Friday, November 28, 2014

Croatian Christmas in Tintown?



In order to understand Christmas in Tintown for the Gurgon Family we must first explore the traditions of Christmas in Croatia.The family of Steve and Katherine would undoubtedly have celebrated some if not all of these traditions. Living in the best Catholic tradition Katherine who attended Mass often at SS Simon and Jude church in Blairsville, Pennsylvania would have passed on the native traditions to her children. Not only that but Katherine held onto her status as a Croatian not becoming a U.S. Citizen implying that she held a deep respect for her homeland, family culture, and customs.Which would likely have been passed down to her children. As Katherine's middle name is Barbara and it was traditional for Croatians to be named after a saint it is likely that the Gurgon family observed the tradition of St. Barbara's Day starting their holiday season. 

"In Croatia, Christmas is observed with much fervor. Since the ninth century, Christianity has been the dominant religion in the country. Like most Western nations, Christmas is celebrated here on 25th December but the preparations for the festival begin since the beginning of the Advent. Women of the house traditionally start baking cookies and cakes from this time.

The Wheat of Saint Barbara table setting.
But the festivities begin here in real earnestness on St. Barbara's Day (December 4), or St. Lucy's Day (December 13) when a very popular Christmas tradition is observed in the country. The mother or female head of every individual family plants wheat seeds in a round dish or plate of shallow water on this day. Normally these germinate by Christmas Eve (December 24th) growing about 8 inches tall, and that is when these are tied together with "trobojnica" (ribbons) of red, blue and white colour, colours of the Croatian flag. These are spread around the floors and under the tablecloth for the Christmas dinner. Sometimes a candle is lit and placed within the wheat along with other symbolic items. It is said that the light that is seen through the wheat is a symbol of the soul within every person. According to popular custom, a prosperous new year is predicted if the wheat grows strong and green by Christmas Eve.
It is also on Christmas Eve that the Christmas tree is set up and decorations made in every home though many families begin the process days in advance.
25th December is mainly seen as a day of holy observances in Croatia and hence, though gift-giving exists during Christmas it is not a too popular tradition in the country. But there are no dearth of gifts for Croatian children, who recieve their presents around the time of Christmas even though the occassions and reasons happen to be different. In the northern and central regions of Croatia, it is St. Nicholas who fills the boots of young children with gifts on December 6th (St. Nicholas Day). In southern and north eastern Croatia, it is St. Lucy who is being seen as the traditional bringer of presents. On December 24th, the Christmas Eve, Santa Claus and the baby Jesus are believed to be the visitors to many homes, leaving gifts for good kids.
Feasts are an important and highly anticipated aspect of the Croatian Christmas celebrations. Stuffed cabbage, sarma, Dalmatian pot roast, pasticada, walnut roll, badnji kruh (fresh bread), purica, smlincima and suckling pig form some of the main items of the Christmas menu in many Croatian homes. Christmas Eve dishes generally comprise of cuisines like "Bianco and biudetto" (cod fish), smelts and salted sardines while the Christmas dinner consists of such delicacies as stuffed cabbage, turkey, zagorje noodles and fig cake.
On Christmas Day, Croats wish each other 'Sretan Bozic' which is the Croatian way of saying "Merry Christmas".
The Christmas celebrations officially come to a close here on January 6 (Epiphany), when local priests visit the homes of the parishioners to give them their blessings. Christmas trees and decorations are taken down on the same day in almost every home." Read more at http://www.theholidayspot.com/christmas/worldxmas/croatia.htm#ddJrwIlr7u4048Hi.99

Traditional Costumed girls from Croatia
THE ELEVEN MEN OF CHRISTMAS
Young unwed ladies!
Girls are supposed to take twelve small pieces of paper. On eleven of them, the name of a local young man is to be written, while one paper is left untouched. A girl then picks the papers one by one, reads the name, and throws it in the fireplace. The last paper holds the name of her future husband, and the marriage will be arranged in the following year. If the last paper is empty, the girl will remain single.

We did not try this technique, but sources indicate it only works on St. Lucia’s Day. So if you take it seriously, be aware of the calendar!

In older times, it was customary for Croats to search through forests in pursuit of a large log. This piece of wood was brought home, cleaned, dried and decorated with flowers or ribbons. It was called badnjak and it is the same word Croats use for Christmas Eve.
The log would pass through a simple religious ritual. Usually, the oldest man in the family would sprinkle it with holy water, citing a prayer or Apostle’s Creed. In some parts of Croatia, badnjaks were sprinkled with rakija, while some people would also completely submerge it in blessed water.

Badnjak would then be put on the fire on Christmas Eve, usually in the home’s fireplace. It was supposed to be in flames as long as it could, so family members would periodically take turns during the night, taking care that the fire didn’t extinguish itself.

Unfortunately, most people in cities don’t own a fireplace, so the tradition is not widespread anymore. 

Badnjak (Croatian)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Badnjak (Croatian pronunciation: [badɲaːk]), refers to a log brought into the house and placed on the fire on the evening of Christmas Eve, a central tradition in Slavic Christmas celebrations in Bosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaSerbiaMontenegroBulgaria, much like a yule log in other European traditions (in the Bulgarian, Croatian, and Serbian languages, the name for Christmas Eve is derived from the term badnjak) as well as the Croatian name for Christmas Eve. The log is cut with great ceremony on Christmas Eve morning, which for Roman Catholic Croats, is December 24. The cutting, preparation, bringing in, and laying on the fire, are surrounded by elaborate religious rituals, with many regional variations. The log is kept burning throughout Christmas Day.
With increased urbanization and migrations to cities, the badnjak tradition has recently been limited to more rural areas, as many urban homes do not having a hearth or fireplace, increasing the risk of a fire hazard, along with the fact that it is near impossible to cut one's own log in the city. Instead, some may chose to have a symbolic log kept in the home.

Etymology[edit]

The term badnjak comes from the old Slavic words bodar or badar, which means "to be awake" (bdjeti).[1] This refers to staying awake throughout the night to tend to the badnjak and wait for the coming of the saviour, Jesus Christ on Christmas Day. The term badnjak lends itself to the literal meaning of Christmas Eve, with Badnji Dan meaning Christmas Eve Day, and Badnja Večer meaning Christmas Eve night.

Origins[edit]

There are many interpretations for the meaning of the badnjak, but scholars agree that it is a remnant of pagan Indo-European times that has adapted to Christianity. Today, the festive kindling of the log commemorates the fire that—according to folk tradition—the shepherds of Bethlehem built in the cave where Jesus Christ was born, to warm the baby Jesus and his mother Mary throughout the night. The badnjak may also be seen as a symbol of the cross upon which Christ was crucified, the warmth of its fire symbolizing the salvation which, in the Christian belief, the crucifixion made possible for mankind. As the log burned and turned into ashes, it symbolized Christ's resurrection and his triumph over sin. Scholars regard the tradition as inherited from the old Slavic religion, where Christians began referring to the celebration of Christmas as the Feast of Lights.[2] They interpret the badnjak as an incarnation of the spirit of vegetation, and as a divinity who dies by burning to be reborn, to whom sacrifices and prayers were offered for the fertility of fields, the health and happiness of the family, in which the rekindling of the hearth-fire symbolizes its importance and center of family life throughout many generations.[3] In some parts, some people focus more the cult of their dead, where they equate the burning fire to their departed family members.[4]

Preparation[edit]

Among Croats of the Roman Catholic faith, Christmas Eve begins on December 24. Early in the morning, traditionally before dawn, the father or another male of the household goes into the forest to chop a piece of log, usually from an oak tree if it could be found, but if the region does not have any, than beecholive, or maple can be used. When the perfect tree is found, the father would invoke God by reciting the Lord's Prayer several times and making the Sign of the Cross and would then cut it. When the father arrives back home with the badnjak, he announces "May Jesus and Mary be praised! I wish you a good Christmas Eve" (Faljen Isus i Marija! Dobro Vam došla Badnja Večer), and the family replies "Today and always."[5] The greeting can differ slightly among different regions; in Slavonia for example, the father would say, May Jesus be praised! I wish you a good Christmas Eve and Adam and Eve [feast day] (Faljen Isus! Čestita vam badnja večer i Adam i Eva.) In the Croatian Catholic calendar, December 24 is the feast day of Adam and Eve. The log is placed on the porch and is not brought into the house until the evening.
When evening comes, the badnjak log is placed in the hearth. In Dalmatia, as the badnjak is brought into the home, it is sprinkled with wine and grain. In the southern part, women would adorn the logs with leaves and flowers and wrap them around with red and gold ribbons.[6] In Dubrovnik, the father sprinkles corn and wine on the badnjak while reciting prayers. In other regions, the badnjak is sprinkled with wheat and holy water, while in Hercegovina the badnjak is completely bathed in holy water.[7] As the log is lit, the father of the family recites theApostle's Creed. In southern Dalmatia, the two logs are often placed in the shape of a cross. After the log is lit, he says "Jesus be praised. Welcome Christmas Eve." Sometimes, more holy water is sprinkled on the badnjak after it is lit. Depending on the region, people may choose to sprinkle bits of wheat grain, or even add some of the evening meal to the badnjak. In Istria, if wine or rakija is sprinkled on the badnjak, a family member toasts: "Drink to your health" (Pij u tvoje zdravlje) believing if they don't, ill fortune will come to them. The log is usually allowed to burn all night into Christmas Day, and family members often take turns all night ensuring the log does not go out.

Kroštule and fritule are in some parts of Croatia popular food on Badnjak.
The Badnjak must last all evening and in many regions, it is burned again. In certain regions, it is re-lit in the New Year on the Feast of The Three Kings and sometimes it stays by the hearth until Lent, where it serves as a special log upon which other logs are placed. In the villages, the ashes or charred fragments of the badnjak are scattered in the fields to assure a fruitful crop.

Celebration[edit]

Much like other European countries, Croatia has specific traditional celebrations that go along with the felling and lighting of the badnjak. The day is spent in preparation for Christmas, with the home being decorated and the feast for the next day being prepared, and all chores must be done before the ringing of the church bells and the lighting of the badnjak. The Christmas tree, which first arrived in Croatia in the mid-19th century, is still relatively new and is usually decorated on Christmas Eve. Other more traditional Croatian decorations include children hanging greenery throughout the home, such as holly branches, sageivy and evergreen wreaths, which are seen as a symbol of the strength of life in the middle of winter. Nativity scenes are usually present in every Christian home, and are generally kept under the tree or in another prominent location.
Another old tradition is sowing wheat seeds in a bowl of water (usually on St. Lucy's day), which will grow until Christmas and is then used to decorate the table on Christmas. The wheat is trimmed and usually wrapped with a red, white and blue ribbon of the Croatian tricolour. Most Croats put candles or other objects such as apples in the middle of the wheat, with candles symbolizing the birth of Christ. A bundle of straw is brought into the house by the head of the family, who greets the home with a Christmas wish, and the straw is then spread under the table and throughout the house, symbolizing the birth of Christ in the manger. Families usually sit on the straw after dinner when gathered around the badnjak.
Throughout the day, the woman of the house prepares the Christmas meal, which usually consists of many courses and desserts. Traditional foods include lamb, roasted pig,sarma with sauerkraut and sausage, stuffed pepperspita, salad, and freshly baked bread. Some traditional Christmas desserts include frituleKroštulestrudelorahnjača,makovnjačaBishop's bread and gugelhupf.
Since Christmas Eve is a fasting day, the family only has a small meal at dinnertime. For Badnjak supper, baklar (cod fish) from Dalmatia is eaten along with a salad or cabbage. A large supply of dried fruits, honey and nuts (mainly walnuts and almonds) are always kept at home and eaten throughout the Christmas season.

References[edit]

  1.  http://www.zupa-svkriz.hr/duhovnost/krozgodinu/hrvatski_bozic1.htm Zupa Sv. Kriza: PRIČA O NAŠEM HRVATSKOM BOŽIĆU
  2. Jump up^ Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas, by Ace Collins; p. 191
  3. Jump up^ Christmas in Ritual and Tradition, Christian and Pagan, by Clement A. Miles, p.252-253
  4. Jump up^ http://www.kbf-st.hr/Casopisi/CUS_2008_1.htm#DRVO_BADNJAK_U_KR%C5%A0%C4%86ANSKOJ_TRADICIJSKOJ_KULTURI_Marko_Dragi%C4%87,_Split Katolicki bogoslovni fakultet-Split, Marko Dragić: DRVO BADNJAK U KRŠĆANSKOJ TRADICIJSKOJ KULTURI
  5. Jump up^ The Magnificat Advent Companion by James Monti
  6. Jump up^ Christmas customs and traditions, their history and significance, Clement A. Miles, p. 252
  7. Jump up^ The World Encyclopedia of Christmas, y G. Q. BowlerJump up
The Christmas Straw

Another custom on Christmas Eve is to put some straw in the house. Well, a lot of straw actually, since children liked to jump on it before mattresses and pillows became the usual instruments of flight. However, grown -ups were supposed to sit on the straw as well- for a very good reason.

It was believed that, if a man be the first to sit on Christmas straw, most of the animals in the following year would give birth to female offspring. If a woman sat on it before a man, it was vice versa. Imagine the shock if you wanted a rooster in the fall, and you discovered you’d taken a straw seat before your wife! You had to wait for the whole year for another chance!

THE FEAST OF THE THREE KINGS (The Magi)
Shrine of the Three Kings [Graves] at Cologne Cathedral, Germany.

The Christmas season ends on January 6, when Croats celebrate the Epiphany (the feast day of the three kings visiting Jesus). It is customary for children in rural areas to make a big star, usually out of paper or cardboard, and carry it through the village knocking on people’s doors and singing Christmas songs. They are usually awarded with candies for the occasion.

  Christmas Dance in Tintown 1930's tradition:
“Local music-making also provided a diversion for the Tintown residents, taking their minds off the troubles of the Depression.
Several young men from the town gained a following as the "Moonlight Serenaders String Band." Members included Carmo's older brother Walter, on guitar, along with John Petrikovic, Joe Novak and Conner Muir--with additional instrumentation on bass, violin and mandolin.
Said George Carmo, "They played on all the local radio stations," with an eclectic repertoire including renditions of popular big band tunes.
Vukman recalled the versatile players could alter their style to suit a variety of audiences--including families of various ethnicities for whom they would play.
"At Easter and Christmas, they came to our home and all the neighbors would come over to dance," Vukman recalled.
"The Serenaders liked our house because we always had wine and beer," he said. "They played American songs and Croatian songs, too."
He recalled that there were times when the band also would make the rounds of Tintown, stopping outside each home's window to offer a selection--hence, the group's name.
The town additionally fielded its own tamburitzan group, playing on mandolins, Vukman said. "They were good."



Bandstand at Christmas, Blairsville, Pennsylvania.
Christmas Tree Farm, Indiana county, Pennsylvania.

John Lazar
"My father was not a train enthusiast, but from my first Christmas on he always had a train layout under the tree.  As seen on the right photo, below, he would often leave the train layout up for several weeks after the tree came down.  I would have a wonderful time playing with my railroad. We moved to Blairsville, PA when I was 10 years old.  Blairsville, which was on the Conemaugh Division of the PRR, had a small railroad yard.  Our home was on the southwest side of the railroad tracks, and the school that I would go to was on the northeast side.  So every day on my way to school I would have to cross the railroad tracks and would often, as boys are apt to do, detour through the yard.  I bacame totally fascinated with the trains and the yard operations.  It was all of these events, in my early life, that developed my love of trains.  As I grew older that love never waned, it only grew stronger!  “

 Imagine It's 1937 a deep unbroken shroud of snow covers the ground in Blairsville's Tin Town. The midnight express has screamed by on its way to make a delivery and home for the train crew it's Christmas Eve. The coal stove is in high gear to keep the house warm and the pipes from freezing at the Gurgon's. Pap stays up late into the night smoking his pipe and  softly dreaming of youth. Zug a toddler is fast asleep as are Tootsie and Betsy his sisters. Frank and Louie wander up to bed half awake smells of the coming feast invade their dreams. Grandma prepares to leave to catch the midnight Mass at St. Simon's and Jude with Mary in tow. The Gurgon boys, Scottie,Peaches,Opie and Chippy make their way home in anticipation of the morrows Christmas Feast.After Mass Grandma and Mary straggle in from the  cold wanting the comfort of the warmth of the stove. Pap awakens and spreads out the gifts from Santa under the simple yet elegant Christmas Tree as Grandma smiles and enjoys the warmth. Thoughts of Johnnie who is in the army and away from home and Anna who is newly married and living in a nearby town invade the Christmas time cheer as missing them that they hold dear. Grandma says a quick prayer and all is retired until the Christmas dawn. 'Sretan Bozic' Johnnie and Anna,'Sretan Bozic' everyone!

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

"Roots"

Supplementing the Larder


Blairsville in the Winter 1940

We needed to have heat for the cold winters that endured at that time, and coal was used by everybody, the majority of people in our area had coal stoves some had furnaces. Although coal was cheap and plentiful we could not buy it, the money had to go for food and clothing and some for Pap's wine and (rakiya) whiskey.Here's the way we obtained the coal to heat the house for the Winter Season.


Old Coal Parlor Stove


Peach Rakiya from Croatia

Croatian rakija[edit from wikipedia]

Rakia is the most popular spirit in Croatia.[10] Travarica (herbal rakia) is usually served at the beginning of the meal, together with dried figs. The Croatian Adriatic coast is known for a great variety of herbal grappas, some typical for only one island or group of islands. The island Hvar is famous for grappa with the addition of Myrtus (mrtina — bitter and dark brown). Southern islands, such as Korčula, and the city of Dubrovnik are famous for grappa with anise (aniseta), and in central Dalmatia the most popular rakia is grappa with nuts (orahovica). It's usually homemade, and served with dry cookies or dried figs. In the summer, it's very typical to see huge glass jars of grappa with nuts steeping in the liquid on every balcony, because the process requires the exposure of orahovica to the sun. In the northern Adriatic — mainly Istria — rakia is typically made of honey (medica) or mistletoe (biska). Biska, which is yellow-brown and sweet, is a typical liquor of Istria.
Traditional Croatian Whiskey Flask
Across the river from Tintown was a coal mine which was operating everyday and the coal was being sold to the railroad company. The coal company had a huge tipple* that received coal from across the river that came over in large metal buckets, was dumped in the tipple and from the tipple into large railroad coal cars. We in a small way helped the man that ran the tipple and loaded the coal cars. All the coal that fell off the cars we picked up and filled potato sacks. After about 12 hours we had about 30 sacks of coal and this we took home by wagon and wheelbarrow and some we carried on our backs.
Brenizer Mine Tipple, Latrobe, Pennsylvania
We filled up the bin in the cellar and had enough coal for the whole winter. To gather this coal and be down at the tipple before anyone else we used to go down there around midnight, and wait until the tipple man came to start loading the railroad cars. the first persons there got the best spots around the coal cars to pick up the coal. Maybe Frankie remembers this time in our lives! Sometimes we had to carry the coal across the river on our backs from a different mine.It was a place called the "Riffles" and old pipe line was underneath the water from one bank to another and at times the water was very swift and you found yourself in the water and losing a sack of coal. In "Tintown" we learned to swim before we could walk. We lived only about 2 hundred yards from the river. Zug can tell you how important it became for him to know how to swim early in his life. It became important to me much later in my life also, after the battle of "Iwo Jima" was over there must have been 5 - 6 thousand Marines on this beach and some of us decided to take a swim. I for one because I loved swimming, anyway I got caught up in the undertow, the water was running fast out to sea and taking me along. My early experience in swimming came in handy and saved my life.
 To get back to the original story, after stocking up on coal, we also needed wood to burn in the stoves, for this we went out into the woods and found some dead trees. One day Pap and I went out and we found a nice big tree log lying close to the road. Pap and I proceeded to saw through the tree with a two-man cross cut saw. When we got about half way through the tree we hit a yellow jackets nest and the whole swarm attacked the both of us.We both dropped the saw and started beating the yellow jackets away from us. Pap turned and started running through the woods, flailing his arms around and hollering and swearing in Croatian and me behind him. We went straight for a small stream where we went under the water and also Pap said to start applying mud on the places where I was stung by the yellow jackets. We both looked like the elephant man. I couldn't see for three days, my whole face was swollen especially my nose, a couple got into my nostrils and stung me good. Pap was worse off than me, because he had his shirt off, and his cap. When we arrived home he took a couple of good slugs of his whiskey, gave me one and rubbed my face with the whiskey. In about three days we went back out for some more wood, only this time we proceeded with more caution and looked the dead trees over real good before we started to saw. This was the way we took care of the problem of heating our house.
*Tipple: a huge wooden structure with a large bin, and two chutes which were manually operated, the coal would dump out of buckets into the large bin, and the tipple man would hand operate the chutes letting the coal out to fall into the railroad cars, a very simple operation.
We gathered coal in this manner until we accumulated enough to fill the bin in the basement. It took us about a month to get all the coal we needed for the winter. Peaches, Chippy, and I were the coal pickers. Johnny was in the Army and Scotty had a job with Lamantia's fruit and produce company, driving and delivering to stores in and around Blairsville for 50 cents a day .....
This all happened during the 1930's. Pap worked on W.P.A. Johnny was in the Army, Scotty was driving truck, Peaches, Chippy and I were helping around the house. Bringing in the coal and wood. I may be repetitious at times as I go forward telling this story but bear with me and read along. I just hope it's not boring.
Getting a little late now and the sandman has already been here so I'll close for now and will continue the story in the next Grzan times.
Love to all,     The Patriarch
[Written by Joseph (Opie/Patriarch)Gurgon. Edited for the Grzan Times Newsletter by Peggy Myers Gurgon  April 1985. Faithfully Transcribed with minor grammar, and spelling changes by Alan Simmons. Images researched by Alan Simmons 4 November 2014 from Google images, ebay, NARA archives, and Life Magazine].

Monday, November 3, 2014

James Chippy Gergon
The Keystone Division

28th infantry division, 110th regiment, Company L. U.S. Army


Keystone Uniform Patch


110th Regiment Bocage France

We often wonder what our Fathers or Grandfathers experienced during World War II. Where were they, what battles did they fight in, and what little bit of history did they contribute to that made a difference to our world today. Such is the story of James Chippy Grdgon [Gergon]. We know from a published newspaper article dated 22 August 1944 that he served with the 28th Division (Keystone Division),110th regiment company L. The Germans called them the bloody bucket because of the patch they wore on their uniforms. We know that he spent time in different states for training, and then Wales and England. Most noteworthy is his involvement in the battle of Normandie in the liberation of a place called Percy. This is where James was wounded at; or near Percy, France on 31 July 1944 as reported in the Indiana Evening Gazette, 22 August 1944. This on the heels of losing a brother John who was killed by Japanese bombs on May 6, 1942. The anxiety that his battle wounds caused his mother we do not know. His mother Katherine was a Member of the Gold Star Mothers and at that time had 4 maybe 5 stars displayed in her window in Blairsville Pennsylvania. We do know that James returned, healed, had a family and lived a productive life. Enjoy the history and honor James Chippy Gergon’s service always. The price of Freedom is not free but paid for in the service of our military Veterans.


28th Infantry Division – “Keystone”, “Bloody Bucket”

The Keystone division, named for its origins as a Pennsylvania National Guard unit, did not land in Normandy until 22 July. It was committed to the St. Lo battles and the breakthrough of Operation Cobra. Fighting through the hedgerows they saw only modest advances against dug in and determined enemies. They took Percy on 1 August closing a key staging point for German troops attempting to breakout.
28th Infantry Division
US Infantry advance along a canal     Order of Battle – 28th Infantry Division
    109th Infantry Regiment
    110th Infantry Regiment
    112th Infantry Regiment
    Support
    107th Field Artillery Battalion
    109th Field Artillery Battalion
    229th Field Artillery Battalion
    108th Field Artillery Battalion (155mm)
    728th Reconnaissance Troop (mechanized)
    103rd Engineer Combat Battalion.[1]





Near St. Lo France July, 1944


Clearing the Bocage  July, 1944



Operation Cobra
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Operation Cobra


M4 and M4A3 Sherman tanks and infantrymen of the US 4th Armored Division in Coutances

Part of Operation Overlord (the Battle of Normandy)
Invasion of Normandy
Operation Cobra was the codename for an offensive launched by the First United States Army seven weeks after the D-Day landings, during the Normandy Campaign of World War II. American Lieutenant General Omar Bradley's intention was to take advantage of the German preoccupation with British and Canadian activity around the town of Caen, and immediately punch through the German defenses that were penning in his troops while the Germans were distracted and unbalanced. Once a corridor had been created, the First Army would then be able to advance into Brittany, rolling up the German flanks and freeing itself of the constraints imposed by operating in the Norman bocage countryside. After a slow start the offensive gathered momentum, and German resistance collapsed as scattered remnants of broken units fought to escape to the Seine. Lacking the resources to cope with the situation, the German response was ineffectual, and the entire Normandy front soon collapsed. Operation Cobra, together with concurrent offensives by the Second British and First Canadian Armies, was decisive in securing an Allied victory in the Normandy Campaign.

Having been delayed several times by poor weather, Operation Cobra commenced on 25 July with a concentrated aerial bombardment from thousands of Allied aircraft. Supporting offensives had drawn the bulk of German armored reserves toward the British and Canadian sector, and coupled with the general lack of men and materiel available to the Germans, it was impossible for them to form successive lines of defense. Units of VII Corps led the initial two-division assault while other First Army corps mounted supporting attacks designed to pin German units in place. Progress was slow on the first day, but opposition started to crumble once the defensive crust had been broken. By 27 July, most organized resistance had been overcome, and VII and VIII Corps were advancing rapidly, isolating the Cotentin peninsula.

By 31 July, XIX Corps had destroyed the last forces opposing the First Army, and Bradley's troops were finally freed from the bocage. Reinforcements were moved west by Field Marshal Günther von Kluge and employed in various counterattacks, the largest of which (codenamed Operation Lüttich) was launched on 7 August between Mortain and Avranches. Although this led to the bloodiest phase of the battle, it was mounted by already exhausted and understrength units and had little effect other than to further deplete von Kluge's forces. On 8 August, troops of the newly activated Third United States Army captured the city of Le Mans, formerly the German Seventh Army's headquarters. Operation Cobra transformed the high-intensity infantry combat of Normandy into rapid maneuver warfare, and led to the creation of the Falaise pocket and the loss of the German position in northwestern France.


Percy, France 2 August 1944


Sources


http://www.nps.gov/museum/exhibits/eise/Military/WWII_normandy_VEday/GISt-Lo-July-1944.html
Accessed 3 November 2014.

http://theminiaturespage.com/boards/msg.mv?id=297680 Accessed 3 November 2014.

1.     Operation Cobra - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Cobra
o     
o     
Wikipedia
Operation Cobra was the codename for an offensive launched by the First United States Army seven weeks after the D-Day landings, during the Normandy ...

[1] NARA, National Archives Identifier:
6928098
Local Identifier:
111-SC-192267-A
Creator(s):
Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Chief Signal Officer.           (09/18/1947 - 02/28/1964) (Most Recent)
From:
Series : Signal Corps Photographs of American Military Activity, compiled 1754 - 1954
Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 – 1985, Photograph of Infantrymen Moving into the Town of Percy, France, 08/02/1944,