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Thunderbolt: The Story of the 11th Armored Division (World War II unit history booklet) The 11th Armored Division Association; Fact Sheet of the 11th Armored Division from Battle of the Bulge Association® Hartman, J. Ted. Tank Driver: With the 11th Armored from the Battle of the Bulge to VE Day. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2014.
Dager as depicted in 1945's The Story of the Eleventh Armored Division: Thunderbolt. In early 1942, Dager was assigned to command Combat Command B, 4th Armored Division during the division's organization and training at Pine Camp, New York. [13] After training in Tennessee and at Camp Bowie, Texas, the 4th Armored Division sailed for France. [13]
11th Armored Division – "Thunderbolt" [9] 12th Armored Division – "Hellcat Division" "Suicide Division" The Mystery Division" [10] 13th Armored Division – "Black Cat" [11] 14th Armored Division – "Liberators"; earned during the last days of World War II when it liberated some 200,000 Allied prisoners of war from German prison camps.
27th, 52nd, and 60th Armored Infantry Battalions 3rd, 16th, and 73rd Armored FA Battalions 9th Armored Engineer Battalion 89th Cavalry Recon. Squadron, Mech. 9th Armored Engineer Battalion 482nd AAA Automatic Weapons Battalion (detached 9 January 1945) 149th Armored Signal Company 11th Armored ("Thunderbolt") Division Brigadier General Charles ...
11th Armored Division "Thunderbolt" Aug 1942 – Aug 1945. 12th Armored Division "Hellcat Division" Sept 1942 – Dec 1945. 13th Armored Division "Black Cats"
5th Armored Division "Victory" 6th Armored Division "Super Sixth", "Bulgebusters" 7th Armored Division "Lucky Seventh" 8th Armored Division "Showhorse" 9th Armored Division "The Phantom Division" 10th Armored Division "Tiger Division" 11th Armored Division "Thunderbolt Division" 12th Armored Division "Hellcat Division" 13th Armored Division ...
The Chenogne massacre was a war crime committed by members of the 11th Armored Division, an American combat unit, near Chenogne, Belgium, on January 1, 1945, during the Battle of the Bulge. According to eyewitness accounts, an estimated 80 German prisoners of war were massacred by their American captors; the prisoners were assembled in a field ...
Holbrook was born on May 31, 1898, at Fort Grant, Arizona. [1] His father, Willard Ames Holbrook, was a career Army officer who achieved the rank of major general.His mother, Anna Huntington Stanley, [2] was a painter and the daughter of David S. Stanley, a Union general during the Civil War.