The Liberators of Pilsen: The U.S. 16th Armored Division in World War II Czechoslovakia

Front Cover
McFarland, Jan 29, 2018 - History - 233 pages

Formed in July 1943 at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas, the 16th Armored Division was the last U.S. armored division to be activated in World War II, the last deployed to the European Theater and the last to see combat. As the war in Europe was coming to an end, General George S. Patton chose the division to spearhead a daring advance into Czechoslovakia. In its first and only combat operation, the 16th liberated the city of Pilsen, forever endearing itself to the Czech people. Poised to continue to the capital city of Prague, the division was halted not by German resistance but by political rivalries between the Western powers and the Soviet Union. Official U.S. Army records and veteran accounts tell the story of the unit's brief two-year existence and its successful mission.

 

Contents

Prologue
1
Introduction
3
forming the 16th armored Division
7
Training for War
32
czechoslovakias Long years of nazi occupation
37
summer and fall of 1944
44
Deployed to europe
53
first Battle for the 23rd cavalry squadron
64
The Liberation of Pilsen
100
The Liberation of Pilsen Part 2
119
ike ordered Halt
128
The end of the War in europe
135
The Pratt Mission
139
ve Day and occupation Duties
147
The 16th armored Division shuffle
161
returning Home and Deactivation
167

The first Days of May 1945
79
Day of Decision
85
Pilsen and Prague on the eve of Liberation
95
The Legacy of the 16th armored Division
180
Works Cited
208
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2018)

Bryan J. Dickerson is a military and naval historian and a twice deployed U.S. Navy veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He lives in Blackwood, New Jersey.

Bibliographic information