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Competition time - VIP 2 day tour and Dinner in Oosterbeek
This is your community. You tell us what you're most interested to see & learn. What you've learned that inspires you, what was a revelation to you to discover? Learning and discovery should be fun. And it's a family show so the younger generations are the ones who'll be travelling to Arnhem & Oosterbeek each year. It's as much about enabling and inspiring their enthusiasm as much as feeding ours. So to that end I'm incentivising. On the right hand side of your page under the Arnhem Banner is a Leaderboard for 30 day engagement. Underneath that is a link to more Leaderboards for 7 day and all-time engagement. How do you get points for engagement? Writing posts which attract likes from other members of the community. Subject matter appropriate please. The 30-day Winner of this Competition will be announced each month, (on the 1st, so that September Winners have a slim chance to make arrangements) and all monthly winners will join me (with their plus 1 upon request) for a dedicated tour around all the major Arnhem and Oosterbeek landmarks* over the course of 2 days of each Airborne Weekend in Arnhem, every September. If the weather is good and the group is happy, we'll do it on hire bikes. It's fun that way, cycles have right of way over cars, cyclepaths are segregated and there's an additional fitness element to it, and the beers at the end of the day are all the more welcome. The experience will be followed by Dinner on the Saturday at Klein Hartenstein OR The Pancake House on Utrechtseweg depending on the preference of the winners at the time. Klein Hartenstein is a well-heeled posh restaurant directly next door to the Hartenstein Hotel in Oosterbeek; the Pancake house is considerably more relaxed. Both rated well. Good wine at the former, good beer at the latter. * Reasonable restrictions & conditions apply, but in particular: + Each winner person will only get one spot on the tour (with a plus-1 on request) and one Dinner expense covered. Your plus-1s will have to cover their Dinner expense themselves, or you will.
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Content to check out
So first content to be added is in the Classroom tab at the top of the page - a 'course' added which currently is in fairly raw format of some of the aerial photography of the ground around Lower Oosterbeek. More content will be added over time - additional photography, video etc etc.
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Introductions - Especially yours.
Welcome one and all to the community as an alternate to a page on the usual social channels. This is just as much about you and your interest and links and dits as it is about the very well documented events that still fires the imagination and continues to inspire people to come and see for themselves. Please do introduce yourselves here, what your interest and connection is to the place. What you want to discover, learn, contribute if anything? It is currently free to join, either by my invitation or by your referral in to the group. Those of you who join as free members will retain your free membership - BUT in return please, this community is not supposed to be just me being 'stuck on send'. As a tongue-in-cheek condition of founding free membership, your contribution to discussion, spinning dits, bringing new information to light is a very valuable resource please. It will add considerable energy to the build and will give more people more reasons to interact. And I get bored of the sound of my own voice. I will at some point flick across to a paid group for new members to join, not least because I will by then have invested a fair bit of time and effort building out the content. I'll continue to develop out the content but to do so will require more trips and more time across there, at Kew National Archives etc. I'm keen to serve the community and keep these stories alive for the enjoyment, entertainment and inspiration and marvel of many generations to follow. I'll go first with the introductions: My own connection to the battle is through my maternal Grandfather, Lt Roderick Pearson and so much of my interest and content begins with him and his unit, the 1st Airlanding Light Regiment Royal Artillery. He and his Regiment, equipped with and firing 75mm Pack Howitzer shells ,were dug in around the Old Church in Lower Oosterbeek, in the South Eastern corner of what became the Airborne defensive Perimeter. This Sector saw a lot of Jerry attention SS Panzer tank and Self Propelled Gun attacks from the direction of Arnhem along the river road, all intending to drive a wedge between the units of 1 Airborne Div and the river, to deny them a possible route of escape.
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New comment 15d ago
Lippmann Kessell - 'Surgeon at Arms'
Lippy is the Father of two ladies I met at Kate ter Horst's house in Lower Oosterbeek during the 80th Anniversary this year - on the morning I was due to fly back to Blighty. https://amzn.to/3VgSu6z is the link to the book on Amazon. Lippy was a Surgeon who lobbed on D-Day (Market Garden) the British 1st Airborne as part of 16 Parachute Field Ambulance RAMC, commanded by Lt Col E Townsend. My paper-back dog-eared annotated, coffee-stained copy of Martin Middlebrook's 1994 book Arnhem 1944, reprinted a good many times (which is the equivalent of my 'Aide Memoire') ties much of the additional reading I've done into one 'doesn't-conveniently-fit-into-trouser-map-pocket' volume of reference. (Incidentally I bought my copy from the shop at the National Archives in Kew on 5th March 2020, ten days before we all went into Covid Lockdown 1. The receipt is still tucked in the frontispiece.) In Appendix 1 Middlebrook lists 16 Parachute Field Ambulance RAMC as being based at Culverthorpe. They flew to Arnhem in 6 x C-47 Dakota aircraft from Barkston Heath and Saltby; and 6 Horsa gliders from Keevil. + 135 men went in. + 6 were killed in action. + up to 129 missing*. As they were primarily all looking after the wounded at St Elisabeth's hospital, it is unlikely none were evacuated on the night 25th & 26th September. Lippy's story does tell the tale of a few of his colleagues who he crossed paths and endured escape efforts with. We join Lippy's story just a couple of days before the initial evacuation of the infantry across the Rhine on the fateful night of 25th/26th. He and his colleagues are at St Elisabeth's Hospital, which is on the western approach into Central Arnhem close to where Route LION (the river road) joins the middle Route TIGER (Utrechtseweg) at an area of high ground called 'Den Brink'. From memory the main building is a series of high-end apartments. Without spoiling the narrative, the account begins as a journal of the experience of the surgeons and staff of the Hospital which were now under the oversight and command of the German SS Divisional Doctor, Divisionsarzt Skalka. Harrowing and difficult conditions prevailed for all within the building, and the surrounding enemy forces had not particularly been behaving themselves, causing more casualties and deaths within the building. The Hospital becomes a haven for the wounded of all the Regimental Aid posts and Main Dressing Stations as the main Divisional body evacuates across the river, and the SS guard the hospital, but allow a core team of staff to stay behind with a small troop of German nuns and a skeleton team of local hospital staff who were primarily treating injured civilians.
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Remembrance Weekend 2024
Hello folks good morning. Hope you all had a poignant Remembrance weekend - enjoying seeing old faces and meeting new people in the remarkably small world that is the UK Service family. I had been at the Royal Albert Hall on Saturday night for the Festival of Remembrance as a guest of the Royal British Legion (RBL) as my team at MFS Casting had been the Cast and Military Advisors for the RBL TV Ad campaign that you will probably seen in the last fortnight or so. I've attached the video of the campaign below and some of the shots from inside the venue. We were approached to Cast and provide military advice on the Campaign, which has been well received, and RBL report anecdotally only so far that their call-centres have seen an uptick in inbound calls citing the Campaign as the initiation of reaching for help. The theme being the mental health of those who serve - while we are equipped with kevlar 'lids', body-armour, eye and hearing protection, for land forces; flying suits and helmets for our Aircrew; anti-flash protection for our Sailors, our experiences accumulated as part of service life can take a psychological toll, and the RBL offer support to those who suffer within themselves as a result of the experiences they have endured. This is not limited to combat or peace-keeping operations, and experiences in training can be as dangerous and traumatic. Since cessation of hostilities in 1945 a further 7000+ British (I believe that includes overseas dependencies) service personnel have been killed in action, which is reasonable to assume that a far greater number still endure psychological pain from their experiences. Let us remember all at the going down of the sun, and in the morning - military, civilian, still suffering and those now gone. Until the next time.
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New comment 10d ago
Remembrance Weekend 2024
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Arnhem 80
skool.com/arnhem
Battlefield study & Literature Review of British 1st Airborne and Polish 1st Indep Bde action at Arnhem & Oosterbeek in September 1944.
Tours offered
Leaderboard (30-day)
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