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Liberation Of Paris Essay

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The Liberation of Paris Since the early morning of 25 June 1940, France was under the control of Nazi Germany. Although some of the French people attempted to resist, either secretly or publicly, liberation would not arrive until 23 August 1944. These brave men and women certainly helped to liberate their homeland, but what ultimately allowed the Allied forces to rescue the “City of Lights”? With the Battle of Normandy reaching its climax, Hitler formulated a plan to convert Paris into “a great defended bridgehead” which (theoretically) would allow the German Seventh Army to retreat to the Somme and Marne Rivers. (Keegan) However, by 15 August a second Allied invasion party started their approach on Paris through the cites of Nice and Marseille. About week later, the Seventh Army, comprised of American and French divisions, succeeded in overtaking General Friedrich Wiese’s Nineteenth Army and started racing towards Grenoble. With Wiese’s defeat, the Germans began to lose …show more content…

Once again, it became clear to the Allies that the French were struggling to regain Paris, and the Allied leaders felt “obliged to go to the insurgents’ assistance.” (Keegan) On 22 August, General Omar Bradley received orders from Eisenhower that General Philippe Leclerc and the French 2nd Armored Division was to direct their attention to Paris. Leclerc and the French 2nd Armored Division traveled quickly, but were temporarily prevented from entering the city due to German resistance. Then a rumor sparked that the French people inside Paris began to dance in celebration of liberation. Leclerc decided to send a “small task-infantry force along back routes into the center of the city” and later that day sent in tanks to follow them. The next, a large bulk of the division joined their comrades in the city rooting out the rest of the German resistance. The “City of Light” was once more free.

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