Notice: Only variables should be passed by reference in /customers/a/b/4/worldwarmedia.com/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/barcelona/option-tree/ot-loader.php on line 98 Notice: Only variables should be passed by reference in /customers/a/b/4/worldwarmedia.com/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/barcelona/option-tree/ot-loader.php on line 304 Notice: Function register_block_script_handle was called incorrectly. The asset file for the "editorScript" defined in the "contact-form-7/contact-form-selector" block definition is missing. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 5.5.0.) in /customers/a/b/4/worldwarmedia.com/httpd.www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 5835 Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /customers/a/b/4/worldwarmedia.com/httpd.www/wp-content/themes/barcelona/option-tree/ot-loader.php:98) in /customers/a/b/4/worldwarmedia.com/httpd.www/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8 Maps Archives - World War Media https://www.worldwarmedia.com/category/maps/ World War Media Wed, 08 Nov 2017 23:05:30 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 https://www.worldwarmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/cropped-WWM11-JPG-2-1-32x32.jpg Maps Archives - World War Media https://www.worldwarmedia.com/category/maps/ 32 32 Operation Market Garden: Crossroads Map https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/03/03/operation-market-garden-crossroads/ https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/03/03/operation-market-garden-crossroads/#respond Fri, 03 Mar 2017 22:55:57 +0000 https://www.worldwarmedia.com/?p=2216 On October 5, 1944, Company E of the 506 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101 Airborne launched an attack on the SS at the dikes between the Dutch towns of Heteren and Randwijk, the Netherlands. They succesfully cleared the area and prevented the German troops from making a diversory attack to support a larger scaled assault by […]

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On October 5, 1944, Company E of the 506 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101 Airborne launched an attack on the SS at the dikes between the Dutch towns of Heteren and Randwijk, the Netherlands.





They succesfully cleared the area and prevented the German troops from making a diversory attack to support a larger scaled assault by the 363rd  Volksgrenadier Division on the town of Opheusden.

In Episode 5: Crossroads, of the HBO series ‘Band of Brothers’, they show more SS troops appearing from the southern edge of the dike shortly after the main US attack.

The map below was made by Cpt Winters, hence, it doesn’t show any of these SS troops coming in support from the south as depicted in the miniseries.




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Normandy: Brécourt Map https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/27/normandy-brecourt-map/ https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/27/normandy-brecourt-map/#respond Mon, 27 Feb 2017 22:48:46 +0000 https://www.worldwarmedia.com/?p=2203 On D-Day, June 6 1944, a group of 22 men, led by Lt Richard D Winters, attacked a German 105 mm gun battery at Brécourt, Normandy. This map shows the positions of the four guns, the German and US machine gun positions and a few more details about the assault, however, in his mémoires, late […]

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On D-Day, June 6 1944, a group of 22 men, led by Lt Richard D Winters, attacked a German 105 mm gun battery at Brécourt, Normandy.


This map shows the positions of the four guns, the German and US machine gun positions and a few more details about the assault, however, in his mémoires, late Maj Winters mapped gun #1 at the most northern machine gun position but then later he endorsed the four guns being in a straight line.

Four soldiers who participated the attack remain unidentified and the action of Cpt Speirs’ team is not mapped yet.

In the assault:

Lt Richard D Winters-Cpl Joe Toye-Pvt Popeye Wynn-Pvt Gerald Loraine-Lt Buck Compton-Sgt Bill Guarnere

Cpl Don Malarkey-Sgt Carwood Lipton-Sgt Mike Ranney-Pvt Joe Liebgott-Pvt Cleveland Petty-Pvt John Plesha

Pvt Walter Hendrix-Pvt John D Halls (Killed in Action)-Cpt Clarence Hester-Andrew Hill (Killed in Action)

Lt Ronald Speirs (D Company)-Pvt J ‘Rusty’ Houck (Killed in Action)

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Bastogne Map https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/23/bastogne-map-2/ https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/23/bastogne-map-2/#respond Thu, 23 Feb 2017 21:06:11 +0000 https://www.worldwarmedia.com/?p=2175 Map with specific WWII sites related to the battle for Bastogne.  A great source for historians, history enthusiasts and everyone who wants to visit the battle sites of the formerly besieged town. Frequently updated! ZOOM IN and OUT to find more sites! Then move cursor over flags or click flags to see more details. To […]

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Map with specific WWII sites related to the battle for Bastogne.  A great source for historians, history enthusiasts and everyone who wants to visit the battle sites of the formerly besieged town. Frequently updated!

ZOOM IN and OUT to find more sites! Then move cursor over flags or click flags to see more details.

To get the full experience and learn about the countless events that occured during the Siege of Bastogne, it is recommended to spend multiple days in the Battered Bastion.

To see it all, one should at least spend two or three days of touring the area with an experienced and knowledgeable guide. Reg Jans, Roby Clam, Henri Mignon and Frank Gubbels come highly recommended. (www.regjans.com)


The Bastogne map is a great source for historians, authors,  researchers, history buffs and people who are planning a visit to Bastogne!

On a regular basis, this map will be updated. More ‘then and now’ photo’s, site-specific info, stories and directions will be published!

New additions are flagged as 

Stay tuned!

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The Escape Route of Joachim Peiper- Interactive https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/10/the-escape-route-of-joachim-peiper/ https://www.worldwarmedia.com/2017/02/10/the-escape-route-of-joachim-peiper/#respond Fri, 10 Feb 2017 15:38:44 +0000 https://www.worldwarmedia.com/?p=2116 “After daybreak cleared, Peiper pointed to a fir tree, sparkling brilliantly in the sun. “Major, he said with a sardonic smile, “the other night I promised you I would get you a tree for Christmas. There it is.” By Ann Hamilton-Shields I was hooked by those two sentences.  The summer of 1984 flew by as […]

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“After daybreak cleared, Peiper pointed to a fir tree, sparkling brilliantly in the sun. “Major, he said with a sardonic smile, “the other night I promised you I would get you a tree for Christmas. There it is.”

By Ann Hamilton-Shields


I was hooked by those two sentences.  The summer of 1984 flew by as I plowed through the Time/Life WWII series – but it was Peiper and the Battle of the Bulge that wouldn’t let me go.  Who were these soldiers escaping through a snowy forest on Christmas day, 800 Germans with a lone American hostage? Thus began a 32 year fascination with Kampfgruppe Peiper’s 1944 breakout from La Gleize.

Skipping forward to 2004, I was a civilian nurse for the US Army living in Germany with my family. We had visited La Gleize a time or two and Peiper’s breakout pulled at me every time.  But where to start? Out of the blue a friend sent me Major General Micheal Reynold’s article “Escape from the Cauldron”, prompting an avalanche of reading on the Bulge and more specifically, Jochen Peiper.

Over the years my amateur study of WWII blossomed. We attended veteran affairs, trekked through battlefields, toured museums, and became acquainted with the dedicated network of WWII experts in the European Theater.

Meeting author Danny Parker at a 2007 museum opening in Baugnez kicked off a new phase in my interest.  We chatted: “So, you’re writing a bio of Peiper? He’s my favorite German bad boy –  a paradox of good and evil.” The conversation flowed and a week later I was one of Danny’s many manuscript readers.

My role soon expanded into scouting and photographing locations from Peiper’s life.  In Berlin, chasing Peiper’s history was not difficult: a flat in his Ruedesheimer Platz building,  the building next door to his bombed-out childhood home,  his elementary school, the Wansee yacht club (where I snuck in with help from the kitchen staff), his wedding and reception site,  an  apartment in the building where “Little Bunny” Potthast lived,  and of course the Lichterfelde Barracks complex. The cooperation of the Berliners was astonishing.

In 2008, my husband and I arrived at the La Gleize museum after a day tracking Kampfgruppe Peiper’s route.  Mr Gregoire walked me outside and pointed to the rocky trail where Peiper and his men slipped out of town. Twentyfour years had passed since I first read about MAJ McCown and Peiper – now it was time to put on the hiking boots.

Danny Parker’s meticulous research provided the backbone for my numerous hikes. The lack of specific directions was frustrating until I realized the Germans themselves didn’t know exactly where they had walked during that grueling 36 hours. My early hikes (2009-2011) were solo endeavors as I scouted out each segment with a sweaty conglomeration of maps and documents, struggling to meet my worried husband at a pre-arranged time and place.  I fought brambles, insects, blisters, mud – and the staff at Wanne chateau, where I was asked to leave!

In 2011 my worry about descending the steep face of Mt St Vincent alone was solved when I met Doug Mitchell. This ex-pat US Marine had what I didn’t: a military sense of tactics and terrain, excellent photographic skills, and fluent German. Add an affable spirit with well-used hiking boots and we were a pair. Tracking Peiper’s trail in its entirety was happening!

During the summer of 2012 Doug and I walked the breakout using our combined sources. I won’t go into the wrong turns and painful backtracks involved – and must mention that in true USMC fashion Doug didn’t complain!  Major General Michael Reynolds graciously reviewed our work, including over 200 photographs, and pronounced it a match with the eyewitness reports he’d collected in the 1970’s from German vets.

Over the course of our research, many WWII history friends had expressed interest in walking the route of Peiper’s breakout.  This idea became a reality in October 2012 as our hardy group left La Gleize on a fall morning, arriving in Wanne about eight and a half hours later. It was a fourteen mile day of ascents and descents, sun and rain, and “aha!” moments when sites recorded almost seventy years ago popped into view.  There was no snow, no hunger, and no machine gun fire….just history under our boots, and the satisfaction of nailing down a mystery before it was too late.




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