“The Rhineland” is a Battle Honour awarded to the 21st Canadian Armoured Regiment (GGFG) for its operations between February and March 1945.
The Battle of the RhinelandThe battle involved First Canadian Army’s offensive, Operation Veritable (and later Operation Blockbuster), designed to clear the west bank of the Rhine and break through the Siegfried Line defenses. Key aspects of this battle included:
• Terrain: The topography unambiguously favoured the defence, consisting of marshy plains often flooded by the opening of dams, rolling hills with “porridge-like” mud, and dense state forests such as the Reichswald and Hochwald.
• Tactics: The operation relied on massive artillery support to shoot the infantry forward through successive defensive belts, with armoured divisions like the 4th Canadian (including the GGFG) committed to exploit the breakthroughs.
• Intensity: The battle for the Rhineland fell heavily on the shoulders of the 4th Division, involving bitter fighting in areas like the Hochwald Gap.
• Conclusion: The month-long battle concluded on March 10, 1945, when the enemy guns fell silent and the last German soldier retreated across the Rhine.
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