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Sunday, 31 January 2016

MEGA GAMES


Chaps just to let you know that we are currently looking to find likeminded historical WW2 players to start to set up Mega Games based on historical battles rather than tournaments. By collectively pooling forces, terrain and with enthusiastic spirit Hengist believes we can pull off Hollywood Sets and fantastic games.

Don't be under any illusion this will be easy but do start by getting in contact, subscribe and we can start to develope an international club that meets twice a year to produce epics.

To contact the editor just email landymorem@gmail.com. Furthermore, the ed is only to happy helping anyone improve their sets, find sources, figures and even paint for commission if you like.

Ultimately we want to develope a network for interactive paint and chats, arrange historical meetings, games days and terrain and figure swaps.

SO HELP GET THIS MESSAGE OUT THERE AND GET IN TOUCH.

Best wishes

Hengist







Thursday, 28 January 2016

Video Referencing

Hi chaps thought I would share these video clips with you. Great detail and colour but please note I do not subscribe to any political statements presenting these. The HCT site has many videos and they are very well put together although the bias is towards a German standpoint. Look out for more action soon.







Sunday, 24 January 2016

PRIMOSOLE Bridge

Good Morning Gentlemen

We report this month from Scilly where we were asked to put on a game at Quex Park. Alas like the paras we faced a number of problems on arrival where we lacked tables and in the spirit of the period decided to go as best we could. Therefore we had to condense everything but this produces a bloody marvellous game which we all enjoyed enormously.

A few caveats old beans.I apologise for some photos and the purists out there may comment that this wasn't quite historical but next time this is done properly we aim to do so. For those wishing to do this battle which we thoroughly recommend,  I have I included some internet information photos and an abridged pocket history.

























This was our attempt to o test out and relight the whole of the three day fighting for the bridge but most importantly the airborne drop and the first use of Pathfinders and gliders. The enemy....Fallschrimjager and reluctant Italians.

Battle Report
The photos tell the tale....
but again 12 turns, random historical cards, Sophia Loren, medics and US air support card driven with the possibility of blue on blue targeting, coastal gun support and all the other usual magic?

The paras dropped well with about 10 % casualties north near the sunken road and about 20% south
and practically on the pill box. What followed was an excellent co-ordinated attack by the paras and a perfect landing by the glider troops whom the Paras poured scorn on by the end of the game. Outstanding banter and bravado and a series of gutsy and aggressive fighting storming the bunker and the bridge and holding the sunken road after repeated assaults.

Alas time does not permit to relate all this tale in detail this time but there were some magical and historical moments. The result the paras captured their objectives and held ie. the sunken road, the Jonny Feature to the south and the bridge but they had taken over seventy percent casualties whilst the German and Axis holding force nearly 90% casualties with one Italian unit sure ding before a shot
was fired a card driven event.


The players were:


Major "Dan"  Dare 1 st  Battalion, a giant of a man with the mad courage beloved by his men who lead and fought a heroic action at the sunken road when surrounded and low on ammunition and destroyed six tanks and three enemy platoons although with heavy loses.

Major "Steely" Ironmonger 2nd battalion a damn brave and charismatic man whom defied the charms  of  Sofia Loren the Italian collaborator and lead a magnificent charge against the pill box and took the bridge with frightful casualties but held and earned the respect of his men.

And of Course a Paget.... this time Lord Harry Paget's, of comic fame, little brother, Captain "
Primrose" Peter Paget.

A small bespectacled officer and excellent tactician and support commander somewhat nervous by disposition but cool headed under fire and alarmed at any loss to his lovely boys.  Somewhat out of sorts to the Paget's normal stock of womanising and drinking his squeaky comment that he sustained no casualties and didn't get even a scratch to his glider,  lead Dan Dare and Steely  Ironmonger to nearly lynch him but so these characters are born and we can't wait for their next outing.

Enjoy the pics and if you need any help or have any comments you only need to ask..

Hengist




































AN ABRIDGED  BATTLE HISTORY FOR PRIMOSOLE BRIDGE


During the night of the 13 July, 1943 part of the 1st Parachute Brigade was dropped in the area of the Primosole Bridge which stretches across the River Lentini in Sicily. It removed the demolition charges placed there, however, many of the troops had been dropped wide of the target and consequently only a small force was available to hold the bridge against repeated German attempts to recapture it. It was, therefore, essential for troops of the 50th Division to reach the Bridge sometime during the 14th or at latest by nightfall As 69 Brigade had so far borne the brunt of such fighting as there had been during the advance, 151 Brigade now took over from them. The three Durham Battalions set out on a forced march of some 25 miles, the 9th Battalion DLI leading, followed by the 8thDLI and then the 6thDLI. By afternoon the 9thDLI Battalion was well over half way and by dusk, together with 4 Armoured Brigade, it was within a mile of the bridge.

The paratroopers had bad news to relate. All day they had fought back repeated counter-attacks with success, but at about 7.30 pm, just two hours before the arrival of the 9th Battalion, lack of ammunition had forced their sadly depleted force to withdraw in the face of another counter-attack. With demolition charges removed, of course, the bridge could not be blown and the paratroopers were near enough to prevent the enemy planting any more. But the Battalions of the 151 Brigade were too tired after their forced march to fight a battle that night and the Brigadier decided to postpone any such attack until the following morning. It was not the Italians with whom they would have to deal but Germans of the 3rd Parachute Regiment, most of whom were veterans of the Crete and Russian campaigns and all of whom had been flown from the Italian mainland only a short while before. The country round about the Primosole Bridge is flat and open. The road running north from Lentini runs along the ridge and from about 1,000 yards south of the bridge a good view is obtainable not only of the bridge itself but also of the country beyond it. The bridge was four hundred feet long with a superstructure of iron girders about eight feet above a sluggish reed-bordered river. North of the bridge were two small farms, one each side of the road, each consisting or two or three buildings and a barn. The road beyond the bridge could be seen running absolutely straight, between two lines of poplars, towards Catania. North of the river are thick vineyards, dotted with olive groves, to a depth of some four hundred yards; beyond them lies open country. Nothing, however, could be seen of the enemy positions nor of a sunken road some few hundred yards north of the river; indeed such cover as there was lay all on the enemy side of the bridge for the British side was completely flat and open. Both the 8th and 9th Battalions tried to snatch a few hours rest during the night. The 6th Battalion was still some way behind, after clearing un at Solarino, and did not arrive until later on the 15th. But at 4 a.m. the 9th was attacked by some Italian Armoured cars which penetrated as far as Battalion Headquarters before being halted. The Battalion antirank gunners quickly came into action and soon put an end to this desperate Italian bid from which there were fewenemy survivors.

Sharp at 7.30 a.m. the 9th Battalion attacked as planned, supported by the fire of two Field Regiments. But the companies advancing over open ground were heavily machine-gunned before they reached the river bank and lost a number of men. Only a few platoons were able to cross the river and where they did so, ran into heavy resistance from Germans concealed in the vineyards and lining the sunken road which hitherto no one knew existed. Many were drowned in the river as they crossed. After fierce hand-to-hand fighting the Battalion's precarious hold north of the river was finally broken and those men who had gone across were driven back, leaving their dead and wounded behind them.

After this first encounter it was clear to the Brigadier that the bridge was a tougher nut to crack than had been hoped. Although a further attack by the 6th Battalion was planned for later in the day news had been received from Corps Headquarters that there was no immediate urgency for the capture of the bridge provided that a proper footing was secured on the far side by the 16 July. Another daylight attack would be suicidal; so the 8th Battalion's attack was postponed and timed to take place by the light of the moon at two o'clock the next morning.

The Battalion was fortunate in having the help of Lieutenant-Colonel Alastair Pearson - CO of the Parachute Regiment - in the operation. The information he provided was invaluable, and he offered to lead the attacking companies over the river at a crossing place he knew of, some hundred yards upstream from the bridge. Two companies were to cross here, then move back towards the bridge and when once they had captured it, the rest of the Battalion was to cross over it.

For an hour and twenty minutes before Colonel Pearson guided "A" and "D" Companies across the river the guns put down concentrations upstream of the bridge and a squadron of tanks and a platoon of machine-guns joined in the overture. For the last ten minutes every gun was concentrated on the area of the bridge. Then at 2.10 a.m. the two companies waded the river at two points fifty yards apart. Once across, the thickly planted vineyards made movement difficult - it would have been difficult enough by daylight - and platoons had to shout their numbers to maintain contact. However, the unexpected form of attack took the Germans by surprise and when the companies reached the bridge only a few of them were encountered. So far so good, wrote David Rissik in his book "'The DLI at War". Both companies established themselves across the Catania road, though "A" Company had to run the gauntlet of Spandau machine-gun fire to get there; and once in position visibility was limited to only a few yards due to the thickness of the vines, shrubs and tall grass for it was the middle of the growing season. Constant vigilance was needed to keep the Germans at bay.


Now it was the turn of the rest of the Battalion to cross the bridge. Colonel Lidwill, who was with the leadingcompanies, had arranged a number of alternative signals for bringing up the Battalion; but when he got back to the bridge every one of them broke down. The mortar flares had got separated from the mortars; the wireless sets had got "drowned" during the crossing, and an R .E. Carrier with a wireless received a direct hit as it reached the bridge. Just at the critical moment, however, a War Office observer turned up at the bridge riding a bicycle. It was rather like a fairy tale but the C.O. dispatched him back to the Battalion to tell it to come forward at once.
Night fell and the Brigade prepared to deliver the coup de grace. Ibis was the task of the 6th and 9th Battalions who, shortly after l.30 am, forded the river upstream from the bridge area where the 8th had crossed the night before. They had little difficulty in crossing; but once on the far bank they encountered savage resistance from the German paratrooper who stood and fought it out until they either shot down their assailants or were shot down themselves. Movement was not easy through the vineyards and companies got split up in the thick undergrowth. As they fought their way forward in the moonlight they cleared up opposition in their path but inevitably left pockets of resistance on their flanks. "B" Company of the 6th Battalion, under Captain Reggie Atkinson, had just such an experience. Once in the vineyards it met intense automatic fire from the Germans in the sunken road and cleared tie Germans from it. Then they struggled on, using bayonets and grenades, to a position beyond it on the left of the Catania road. There, approximately one platoon strong and entrenched in a shallow ditch and a large shell crater, Reggie Atkinson and the remnants of his company were able to engage any Germans tying to advance up the road to reinforce the bridgehead and, what is more, to prevent any in the bridgehead from withdrawing from it. At dawn the Germans managed to infiltrate back into the sunken road and for a time they made things difficult for the Company; but for three and a half hours the enemy were kept at bay and finally driven back. This gallant action very materially influenced the course of the battle.

"A" Company of the 9th Battalion was less fortunate. It started out only two platoons strong and almost at once came under heavy fire. The advance was not made any easier by loose telephone and barbed wire lying among the vines; but the Company pushed on towards the main road and captured a machine-gun post and took three prisoners; by which time the Company Commander, Captain Hudson, found he had only fifteen men left. Heavy fire was then opened on this small party from their rear. So they began to withdraw towards the main road. As it got lighter, fire was opened on them from the road itself, but Hudson, recognising the Commander of another Company advancing on the far side of the road, managed to attract his attention and signal to him to attack the post on the road.


This they both did but were halted by very heavy fire. Hudson then found himself both short of ammunition and with only seven unwounded men left so he ordered them to make their way back to the Battalion as best they could. He himself was wounded and was soon afterwards taken prisoner. At about 6 a.m. the Germans counter-attacked with tanks, but the attack was broken up by shell-fire; and shortly afterwards both the 6th and 9th Battalions reported they were well beyond the bridge, At 7 a.m. some Sherman tanks crossed into the bridgehead and broke through the grapevines shooting at everything in sight. The effect of this added support was felt at once. The sunken road was quieter than for 24 hours and gradually white handkerchiefs began to appear in increasing numbers along the length of it. The Germans had had enough. By mid-day all resistance had ceased; over 150 Germans had surrendered; and their dead on the ground numbered over three hundred. The area around the bridge was a regular hell's kitchen; it was littered with smashed rifles and automatics, torn pieces of equipment, bloodstained clothing, overturned ammunition boxes and the bodies of British and German dead. It was a scene of terrible destruction and telling evidence of a bitter struggle in which neither side had asked or given quarter. There can have been few better German troops in Sicily than those who held the bridge. They were Nazi zealots to a man, but they fought superbly well and as their Battalion Commander was led away to captivity, Colonel Clarke of the 9th Battalion quietly shook him by the hand.

Apart from the British paratroopers the brunt of the fighting had fallen on the 8th Battalion who owed much to the conspicuous leadership of their C.O., Colonel Lidwill, and to the countless deeds of individual heroism that occurred over the period of the battle. But when at the end of the fighting the three DLI Battalions counted their casualties they had lost between them five hundred killed, wounded and missing.

Six regiments were awarded the Honour which the Durhams, Parachute Regiment and the London Scottish elected to carry.

Saturday, 16 January 2016

The Brethren of Godno: The Reluctant HJALMAR

Morning Gents...

Another fab battle from Finland...this time a little twist on a scenario from the period concerning evacuating civilians from No Mans Land. In this scenario I wanted to examine the role of civilians in harms way and a method of Victory Points being available for the Russians which the Fins had to circumvent.

SITUATION REPORT

It is a clear day, no heavy weather temperatures only minus 20, it actually dropped to nearly minus fourty in 1939 the coldest winter on record in Finland at that time in living memory..A monastery and church sit in the middle of the battlefield with refugees before the Manaheim line which is protected by two heavy MG concrete bunkers;  rare on the line most fortified positions being dugouts with logs as the Fins had limited concrete and steel to build casements etc.

The Monks of the Abbey are highly zealous pacifists and will not move, convinced their presence will prevent the maelstrom about them. The Soviets want the vantage point for artillery observation and as a launchpad for assault. The fins want the civilians and monks to move to safety.

RULES

Heavy Waether rules, random cards for events and reserves. Weather was rolled but was Normal.




The Monks of Godno are apolitical and heal writhing 16 inches all sides until convinced to support either side.

Each civilian base was worth 1VP and the Monks 2VPS. To remove them and get them safely to the
rear a combat base must be in contact and make a skill test. To remove the Monks from the abbey two back to back skill test rolls must be made.This means the Abbey context is work a total of 6 VPS for
the Russians and the Manaheim Line objectives of two bunkers 2 VPS each and the dragons teeth
road 5 VPS.

THE FORCES.

The Soviets had an infantry company of three depleted companies which were Strelkovy with Wave Attack and a Engineer company all with attached Machineguns which were low on ammunition with a reduced Rof of 4. They also had a tank company of  two companies of T26 tanks of seven tanks each and a five tank flamethrower company. Only the infantry started on the board the tanks to arrive
in Reserves.

In the card deck was artillery of 12x 122 artillery another Infantry company, very depleted, and 10 more T26 twin turrets tanks with air support and some other specials.

The Fins could pick 6 units from their two companies. They also had to man an empty MG bunker just completed and as well, hold the line, rescue the civilians and monks and therefore get troops forwards into No Mans Land.

In their deck their artillery, another Ski platoon, a full company of Sweedish Volunteers ( 8,000 served in Finland by the way) rated CT with their national HOH rules, and some specials including a Antitank, sled and the divisional antitank guns of 2 x Bofors  Sweedish made ATGS and a single captured tank limited to the road...unreliable and overloaded and conscript class.

The Fins elected for 2 infantry, the 3 captured Russian 76s pressed into service, a ski platoon, MG
platoon and Mortars.

BATTLE ACTION.

This was a damn exciting game no doubt about it.

The  Fins won the first turn and immediately deployed the ski Troops from ambush whom raced for the Monestry against a hoard of incoming Russian infantry. As expected the battle gravitated around the Abbey. The Fins getting their tank, which blocked the dragons teeth road, the divisional anti tank guns and the anti tank sled pretty quickly. The Russians got the tank company reserves quickly. However due to the shortages, if a tank rolled a one to bog or double it immediately broke down. The Soviets lost 9 tanks this way that day.

Initially it went well for the ski troops but the Monks would not shift. A Russian assault got in failed to hit and they broke off leaving one base in the abbey to plead with the abbot. Eventually the corporal Fredricks was successful but now tanks approached at the double and the ski troops looked done for. However the sled ATG then attached to the ski troops opened fire and destroyed the command tank and two other tanks and bailed two more. Private Hjalmar was immediately elevated at the end of the game to a single man Team for his heroism but they were not out for it yet. The Russians captured and convinced a Finish base of civilians to turn coat and they pressed ther attacks forwards to both bonkers securing the church but the 1IC WAS CUT IN HALF BY A MORTAR ROUND HAVING BEEN SAVID ON SEVERAL OCCATIONS BY THE ABBOT.

Attack after attack took place on the bunkers, the Sweeds in their baptism of fire heroically holding the now  manned HMG bunker casement supported by a Heavy HMG Finish platoon. Again and again the  Soviets were cut down by the desperate Fins as they charged over the open in the snow. The flame tanks then struck and destroyed 5 bases or twenty men in one flame attack but then all bogged down just as the Fins thought  the tanks would break through. Finish snipers  continued to pin the enemy and the ski troops fell back to the lines as more Soviet tanks loomed. Then the abbot seeing the destruction returned to the field and set up an aid station for the Fins heartbroken that the abbey was lost and the Reds were pillaging the grounds for food and valuables.

And so it pressed on with theSweedish Volunteers  finally rerepulsing the tanks in  the last tur because they too bogged down.

 The Soviets had lost 14 tanks, 9 mechanically broken down,  the rest to the sled and 76 and Bofors ATG.  In addition  three depleted companies of infantry were mown down  but the Fins had be sorely pressed although th y looked on in horror  when the Soviet card for  the    artillery card arriving in the last turn  for. 12 gun 1222 battery became available but then the Reds had  no 1IC to spot.

The Reds  had benefited from one turn when there was an. Eclipse to gain movements forwards under darkness and had forced the fins to deploy a minefield and remove a platoon but the fins and Sweeds  had lost very little about 50 men  compared to nearly 200 Russians the Flame tanks being the most devastating to them.

The Fins achieved 9 VPS the Soviets 1VP

Exciting and as we shook hands and marvelled at the game,  we looked forward to more from the Finish War.

If you are interested in this campaign, have any ideas or suggestions please comment and if you are a regular reader please subscribe.

Laters and it is damn cold in the studio at present

Best wishes