A very good account. My wife's grandfather (Acting RSM) CSM John Martin aged 36, of the Royal Scots Regiment was killed on the 27th of May 1940 at Le Paradis. His gravestone in the tiny hamlet of Le Paradis bears the date he was killed as the 25th May 1940. However, having researched the activities that took place at that time by the Royal Scots Regiment, a diary written by Major J Bruce came to light. In the diary (Acting RSM) CSM John Martin was mentioned amongst others as having distinguished himself and shown particular gallantry in the initial defence of the Battalion HQ on 27th May in Le Paradis and had been killed. We have visited the grave on a number of occasions and it is an extremely well maintained cemetery and we are grateful to the people of the village for ensuring this.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment and sharing your story!
@george15079910 ай бұрын
Wow, salute to your wifes grandad and the rest of those men, my dad and his brothers came back 4 years later and hopefully made her grandad proud, RIP all of them.
@MrBobthebird3 ай бұрын
I visited the graves at Le Paradis on June 4, 5, and 6 this year. A family member of mine was Drummer Angus Cain. I totally agree with you., The graves are immaculate. I was very well received by the three men caring for this cemetery. As I walked in, they saw me looking for Drummer Cain's grave, and one very politely asked which grave I was looking for. I told him and without a second thought he took me straight to it. Absolutely amazing. I have posted photos of these men on the Le Paradis website. Such respect for these falling men. Well done France.
@petersmith420210 ай бұрын
My dad got away on a coal boat from dunkirk all thanks to the incredible bravery of men like this
@pkrockets Жыл бұрын
I've got to say, i have watched hundreds, if not thousands of hours of WW1 and WW2 content on KZbin. The way you structure and speak on your videos is incredible. Honestly, so under-rated and one of the best on YT. Keep it up 👍
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words.
@bigdunc1313 Жыл бұрын
I agree these are professionally made Looking forward to enjoying future content.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much. Yes a monumental amount of work and research goes into each documentary and we have loads lined up for 2024! @@bigdunc1313
@EMoThaGr8 Жыл бұрын
@@BattleGuideVTgained a subscriber today. Excellent content and presentation 🏆
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks!@@EMoThaGr8
@garyluther Жыл бұрын
My natural grandfather, William Herbert McQuitty (from Belfast and known as Paddy), was a regular soldier serving in the 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment. He went to France as part of the BEF and was evacuated from Dunkirk. He was a driver and was transferred to REME when it was formed in 1942, serving with them in North Africa and Italy. He survived the war and later also served in the Palestine conflict. He died in Belfast in 1982. Lest we forget.
@zen4men10 ай бұрын
Good soldiers, Ulstermen! / But what is a "natural grandfather"? Never seen the term before! Or did you mean "maternal"? /
@johnbrereton522910 ай бұрын
@@zen4men A 'Natural' grandfather is related by blood, not marriage. Just as a natural father is one who is not married to the mother.
@zen4men10 ай бұрын
@@johnbrereton5229 Thanks for teaching me something, John! /
@johnbrereton522910 ай бұрын
@@zen4men A pleasure Zen, knowledge ahould always be shared and I learnt this when researching my grt grt grt grandfather who had two 'natural' sons.
@garyluther10 ай бұрын
@@johnbrereton5229 I'm puzzled about what point you are trying to make. My 'natural' grandfather, married my 'natural' grandmother in 1939 and she gave birth to my 'natural' mother in 1940. My 'natural' mother gave birth to me, her 'natural' son in 1958. The reason I mention the word 'natural' is that my 'natural' mother gave me up for adoption and I was brought up by another family.
@thenoworriesnomad Жыл бұрын
God Bless Them All, Never To Be Forgotten...
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
We agree.
@francesco245 Жыл бұрын
Are you German?
@thenoworriesnomad Жыл бұрын
@@francesco245 what with a Union Jack as a profile pic lol, but why do you ask
@TheBlueCream10 ай бұрын
why would he be@@francesco245
@dannythomson523910 ай бұрын
@@BattleGuideVT i disagree. do you think any single British soldier would have fought if they could see our country today?
@PeterPayne-z1g10 ай бұрын
My first wife's father, Captain John Woodwark, served in the Royal Norfolk Regiment and survived the massacre because he had been injured earlier in the fighting and had been laid in a ditch with some other wounded to shelter them. The SS didn't discover them. Wermacht soldiers eventually found them and he spent the rest of the war as a POW. He was a fine man and an absolute gentleman, may he rest in peace.
@alanbobbymcguire509910 ай бұрын
I’m from Edinburgh and the home of the Royal Scot’s. Hearing this story had me chocking back tears. I am sixty now and for as long as I still draw breath these men will never be forgotten. My utter respect to these brave brave men.
@thewarwickbear3 ай бұрын
No apostrophe in Royal Scots.
@LS_jr10 ай бұрын
My granny’s two cousins were apart of this last stand. They were last seen operating a machine gun on Dunkirk. God rest their souls true British grit native to south London 🙌🏼🙌🏼
@Great_Cthulhu10 ай бұрын
They were covering the boat that got my grandad out, then, so thank you for that from a Mancunian.
@jackthomson561810 ай бұрын
Look at England now
@velvetinedrapes435910 ай бұрын
@@jackthomson5618Don't worry mate. Western youth are growing ever more tired and angry
@jackthomson561810 ай бұрын
@@velvetinedrapes4359 well I hope to God you are right
@AndySmith-qf2wd9 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. My great aunt’s husband was with the Norfolks and was one of those killed at the barn in the massacre. I only previously knew a little of what happened from the family talking about it. Now I understand a lot more of what occurred. Rest in Peace brave souls.
@paulcousins1168 Жыл бұрын
My father was wounded at Dunkirk he being a good swimmer swam out to the boats and was rescued by his father, he went on to serve in the war and landed on Sword beach. He served from 1937-49.
@czar659510 ай бұрын
Your father was rescued at Dunkirk by your grandfather? If thats what you are saying then I doubt thats a true story.
@minhthunguyendang990010 ай бұрын
@@czar6595 Stranger things have happened
@minhthunguyendang990010 ай бұрын
The 3rd SS pz div : the triple 💀 💀 💀 division 1_ German tank force ☠️ 2_ SS ☠️ 3_ Totenkopf division ☠️
@czar659510 ай бұрын
@@minhthunguyendang9900 its a provable lie, a story like that would have made news, would have been propaganda, no evidence of anything like it exist for the evacuation of Dunkirk, so no.
@czar659510 ай бұрын
@@minhthunguyendang9900 if this was a true story there would be some kind of record of this, this would have become a propaganda story it would have been a national story, but literally no evidence this ever occurred.
@alex4833 Жыл бұрын
Heartwrenching and horrifying. The testimonies are powerful. The maps and images are helpful too. Excellent video.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!
@alex4833 Жыл бұрын
@@BattleGuideVT Anytime. Your videos are great and I learn a lot from them.
@TheGodParticle10 ай бұрын
A tough one to watch and impossible to imagine. Such brave souls. Those soldiers are heroes.
@killianlpc10 ай бұрын
Another video well done. People tend to forget that for those to escape at the retreat to Dunkirk others had to give their lives. Another great one to do would be The Siege of Lille where the remnants of The French 1st under General Molinie held up a massive German force of over 160,000 men and nearly 900 tanks for four days which was utterly crucial as these forces would have joined in on the attack at Dunkirk, and if they had done so hardly anyone would have escaped. Churchill paid tribute them in his memoirs as vital in enabling the evacuation. Look forward to more great content.
@davefaster327010 ай бұрын
Excellent video. My father was in the Norfolks and went out with the BEF. He was one of the men who went on to St Valery and was captured there. He was a POW for the duration. He didn't find out about the massacre until the 1960's when he discovered Pooleys book. He didn't like to talk about anything much that happened during the war, and although I have read several books around the subject, and visited the area, your video has helped me visualise the battle very clearly. Thank you.
@Initialgs10 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was at St Valery, serving in the Black Watch and was captured there too. Spending the rest of the war in various POW camps, and briefly, due to escaping a few times, a concentration camp. Before being handed over to the Americans by the Russians.
@DTex.45ACP Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love how you incorporate maps into your videos. When I read historic accounts, and historical fiction, I always look at the areas described in goog maps and try to follow along, so these videos are incredibly on-point for me.
@bobbluesbarker11 ай бұрын
A great uncle of mine was killed near Saint-valery-en-caux during the retreat. He served in The Gordon Highlanders. I visited his grave last year in the small military cemetery in Saint-valery-en-caux.
@samuel10125 Жыл бұрын
Anyone who says the Brits "ran away and let the french do all the work" show them this.
@chemcom276 Жыл бұрын
15k (maybe 20k) French were killed and 35k were lost to protect this retreat, and yes, after Dunkirk they were alone to fight on the ground.
@jeromelemoine1942 Жыл бұрын
It's important to have a well balanced assessment of History and not give in to nationalist stereotypes, regardless the nationality. The British never "ran away", they just withdrew toward the coast (in a rather orderly manner), which was the best thing to do given the situation. The French were simply ordered to protect this evacuation and save as many men as possible ((both British and French, plus a few belgians). The staggering losses suffered by the French (16,000 KIA + 34,000 wounded and POWs in 10 days from May 25th to June 3rd) highly contributed to the safe repatriation of almost 200,000 british soldiers to their homeground, which surely changed the course of History. The French indeed lost a battle but, with hindsight, sowed the seeds of the final victory, allowing the British to hold their ground during the Battle of Britain and to counterattack in North Africa the same year. Without Dunkirk, no El Alamein, nor Monte Cassino, nor Normandy Landing.
@samuel10125 Жыл бұрын
@@jeromelemoine1942 Exactly I'm tired of this narrative.
@francesco245 Жыл бұрын
*French
@danielwood9332 Жыл бұрын
@@chemcom276would you reinforce failure by holding your positions while your allies, Belgians to the north east and French around sedan, were fleeing without a hope of a rallying. Would you stand to the last man knowing you are being surrounded by better armed and led troops. If you think they were left alone purposely then more fool you
@timsampson7336 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for bringing this story to a wider audience.
@dalj436210 ай бұрын
It's such a sad story. Heroes, every one of them. Thanks for the video and for keeping their memory alive.
@davidwilliams48308 ай бұрын
My grandfather was part of the BEF and captured at St Valerie. He was a dispatch rider with the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and was part of the “long march” to Poland. He didn’t get home until late 1946, to my Grandmother. Mum was born in 1947 and he wouldn’t talk about his experiences until the late 1980’s, when he met up with a few of his companions from pow camp. I sat in awe listening to the tales as a 10yr old during the day. Heartbreaking to hear such brave men in tears after bed time listening to their stories on the stairs of my grandparents. Bless all those who served. The lucky ones who came home and lest we forget those who did not make it home. My brother played the bugle on Remembrance Day in Colwyn Bay as a schoolboy when there were still a lot of veterans alive rather than listening to the radio broadcasts from London. Truly a moving experience for me (as a Scouts flag bearer), himself and all of the veterans. One chap appreciated it so much that he gave my brother a bottle of scotch the second year he performed at the ceremony- he was 12. God bless all who served
@dondouglass641510 ай бұрын
What a heartbreaking story. Those poor poor men... 😢
@stephensuddens914612 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this. I used to work with a Scots Guard who managed to escape the horrors of the escape at Dunkirk. Without these men he would never of escaped.
@paulseoighemcgee577210 ай бұрын
Well edited and written docu and a touching memorial to those brave men of the Norfolk Regiment . Lest we forget .
@paulbradford8240 Жыл бұрын
When evacuation of the troops was being planned and put into action my Grandfather in First Battalion The Rifle Brigade, was moved across the channel to Calais. He had joined in the early 1930's. They arrived on 22nd May 1940. They fought gallantly in defence of Calais and had orders to fight to the last man. According to Airey Neave's book (he was there), there were thousands of French troops in Calais who would not fight and kept trying to surrender, making things difficult for the defenders. I believe he said there were about 800 French that continued to fight. My Grandfather would speak a little about the horrors of the battle, but would then clam up. He stated that he was able to get to the end of one of the harbour walls, to a small building. They were ordered by a German Officer to surrender or die. They surrendered. He said the worst part was the march in captivity. They were not fed and had to fend for themselves. He said the most indigestible thing he had to eat was raw rhubarb. Anyone that couldn't keep up was shot at the side of the road. He said it took six weeks to get to their prison camp. He was forever bitter about the British Governments failure to save them. He didn't understand my argument that had he been rescued, he might have died later in the War. My father had been born in December 1938. He didn't see his father until he came home a couple of months after the War ended. They didn't have a great relationship after that. But then, there would have been hundreds of thousands of families in a similar position.
@biggles1483 Жыл бұрын
My Great Grandfather was also in the Rifles at Calais, he was Liutenant in A Company I believe. He was also captured after the lines broke while he was being treated in the aid station after being hit in the leg. He made a break for it with a Maj Prettie while on that horrible march by jumping out of the columb and running for it. They managed to make it all the way back to Somme estuary and were waiting for the tide to come in in order to steal a boat before being recatured by a german officer having a cigar on the beach, complete bloody bad luck it being the dead of night. Its very possible that him and your grandfather knew eachother. Unfotunatly that ment like your granfather they were force marched again to the camp where his spent the rest of the war. My Grandad said he was never the same after he came back.
@paulbradford8240 Жыл бұрын
@@biggles1483 They probably did know each other. My Grandfather told me he was Company Sergeant Major, although POW records show he was a Corporal. I wonder if he was promoted in the field at Calais? As far as I can make out, he was in headquarters company. Where they were situated is, I believe where the vehicle parks are now. He told me a story of an order being given to blow a bridge. The soldier ordered to do it refused due to refugees being on it. The reason given was suspected fifth columnists using it to get behind the British lines. (It is a matter of fact that a number of Germans did get through and were sniping the defending forces.) The soldier was ordered to blow the bridge or be shot for refusing an order. My Grandfather told me the guy was shot. I don't know if my Grandfather shot him, or if he blew the bridge. My Grandfather wouldn't talk any more about it. However, he said that The Rifle Brigade had been together for so long, everyone knew each other well and it was known how every soldier died (between 2-300) during the siege. After the War the soldier's family had asked how he was killed but they weren't told.
@oliviermagail57 Жыл бұрын
Hi everyone. Fantastic video. Great explanation and the maps are awesome. My grandfather fought at Dunkirk. He told me a little bit about the terrible bombarding then he was captured. Btw, he was French. He ended up spending 5 years as pow. He always kept a certain bitterness against British, adoring the Americans who rescued from camp.
@ybreton659317 күн бұрын
I speak French you just need to click on English language translation ! sur tla BEF n'a pas combattus sur le sol Français mais aux Pays Bas et Belgique . quand a osés dire que les soldats français ne voulaient pas se battre c'est un mensonge . du 10 mai au 15 juin 1940 68 000 soldats français ont été tués aux combats 35 000 soldats français portés disparus et déclarer morts pour la France en 1945 120 000 soldats blessés lors des combats . Côté allemands 57 000 soldats allemands ont été tués uniquement lors de la bataille de France 22 000 soldats allemands porter disparus et environs autant de blessés que les français . Côté britannique 4700 soldats britanniques tués lors des combats aux Pays-Bas , Belgique et Dunkerque - Calais . les britanniques sur ordres de leurs autorités supérieurs ont abandonnés en France environs 22 000 blessés britanniques lors du fameux rembarquement ou débâcle qu'ils ont osés appelés miracle de Dunkerque . le désastre de Dunkerque se résume outre les 22 000 blessés a l'abandons de 6500 canons , 800 tanks , 25 000 véhicules automitrailleuses , 68 000 tonnes de munitions et armement divers 460 000 tonnes de carburants . depuis Dunkerque des dictons sont rester : partir à l'anglaise , fuir à l'anglaise , partir sans prévenir car le général Gors l'Amiral Ramsay , Winston Churchill avaent préparés l'opération Dynamo sans prévenir les Etats Majors Généraux français et les autoritées politiques françaises . le 15 mai l'Amiral Ramsay recevait l'orde de préparer le réembarquement des armées britanniques soit 5 jours après le début des combats aux Pays-Bas . normalement le réembarquement des troupes britanniques devaient se faire en Belgique dans les ports d'Ostendes et Nieuports . ce que vous les britanniques semblaient Oublier c'est que l'Armée Française se battait sur 3 fronts 1) le front du Nord-Ouest avec leurs pseudo alliés anglais , 2) le front Nord-Est que les allemands n'ont jamais réussi à franchir 3) le Front Sud-Est contre les Italiens , Autrichiens et Allemands ou les trois armées de l'Axes étaient mis en échecs par l'armée française !!! en 1940 les soldats français et le peuple français ont vécus plusieurs trahisons : la première par l'abandon au combats de armée britanniques de soi-disant soldats professionels contrairement ausx soldats français qui était une armées de conscriptions ? la deuxième : de faire croire au monde que les soldats français étaient des lâches ? la Troisième , elle était la pire : les généraux en chefs français étaient des ânes et nuls , et les autorités politiques sont partis sur Bordeaux puis ont signer l'armistice de la honte avec le diable . Mon Grand-Père paternel a fait la première guerre mondiale à Verdun puis le Chemins des Dames à Crâon dans la Sommes . le Grand-Père maternelle été griévement blessé a Douaumont (bataille de verdun) il est mort en 1931 . Mon père était soldat sur le Front Nord-Ouest défendant Lilles n'ayant plus de munitions avec ces camarades ils se sont rendu et ont eu le droit aux honneurs militaires de la part des allemands . prisonnier , il s'évade en sautant du train dans la région de Metz en Lorraine . il rejoint sa région et entre avec son père dans la résistance naissante en octobre 1940 en coupant en premiers des fils téléphoniques etc .etc . etc .puis plus tards aides les aviateurs britanniques en les cachants puis les aidants a s'évader mon Grand- Père et pris par la police allemande en 27 octobre 1942 torturé pendant près 1 mois il est fusillé avec d'autres résistants le 12 décembre 1942 . En avril 1943 mon Père est Arrêter par les Allemands après avoir fait dérailler un train de materiel militaire allemand torturer pendant deux mois environs ils est transféré au camp de concentration et de la mort de Mauthausen dans le nord de l'Autriche en tant que N.N. in French : Nuit et Brouillard ,in German : Nacht und Nebel , in English : Night and Fog ; terme employer pour faire disparaitre un résistant ! s'il a survécu c'est grâce aux résistants espagnols polonais et français du camps de concentration de Mauthausen car même dans des camps de concentrations il y avait des résistants ! LES FRANÇAIS DES LÂCHES ? NON JAMAIS
@paulbradford824016 күн бұрын
@@ybreton6593 Unfortunately, you need to read a bit more about the history leading up to the siege of Calais. May I suggest the excellent book 'Flames over Calais' by Airey Neave, one of the many, like my Grandfather that fought on French soil. Airey Neave details the continual attempts to surrender by some of the French forces. That's not to say they were cowards, but they'd obviously had enough. I'm not decrying the efforts of the brave Resistance movements within France, but there was often infighting among the groups vying for power in order to obtain the arms and money that was being sent from the Allies. Another excellent book detailing SAS and SOE operations in France in 1944 is 'Fire from the Forest'. The infighting included denouncing opposition party resistance groups to the Germans meaning execution of their compatriots. So, it's not as cut and dried as doctored history would have you believe. There are things that people prefer to ignore or forget, even today. The Vichy French and others who helped round up the Jews in 'La Rafle'. People imprisoned in France that had never seen a German soldier, but were imprisoned by La Milice, the French version of the Gestapo. Read the autobiography of Michel Thomas 'The Test of Courage'. No one comes up smelling of roses in War.
@kingdaniel69 Жыл бұрын
These are the best war videos on KZbin.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@cristiantomlinson5945 Жыл бұрын
My Great Uncle, Lance Corporal David Tomlinson of the Royal Norfolk regiment was there, one of these brave, unfortunates at La Paradis. His photo sits at my bedside. His Brother Robert, was in the Merchant navy, serving on an armoured tug boat in the Firth of Forth. He was killed when it struck a German mine. The only surviving Brother, my Grandfather Alfred, his regiment were sent out during D day. By request of his mother, only having one son left, he was transferred, and spent his duty guarding Buckingham Palace on Horseback, reluctantly not being able to revenge his older brothers.
@fabiomgbr Жыл бұрын
The way you describe and give details on the videos is great!! Feels like traveling to the places… thanks a lot!! 🙏🏻
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
So nice of you
@vanmush10 ай бұрын
My grandfather was in the same position with the Queens Regt, defending a bridge over the same canal, he was captured after days of shelling and survived the war after being a PoW for 5 years.
@MrTravis9159 ай бұрын
These short documentaries you guys make are by far the best war docs made. The research, pictures, maps and presentation is 2nd to none. Bravo!
@captainhindsight8779 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic content, really important things like this which should never be lost to history.
@Jumplin36 Жыл бұрын
Well this made me cry, Accurate and well done. Jayne ( Bert's gran daughter) .
@CIMAmotor10 ай бұрын
You should be very proud of him Jayne.
@Jumplin3610 ай бұрын
@@CIMAmotor I am... Very.
@SirZanZa10 ай бұрын
@Britishempirewillneverdie how do you know though?
@mvashton9 ай бұрын
@BritishempirewillneverdieI hope you are wrong. Stolen valour (if true) is deplorable but I reserve judgement.
@neilhayz155510 ай бұрын
An excellent documentary. I live in Norfolk and the massacre is commemorated in the Castle Museum in Norwich. God rest their valiant souls.
@benstallard9924 Жыл бұрын
Another absolutely superb vid from the Battle GuideVT team. Having been to Le Paradis with Dan and seen it for real, this video really does the place and the events of that day, justice. The best military history channel on YT!
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ben, much appreciated mate and hope you had a great Xmas!
@scotthegley47232 ай бұрын
Absolutely top notch documentary for its graphics, narrative and scope. Thank you.
@colinthomas546210 ай бұрын
Excellent account, thanks for making this interesting YT video. My uncle survived Dunkirk he was acting Sargent in the Royal Artillery went on to win the Military Medal at the Anzio beach head in Italy. Thanks again.
@greghawkes4711 Жыл бұрын
We have just watched your video and think it is really good in its accurate and clear telling of this terrible massacre. Jeannette Hawkes (née Pooley)
@ProfessorM-he9rl3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this post. Most educational.
@alessandrapirelli7040 Жыл бұрын
Nicely put together. The aerials used were very helpful.
@SunKing96810 ай бұрын
BRILLIANT job on this lads
@averagepal57210 ай бұрын
Most underrated video on KZbin.
@danvid193510 ай бұрын
This was very well done. Visually, and also the commentary was respectful and informative. Fine efforts. Thank you
@bikenavbm122910 ай бұрын
very well done perfect mix of information to understand the events, thank you.
@patrickmarkdunleavy76810 ай бұрын
Brave men, regardless of nationality, were overwhelmed by a well equipped, tactically innovative and motivated enemy. No disgrace. The actions of both those brave British and French defenders was heroic and enabled events to be changed in time. We owe all of them a debt of gratitude. Lest we forget.
@eddiegibbs110 ай бұрын
Thank you for compiling and posting this video, which I found to be an accurate account of the events that day, as well as very moving. I visited Le Paradis on 27th May last year, my connection being that my cousin-once-removed, Pte. Francis Porter of 2Bn, Royal Norfolk Regiment was killed in battle earlier that day at Pont d'Avelette. A memorial to the 97 men who died now stands in the grounds of Norwich Cathedral, dedicated in a service there on May 27th 2021, where Dennis O'Callaghan, William O'Callaghan's son, took one of the readings. A further memorial to the 97 is planned at the National Memorial Arboretum.
@JakeTheBear1 Жыл бұрын
Amazing presentation and research! Bless all these brave men who held back so the rest could live another day!
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thank you kindly!
@stogmot110 ай бұрын
thankyou for bringing this story and their lives to us .
@lm1579 ай бұрын
You shouldn't EVER forget that. I'm Polish and such happened all the time during September Campaign in 1939 Poland. Every time Poles stood their ground and fought hard, Germans killed all the remain soldiers and villagers from nearby villages. For you it's single separated event or events, for us Poles it was everyday fact. We will never forget.
@martinhogg533710 ай бұрын
A sad and horrendous story! Thank you for bringing this to light. We must not forget!
@comicbossone241110 ай бұрын
Subbed! What a wonderful video. We must keep the memory and lessons from this event and these people alive.
@MarkBridger-u9b9 ай бұрын
Christopher Lee's Wartime Service would be great ! Keep up the Good Work your Channel is Brilliant. Well Done.
@beachcomberbob349610 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation of a cruel event. Thank you.
@mateoshulz370810 ай бұрын
Great quality and meaningful content. Well done!
@thehistoryexplorer Жыл бұрын
Another brilliant video. I've always wanted to stop off here and film when on my 'booze-cruise replen'. Thank you for sharing. What a story!
@BattleGuideVT10 ай бұрын
Thanks mate, sorry, no idea how I missed this, keep up the great work! Dan
@FACrazyCanuck Жыл бұрын
My uncle was fighting rear guard action at Castle Hazebrook with the 1st Bucks and he was captured here and spent the rest of the war as a POW.
@caractacusbrittania744210 ай бұрын
My grandad was 1st Oxford and bucks l.i On the scheldt,near hollain. He and three others were in a dugout closest to the river as forward observation. Their dugout was hit by a German shell, none survived. That same day, the order was given to withdraw to Dunkirk. My nan, on hearing the news went blind, and stayed that way for a month. She had to raise 5 small children, alone. She found work as a machine operator making shell fuses. She remained at the same factory Untill 1968 and her death. She never remarried.
@FACrazyCanuck10 ай бұрын
@@caractacusbrittania7442 thank you for sharing your story. My uncle was captured at the train station while defending from a maintenance trench.
@leeredman89802 ай бұрын
Wow, that was so powerful, what a great piece of work, well done 👏👏👏👏
@turboz6477 Жыл бұрын
Least we forget! Thank you for this interesting and informative video. Amazing yet terrible story. Keep up the good work
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Tha ks for taking the time to watch :)
@turboz6477 Жыл бұрын
@@francesco245 glad you remembered 😜🤣
@johnallen780710 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine the courage required in this situation knowing that, at best, you would be taken prisoner. RIP to very brave men.
@robertcorradi8573 Жыл бұрын
Astounding ..... & your research and commentary are second to none. Thank you .
@derekhawkins7290 Жыл бұрын
The yanks where very fond of making fun of our boys at Dunkirk it is such a shame that their soldiers weren't a patch on ours
@mneveitt10 ай бұрын
I never heard an American say anything like that, I hope it’s not true, much respect
@janlindtner305 Жыл бұрын
Really excellent lecture. I knew about this and other breaches of the genevere convention, but not in such detail and thanks for the "tour" of the crime scene.👍👍👍
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Glad you found it interesting!
@JimLander3 ай бұрын
Thanks for recounting this tragic event.
@baz-wc4fi Жыл бұрын
Very well Compiled, best ive seen on YT, more please. UK
@robertthomas377710 ай бұрын
Keeping the story alive is vital. This is very well done. Thanks. Lest we forget. 🦘🇦🇺👍
@Paratus7 Жыл бұрын
Read Sean Longdon’s book: ‘The Men they Left Behind’ for more on the bravery of British forces in France which allowed the escape from Dunkirk to happen. One of the best books I have read on this part of the war. 🇬🇧
@andreww925210 ай бұрын
A wonderful account of a brutul story .. well done ... lest we forget
@Free-Bodge7910 ай бұрын
This channel is really good. Love your stuff guys. The way you bring all these story's and memory's together is just first class. Thank you so much for putting out this content. It's first rate. 👍💛👊
@thebossmonster12 Жыл бұрын
One of the best pictures in this video that most original documentaries seem to omit at 8:51. Not many portraying German footage ever seem to give them any touch of humanity, only ever showing them dashing across hedgerows or tanks shooting into buildings indiscriminately. This happened yes, but the medic tending another soldiers wounds shows that side of war that is just young soldiers caught up just trying to survive. Sensationalist documentaries don't like to show these types of pictures because it doesn't show the narrative of Germany as the Evil Nazis that slaughtered families indiscriminately house to house or committed other heinous acts that should not ever be forgotten. Always seeing footage of British or Americans tending their wounded and carrying them to safety, but almost never from Germany despite us knowing they had dedicated filming teams that accompanied many German Divisions for propaganda purposes. Wonderful job on the video as always and keep up the amazing work! Thank you for your hard hitting research and story-driven knowledge!
@trevorfuller1078 Жыл бұрын
@the bossmonster12: Nevertheless, be in absolutely no doubt here that Waffen SS atrocities did then occur in the days leading up to the Dunkirk Evacuation in May, 1940, against British & French Troops! The Norfolks at Le Paradis & the Warwicks at Wormhoudt a few miles away were well documented testaments to these absolutely unnecessary & illegal massacres perpetrated to men who had already surrendered to other German forces (Wehrmacht units), who were then handed over to backing up SS forces (Toetenkopf Division) that were apparently not happy to serve performing effectively, “fetch & carry chores & roles” as often was then the case to Wehrmacht or even Luftwaffe units! That the Waffen SS probably felt were far beneath their dignity to do, as putative elite formations, notwithstanding the unpleasant fact at that time, early in the war, that this was only in reality so, in their own (Himmler & the rest of his SS troops) eyes & perceptions alone at the time!! In contrast, in the Wehrmacht’s Senior Command’s eyes, in 1940 both in Poland & later in France the Wehrmacht viewed the Waffen SS in far from complementary terms & held them generally in low-esteem in this early part of the war! However, as their experience & competency grew, especially in Russia later in the war this opinion would change by most Wehrmacht observers, albeit somewhat gradually & grudgingly in most cases!
@gibraltersteamboatco888 Жыл бұрын
Le Paradis is just one on the endless list of atrocities and war crimes committed by the Germans during WW2, Europe is littered with memorials to their victims. These heinous acts were not limitted to the SS or Wehrmacht as many were committed by German civilians. The German deliberate program of extermination, genocide, massacres,.starvation and bombing systematically killed over 11 million people including 6 million Jews. These plus 19 million dead Soviet civilians (the single largest group) are proof that the Germans did slaughter families indiscriminately house to house and did commit heinous acts that should never be forgotten. R.I.P. to all victims of German aggression.
@alexandanu Жыл бұрын
Excellent documentary - really well done ❤
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Many thanks!
@GARTH25710 ай бұрын
Great film thank you BATTLE GUIDE VT for helping keep the memories alive of these brave brits,my great uncle Rhys underwood was killed fighting a defensive retreat to dunkirk on the belguim/french border MAY21st 1940.RIP those brave lads that laid down their lives for britain.
@NellaCuriosity Жыл бұрын
Incrediblely informative documentary!
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@damianbutterworth2434 Жыл бұрын
My Granddad Frank Butterworth was a rear machine gunner at Dunkirk. Wish I knew more about what he got up too. He did say he grabbed men onto the boat that would of drowned.
@thesmellypocket110 ай бұрын
Thanks
@clementaut7287 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this great video. This is an awesome way to approach history. Keep going
@tokysobukanla Жыл бұрын
Brilliant as always! Keep up the good work! 👍🏿
@BlackGold-fc7tu10 ай бұрын
My grandfather was in the British infantry that was pushed into the sea where he decided to swim out to a boat. He later returned to France in a Sherman with the Grenadier Guards.
@simonwelch789910 ай бұрын
Fabulous presentation
@glennmorrissey2529 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your great efforts here, it was an incident I was not aware of.
@sirmattalott148410 ай бұрын
Well done to the makers of this film.
@dansmith4077 Жыл бұрын
For the algorithm important video thank you
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks very much Dan
@knockshinnoch195010 ай бұрын
An excellent video presentation.
@BattleGuideVT10 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching
@murph529010 ай бұрын
My great uncle was injured at Dunkirk, he was Welsh. Then on 6th June 1944 alongside my granddad (who was a Dubliner, Irish) landed on Gold Beach and was injured again. Don't make them like that these days. They married two English sisters who would cycle past their road block, pre-Normandy landings. The stories they would tell of the war had us kids riveted. I've got photos of them both, arms around each other with a pint glass raised at the Hotel Atlantic, Hamburg, celebrating the end of the war together, as well as a heap of other photos during the war period. They'd roll in their graves if they knew people would be willing to roll over for a dictator like Putin, people learn nothing from history. To think people in politics like Farage idolise Hitler. My granddad lost a brother and my gran lost a brother fighting fascism (both on different bomber crews). Gran also had a sister blinded from a bomb raid. WW2 affected everyone my grandparents age when I was a kid, everyone had a story, it wasn't that long ago.
@unojayc10 ай бұрын
Many thanks to these brave lads!..God bless them!..
@davenewman459610 ай бұрын
Brilliant content, thank you
@BattleGuideVT10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@MartinWalshDC Жыл бұрын
Some interesting trivia. Major Lisle Ryder, A/CO 2nd Royal Norfolk, is the brother of Commander Robert 'Red' Ryder who earned the Victoria Cross for leading the British naval forces in the audacious British naval and commando raid 'Operation Chariot' on the Nazi occupied Normandie dry dock in Saint Nazaire in March 1942. I've just finished writing the script for a movie on 'Operation Chariot'. Jeremy Clarkson narrated a terrific documentatry on the raid. Of course Red Ryder didn't learn about this brutal massacre until after the war, all he knew was his brother was killed in action fighting this rear guard action.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Amazing! We are releasing a documentary about Operation Chariot on Friday and were unaware of this connection... absolutely fascinating!
@kumasenlac5504 Жыл бұрын
The third Ryder son died in a Japanese captivity after the fall of Singapore.
@samcruickshanks685610 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this video
@pauldonohue425510 ай бұрын
My wife grandfather had to find his commanding officer on the beach of Dunkirk to ask to leave. He was some of the last men out. He then returned on D-day behind enemy lines to take Horsa bridge inland to prevent armour reinforcements.
@OnlineEnglish-wl5rp10 ай бұрын
British very strong in defence: ~ Rorke's drift ~ Le Paradis ~ Arnhem ~ Gloster Hill ~ Port Stanley ~ Lungi Lol ~ Musa Qala
@grahammccrindle5523 Жыл бұрын
Heart breaking end to these brave British soldiers, justice caught up with the SS commander....Great content .
@RalphBrooker-gn9iv10 ай бұрын
I’m ex-Royal Hampshire Regiment, 1978-1990, now PWRR. Massive respect for the Royal Norfolks. Their descendants comprise The Royal Anglian Regiment. British line regiments may not be glamorous. Rather they are indispensable. Few remain today as Europe seems less stable than at any time since the Berlin Blockade.
@lochside76479 ай бұрын
The 'Last stand' was actually made by the Highland Division, which was still fighting at St, Valery on the coast, up until the 12th of June. Days after the evacuation of all the 'B.E.F.. Strange that this sacrifice is never mentioned or seen in documentaries/films of the Dunkirk evacuation !
@johnmackay77899 ай бұрын
Thats a story that also needs to be told. Its said that after the war the ones that survived the "last stand "got a fair bit of stick because they spent the rest of the war as POWs avoiding all the future fighting. Pretty sad considering the sacrifice.
@freedompodcast451810 ай бұрын
RIP to all the brave British soldiers who fallen in this battle 🙏 ⚘️🌹
@bowenisland100 Жыл бұрын
Great job - thank you. Great channel. I do wish you could tone down the music: I find it distracting.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the suggestion we will look into it.
@1fires111 ай бұрын
Actually they and many others during the campaign were the real heroes of Dunkerque that stayed behind and defended so the rest could be evacuated..
@dalebechtel890410 ай бұрын
This channel is amazing. Thank you
@Ben-Downlow.10 ай бұрын
I think it would be extreamly difficult for any one of us who was not there in France in may 1940 to apeciate the utter force terror hellishness and sense of armageddon that those men who were there fought in. Thank you gentlemen for those freedoms still left to us that have not yet been weaseled awy by power hungry cowards.
@luispiros Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the maps and slick graphics, this is how I learn. I’ve never been so interested in WW’s until now!
@Richard-pe4cx Жыл бұрын
my grandfather was rescued from dunkirk a very moving and harrowing account
@ChoppingtonOtter10 ай бұрын
There men truly were fighting utter evil. We owe them so much.
@oliverorchard229610 ай бұрын
Love these videos, my great grandad edgar plunkett was a captain at Dunkirk, he led stragglers over the mossy wet rocks at night to make it the beach, tracers would fly overhead close, Dunkirk was on fire, he went on to become a major in el alamein and monte cassino and survived.. I took my nan his daughter to watch Dunkirk in 2017, she was yelling in the cinema at the screen that it was wrong and thst fire and bombs were everywhere 😂 she wasn't wrong
@daniellee5147 Жыл бұрын
God I love this channel.
@BattleGuideVT Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@lesking6541 Жыл бұрын
I am full of admiration for these men. I do wonder what they would think if they could return and see the way our "elites" have betrayed the country and are well on the way to ruining it.