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Cinderella Army: The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944?1945
 
 

Cinderella Army: The Canadians in Northwest Europe, 1944?1945 (Hardcover)

by Terry Copp (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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'Terry Copp has become the pre-eminent historian of the Canadian army in northwest Europe during the Second World War.'

(Peter Behrens The Globe and Mail - September 30, 2006 )


Product Description

In his controversial and award-winning 2003 book Fields of Fire, Terry Copp offered a stunning reversal of accepted military history, challenging the conventional view that the Canadian contribution to the Battle of Normandy was a failure. Cinderella Army continues the story of the operations carried out by the First Canadian Army in the last nine months of the war, and extends the argument developed in Fields of Fire that ?the achievement of the Allied and especially the Canadian armies? has been greatly underrated while the effectiveness of the German army has been greatly exaggerated.? Copp supports this argument with research conducted on numerous trips to the battlefields of France, Belgium, Holland and Germany. His detailed knowledge of the battlefield terrain, along with contemporary maps and air photos, allows Copp to explore the defensive positions that Canadian soldiers were required to overcome, and to illustrate how impressive their achievements truly were.

Except for a brief period during the Rhineland battle, the First Canadian Army was the smallest to serve under Eisenhower?s command. The Canadian component of that Army never totalled more that 185,000 of the four million Allied troops serving in Northwest Europe. It is, however, evident that the divisions of 2nd Canadian Corps played a role disproportionate to their numbers. Their contribution to operations designed to secure the Channel Ports and open the approaches to Antwerp together with the battles in the Rhineland place them among the most heavily committed and sorely tried divisions in the Allied armies. By the end of 1944 3rd Canadian Division had suffered the highest number of casualties in 21 Army Group with 2nd Canadian Division ranking a close second. Among armoured divisions, 4th Canadian was at the top of the list as was 2nd Canadian Armoured Brigade among the independent tank brigades. Overall Canadian casualties were twenty percent higher than in comparable British formations. This was a direct result of the much greater number of days that Canadian units were involved in close combat.

As passionately written and compellingly argued as its precursor, Cinderella Army is both an important bookend to Copp?s earlier work, and stands on its own as a significant contribution to Canadian military history.


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Military History as it should be practiced., Aug 26 2007
By D.H. Geoffrey (Vancouver Island) - See all my reviews
As the previews state, this work follows "Fields of Fire", continuing the author's analysis of the documentary record of the hundreds of battles fought by First Canadian Army until the war's end. It is the most balanced and lucid account I've yet read of these actions, adequately supported by sketch maps and unsparing in critical judgment. The evaluation of command decisions from Battalion level up is particularly fine and the writer avoids the palpable reluctance shown in Stacey's Official History to criticize, where such criticism was clearly due - understandable at the time of course. Colonel Stacey had to work under the men on whom he would be passing judgment. Another innovation of this work is the extensive use of the many analytical studies done by the Canadian Army during 1944 to identify their own deficiencies and inefficiencies, troublesome enemy strengths and practices and then develop remedies for them. The honesty and sophistication of these reports was a revelation to me. Professor Copp represents the rarest type of historian, the one willing to think for himself and to avoid the easy path of received dogma. History has itself undergone a lengthy period of criticism in the last two decades, based on a somewhat murky pseudo-philosophical perspective and it is works like this - clear, balanced and based on the careful sifting of vast documentary material - that demonstrate it's strengths and it's essential role in understanding human culture.
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