Mar-1 Apr 45 |
►Emmerich-Hoch
|
28
Mar-1 Apr 45 |
Elten |
. |
Korean War
|
Domestic Missions |
►FLQ
Crisis |
International
Missions |
►ICCS
Vietnam 1973
►MFO
Sinai 1986- |
Peacekeeping |
►UNTEA |
W. N. Guinea 1963-1964 |
►ONUCA |
C. America
1989-1992 |
►UNTAC |
Cambodia
1992-1993 |
►UNMOP |
Prevlaka
1996-2001 |
|
Exercises |
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Boulogne, 1944
Boulogne, 1944
was a Battle Honour granted to Canadian units participating in the
action to take this city during the operations to clear the Channel
Ports.
Background
After the breakout
from Normandy, Allied strategic priorities became a matter of
debate, largely between General Eisenhower, commanding Supreme
Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Forces, and his subordinate
commanders in the field. Eisenhower favoured a "broad front" policy
while many of his subordinate army group and army commanders had pet
plans for "single thrust" operations. Field Marshal Montgomery,
commanding 21st Army Group, to whom 1st Canadian Army belonged, was
certainly among the group of those who favoured a single thrust
approach. In September 1944, as the British 2nd Army advanced into
Belgium, Montgomery was able to convince SHAEF of the feasibility of
a major airborne operation over the Rhine River, aimed at securing a
bridgehead into Germany and the industrial areas of the Ruhr.
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To assist in this
single thrust, the Canadian Army was required to secure a major port
along the Channel coast. Le Havre and Rouen, in Allied hands, had
been allocated to the Americans. Boulogne was earmarked for capture
by the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division, the 1st British Corps, 1st
Polish Armoured Division and 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade all used
to reinforce the drive on Antwerp to the north.1
The 3rd Division lacked naval gunfire support but did have help from two
14-inch and two 15-inch British guns firing from across the English
Channel from Dover; these guns shelled coastal positions in the
Calais-Cap Gris Nez area, preventing massive 16-inch German guns up
the coast from Bolougne in disrupting the Canadian attack. The commander of
German defences in Boulogne commented after the battle that he knew
"when the attack did come it would be thoroughly prepared to the
last weapon, and that the Canadians would attempt to take the port
with as few casualties as possible."2
Concerns
by both the Canadians and Germans for the civil population led to a
mutual evacuation of 8000 residents from the city. Massive artillery and
heavy aerial bombardment (on 17 September alone, nearly 800 aircraft
dropped 3200 tons of explosives), the majority of German defensive
installations remained intact, and it took infantry and tanks six days
to secure the fortified port. Canadian losses included 634 killed,
wounded and missing, with some 9,500 Germans being taken prisoner.
The port facilities, so desperately needed to ease Allied logistical
concerns (with armies streaming towards the German border, their
supplies were still being drawn through the Normandy beachhead), had
been heavily damaged and were useless as long as German batteries at Cap
Gris Nez and Calais - equally formidable - remained in operation.
The 3rd Canadian Infantry Division therefore moved to attack Calais
next.

Private F.J. Coakley of The
North Shore Regiment sitting on a captured German coastal
artillery gun, Boulogne, France, 21 September 1944.
Battle Honours
The following Canadian units were awarded the Battle Honour "Boulogne,
1944"
for participation in these actions:
79th British Armoured Division
2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade
3rd Canadian Division
8th Canadian Infantry Brigade
-
The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada
-
Le Régiment de la Chaudière
-
The North Shore (New Brunswick) Regiment
9th Canadian Infantry Brigade
-
The Highland Light Infantry of Canada
-
The Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders
-
The North Nova Scotia Highlanders
Notes
- Copp, Terry "Canadian Operational
Art: The Siege of Boulogne and Calais" Canadian Army Journal
Issue 9.1 Spring 2006
- McKay, A. Donald Gaudeamus
Igitur (Bunker to Bunker Books, Calgary, AB, 2005)
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