The Liberation Trilogy Box Set
Page 348
Douve River
Drabik, Sgt. Alex
DRAGOON, Operation
advance on Lyon and Montélimar
advance on Vosges and Swiss border
Belfort Gap and
Churchill and
launch of
Marseille and
St.-Tropez and
success of
Toulon and
Draguignan
Draper, Sgt. Frank, Jr.
Dresden
bombing of
U.S. POWs in
Driant, Fort, debacle
Drôme River
Dufy, Raoul
Duisburg
Dumas, Alexandre
Du Maurier, Daphne
Dunckern, Gen. Anton
Dunkirk
Dupuy, R. Ernest
Düren
Düsseldorf
Dutch resistance
Eagle’s Nest (Hitler château)
Eaker, Lt. Gen. Ira C.
Eastern Europe
Yalta and
Eastern Front
Eastern Siberia
East Pomerania
East Prussia
Eberbach, Gen. Heinrich
ECLIPSE (postwar plan for Germany)
Economist
Eddy, Maj. Gen. Manton S.
Eden, Anthony
Egypt
Eichhorn, Rabbi David Max
Eindhoven
Eisenhower, Doud Dwight
Eisenhower, Gen. Dwight D. “Ike”
advance beyond Rhine and
airborne troops and
Allies managed by
Antwerp and
arrives in Normandy
assassination threat vs.
assumes ground command
atomic bomb and
awarded fifth star
Berlin and
birthday of
bombing of German cities and
Bradley and
Brooke and
brothels and
Bulge and
Bushy Park office of
Cannae and
capture of German territory and
Cherbourg and
Churchill and
Churchill honors, in London
COBRA and
Colmar Pocket and
combat exhaustion and
COMZ and
concentration camps and
criticisms of
cultural treasures and
Czechoslovakia and
D-Day and
death of FDR and
death of Ramsay and
De Gaulle and
desertions and
Devers and
Devers’ plan to jump Rhine and
divisions fighting under
DRAGOON and
Falaise and
FDR and
final days of war and
First Army returned to Bradley by
French and
German POWs and
German surrender and
GOODWOOD and
Göring and
health problems of
Hodges and
Hürtgen and
leaflets and
liberation of Paris and
logistics and
logistics for winter and
Malta and
manpower needs and
MARKET GARDEN and
Marshall and
Mediterranean campaign and
Merkers treasure and
Metz and
Montgomery and
Montgomery vs., and Bradley
Montgomery vs., and Bulge
Montgomery vs., and Churchill
Montgomery vs., and MARKET GARDEN
Montgomery vs., and showdown in Maastricht
Montgomery vs., and single- vs. multipronged strategy
Montgomery vs., and war’s end date
Munich and
Normandy and
OVERLORD and
Patton and
Patton’s Baum fiasco and
personality of
poison gas and
postwar career of
postwar German occupation and
pozit shells
provisions for
Reims HQ of
Rhine crossing and
Ruhr and
shifts main attack to Bradley
Simpson and
Soviets and
St.-Dié demolitions and
Strasbourg and
Stuttgart and
Summersby and
Ted Roosevelt and
three phases of battle envisioned by
as Time “Man of the Year”
transfers XV Corps to Seventh Army
Truscott and
V-1 attacks and
valor awards and
VERITABLE and GRENADE and
Versailles HQ of
Yalta and
Eisenhower, Ida
Eisenhower, John
Eisenhower, Mamie
El Alamein, Battle of
Elbe River
U.S. and Red Armies meet at
El Guettar, Battle of
Elsenborn Ridge, Battle of
EMBARCO
English Channel, fuel pipelines across
EPHEDRINE (commando team)
Epstein, Lt. Bernard
Erpeler Ley
Essen
bombing of
Estonia
European Advisory Commission
Fairbanks, Lt. Douglas, Jr.
Falaise
Falaise Pocket, Battle of the
Farouk I, King of Egypt
Faubus, Maj. Orval E.
Faust (Goethe)
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor
Figaro, Le
Finland
First Allied Airborne Army
MARKET GARDEN and
VARSITY PLUNDER and
Flanner, Janet
Foertsch, Lt. Gen. Hermann
Follain, Jean
“Foot March Group South”
Force B
Force U
Ford, Homer D.
Fort Du Roule, fall of
FORTITUDE (Appendix Y) deception
For Whom the Bell Tolls (film)
France. See also Vichy France; and specific individuals, locations, and military units
African soldiers and
crimes by U.S. soldiers in
German postwar zone and
German surrender and
logistics and
Mediterranean invasion and
OVERLORD and
railroads
Yalta and
Franconia, R.M.S.
Franco-Prussian War
Frankfurt
SHAEF moves to
Freckleton air accident
Frederick, Maj. Gen. Robert T.
Frederick the Great, King of Prussia
Free France
Freeman, Douglas Southall
Freeman, Edward Augustus
Fréjus, Gulf of
French 1st Armored Division
French First Army
French I Corps
French 1st Infantry Division
French 2nd Armored Division
French II Corps
French 3rd Algerian Division
French Army
Bulge and
colonial troops and
DRAGOON and
looting by
rebirth of
Rhine Crossing and
Stuttgart and
French Army B
French collaborators
French communists
French Forces of the Interior (FFI)
French Foreign Ministry
French Legionnaires
French Resistance
Lyon and
Paris and
French War Ministry
Friedeburg, Adm. Hans-Georg von
Friedrich, Jörg
Frost, Lt. Col. John D.
Frost, Robert
fuel supplies
Fuller, Col. Hurley E.
Fussell, Lt. Paul
Gaffey, Maj. Gen. Hugh J.
Gale, Lt. Gen. Sir Humfrey M.
Gallic Wars (Caesar)
Gallipoli, Battle of (1915)
Gander, Marsland
Gap
GARBO (British double agent)
Garrick, David
gas chambers
Gaskill, Gordon
Gault, Lt. Col. James F.
Gavin, Brig. Gen. James M.
Bulge and
concentration camps and
German surrender and
MARKET GARDEN and
personality of
Geisel, Theodore (Dr. Seuss)
Gela, landing at
Gellhorn, Martha
Geneva Conventions
George VI, King of England
Gerhardt, Maj. Gen. Charles Hunter, Jr.
German First Army
surrender by
German First Parachute Army
German I SS Panzer Corps
German 1st SS Panzer Division
German II SS Panzer Corps
German 2nd Panzer Division
German 2nd Parachute Corps
German 2nd SS Panzer Division (Das Reich)
German 3rd Panzer Grenadier Division
German Fifth Panzer Army
Bulge and
German Sixth Panzer Army
Bulge and
German 6th Parachute Regiment
German 6th SS Mountain Division
German Seventh Army
Bulge and
Falaise Pocket and
Mortain and
retreat from Belgium
German 7th Panzer Division
German 9th Panzer Division
German 9th Parachute Regiment
German 9th SS Panzer Division
German 10th SS Panzer Division
German Eleventh Army
German 11th Panzer Division
German Twelfth Army
German 12th Infantry Division (Wild Buffaloes)
German 12th SS Panzer Division (Hitler Youth, Murder Division)
German Fifteenth Army
German 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division
German Nineteenth Army
German 21st Panzer Division
German 25th Army
German 26th Volksgrenadier
German XLVII Panzer Corps
German 49th Infantry Division
German LVII Panzer Corps
German LVIII Corps
German 58th Panzer Corps
German LXVII Corps
German LXXIV Corps
German LXXXI Corps
German 84th Corps
German 85th Corps
German 89th Infantry Division
German 116th Panzer Division
German 150th Armored Brigade
German 198th Division
German 275th Division
German 352nd Infantry Division
German 716th Infantry Division
German Afrika Korps
German Air Fleet Three
German Air Ministry
German Army Group B
surrender of
German Army Group C
German Army Group Center
German Army Group G
surrender of
German Army Group H
German Army Group Oberrhein
German demolitions
German Luftwaffe
Bulge and
command problems
fuel shortages and
glide bombs and
losses
German OB West (HQ)
German Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW, high command)
German Panzer Group West
renamed Fifth Panzer Army
German Panzer Lehr Division
German paratroopers
German SS
Baugnez massacre and
Buchenwald and
concentration camps and
death of FDR and
liberation of Paris and
MARKET GARDEN and
German Volksgrenadiers
German Volkssturm Home Guard
German Waffen-SS troops
German Wehrmacht. See also specific individuals, locations, and military units
decline of
liberation of Paris and
retreat of
surrender of
after V-E Day
Germany. See also specific individuals, locations, and military units
Allied propaganda and
Allies first cross into
bombing of
“bridge psychosis” and
casualties and
civilians under occupation
December 1944 position of
early plan for drive on
industry
January 1945 position of
looting of
Normandy defeat and
postwar occupation of
scientists in
search for missing soldiers in
Soviet invasion of
Stalin and reparations from
surrender of
Third Reich, after V-E Day
transportation system
war crimes and
women in
Gerow, Maj. Gen. Leonard T.
Geyr von Schweppenburg, Gen. Leo Freiherr
GI Bill
Gide, André
Gielgud, John
Giessen
First and Third Army meet at
Gill, Brendan
Gillem, Maj. Gen. Alvan C., Jr.
glide bombs
gliders
Goebbels, Joseph
Goethe, Johann W. von
Going My Way (film)
Gold Beach
Golden, Capt. Jack
Gone with the Wind (Mitchell)
GOODWOOD, Operation
Gooseberries
Göring, Hermann
Gorky, Maxim
Gothic Line
Goya, Francisco de
Graham, Maj. Gen. Sir Miles
Grand Hotel (Baum)
Granville
Graves Registration units
Grave
Gray, J. Glenn
Greece
GREIF, Operation
GRENADE, Operation
Grenoble
Groesbeek
Groesbeek Ridge
Groves, Lt. Gen. Leslie R.
Guadalcanal
Guam
Guderian, Heinz
Gustav Line
Gypsies
Haardt Mountains
Haile Selassi, Emperor of Ethiopia
Haislip, Maj. Gen. Wade
Hall, Rear Adm. John L.
Hallock, Lt. Joseph R.
Hamburg
fall of
firebombing of
Hamburger, Philip
Hamlet (Shakespeare)
Hamm
Hammelburg POW camp
Hammett, Dashiell
“Handbook for Military Government in Germany” (SHAEF)
Hannibal
Hanover
Hansen, Maj. Chester “Chet”
Hardy, Thomas
Harmon, Maj. Gen. Ernie
Harriman, W. Averell
Harris, Air Chief Marshal Arthur T. “Bomber”
Hart, B. H. Liddell
Harz Mountains
Hasbrouck, Brig. Gen. Robert W.
Hastings, Max
Hausser, Gen. Paul
Heidelberg
Heilbronn
Heinz, W. C.
Heisenberg, Werner
Hemingway, Ernest
Henri II, King of France
Henry V (Shakespeare)
HERBSTNEBEL, Operation (Autumn Mist). See also Bulge, Battle of the
Hewitt, Vice Adm. H. Kent
Heydte, Col. Friedrich von der
Higgins, Trumbull<
br />
Hill 262 (Maczuga)
Hill 314 (Montjoie)
Hill 400
Hill 427
Himmler, Heinrich
Hindenburg, Field Marshal Paul von
History of the Norman Conquest of England (Freeman)
Hitchcock, Alfred
Hitler, Adolf
Aachen and
admits war is lost
Allied Rhine crossing and
Alsace and
Antwerp and
Ardennes and
assassination attempt vs.
Atlantic Wall and
Belgium and
Berchtesgaden and
Blaskowitz fired by
Boulogne and Dunkirk ordered held by
British invasion planned by
Brittany ports and
Cherbourg and
COBRA and
Colmar and
coup attempt vs.
D-Day and
death of Rommel and
DRAGOON and
Eastern Front and
Falaise and
final days of war and
forces required to defeat
French and
generals fired by
German losses and
health problems of
HERBSTNEBEL (Bulge) and
Italy and
June 1945 positions and
Kesselring and
Kluge suicide and
Lorraine and
Metz and
Mortain and
Munich and
NORDWIND and
oil and
OSS portrait of
OVERLORD and
Paris and
retreat from France and
Rhine bridge demolitions and
Rommel and
Ruhr and
Rundstedt reinstated by
scorched-earth decree of
secret weapons and
Siegfried Line and
Soviet invasion and
Soviet nonaggression pact and
Strasbourg and
suicide of
V-2 rocket and
Hitler Youth
Hobbs, Maj. Gen. Leland S.
Hodges, Lt. Gen. Courtney H.
advance on Rhine and
Bulge and
Hürtgen and
January 1945 position of
personality of
Rhine crossed by
Ruhr and
victory position of
winter preparations and
“hog calling” tactic
Hoge, Brig. Gen. William M.
Holland. See Netherlands
Holocaust. See also concentration camps; Jews
Holzinger, Sgt. Warner W.
Honsfeld massacre
Hopkins, Harry
Horne, Lena
Horrocks, Lt. Gen. Brian G.
Horton, Lt. Hershel G.
Houffalize
Housman, A. E.
Howard, Maj. John
Howard, Michael
Howarth, David
Howie, Maj. Thomas D.
Huebner, Maj. Gen. Clarence R.
Hughes, Maj. Gen. Everett S.
Huie, William Bradford
Hull, Cordell
Humain
Hungary
Hunger Winter
Hürtgen Forest, Battle of
HUSKY
Huy
Hynes, Samuel
Ibn Saud, King of Saudi Arabia
IG Farben
Ill River
India
Indochina
Infantry Attacks (Rommel)
Ingersoll, Maj. Ralph
Innocents Abroad, The (Twain)
Institute of Physics and Chemistry (Halle, Germany)
“Instrument of Surrender”