Our July 2019 Lecture: Breakout from Normandy, Operation Cobra, Sequel to D-Day, July 1944
This lecture is the Society’s contribution to 75 th anniversary commemorations of D-Day. By end June 1944 the word most feared by Allied senior commanders and politicians was “stalemate”. US First Army and British Second Army units made few inroads into Normandy since the D-Day landings on 6 June. They faced stiff German resistance, impassable terrain and unpredictable weather. General Omar Bradley’s First Army faced two natural obstacles, the Cotentin bogs and ubiquitous hedgerows. Divisional commanders resorted to throwing away Army field manuals, relying on intuition and innovation to find a way out. Eisenhower was equally concerned about the “slow and laborious” advance of the Normandy front. If there was to be a breakout it would happen in the American sector, he thought. Bradley came up with Operation Cobra, scheduled to commence late July while Generals Montgomery and Dempsey devised Operation Goodwood, starting a few days earlier. The Germans would be compelled