In 1989, Major Harry Mainwaringa veteran of two wars and a career officer in the Royal Artilleryrecorded six hours of recollections covering some of the 20th century's pivotal military events. This book combines those recordings with the informed perspective of his son, creating a first-hand account that illuminates both the frontline experiences of a British artillery officer and the broader strategic developments of the Second World War and the post-war era. Commissioned in March 1940, Harry served throughout the war with the 53rd Heavy Regiment, Royal Artillery; this unit provided the long-range firepower that played a decisive role in military operations ranging from the breakout from Normandy to the advance through Northwest Europe. His narrative follows the regiment through the years of British war preparations and coastal defense, as well as the transition to mobile, mechanized warfare. After landing in France shortly after D-Day, Harry experienced the brutal artillery duels in the *bocage* country, the arduous advance through Belgium and the Netherlands, and the final push into Germanyeleven months of continuous combat that tested the full range of an artillery officer's skills. Yet Harrys military career did not end in 1945. Amid the uncertainty of Britains post-war decline, he returned to active service with the Royal Army Education Corpsonly to be deployed once more, this time to the Korean War, where British forces took part in some of the most challenging campaigns of the Cold War. By combining operational details with candid personal accounts, this work offers readers interested in military history invaluable insight into artillery warfare, command under fire, and the lived experience of a soldier shaped by two world wars.
Details
English text, 50 bw-illustrations. 224 pages.
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Church Street 47 S70 2AS South Yorkshire Vereinigtes Königreich