yamonda1
Registered user
Just read 'Tank Men' by Robert Kershaw (ISBN 978-0-340-92349-0)
It covers the formation of the first tank regiments in WW1 to the end of WW2 in Europe and has personal stories from British, US, German and Russian soldiers.
His low key writing style can't hide the horrors of being a WW2 British tanker, at least for the first five years where at the start a WW1 cavalry mindset fought against panzer tactics honed in the Spanish Civil War. This only changed as the losses in men and machines mounted and the tactics had to be changed to combat the British tank deficiencies. The incompetence of British procurement policy and training methods are truly staggering ...
The book made me think of a childhood neighbour Mr.Simm who, as a tanker, came through the entire North African, Italian and latter German campaigns unharmed (at least physically) only to die in the 60's from Weil's Disease contracted when he picked up some rat infected litter in his backyard.
To survive all that and be killed by a bloody rat !!
It covers the formation of the first tank regiments in WW1 to the end of WW2 in Europe and has personal stories from British, US, German and Russian soldiers.
His low key writing style can't hide the horrors of being a WW2 British tanker, at least for the first five years where at the start a WW1 cavalry mindset fought against panzer tactics honed in the Spanish Civil War. This only changed as the losses in men and machines mounted and the tactics had to be changed to combat the British tank deficiencies. The incompetence of British procurement policy and training methods are truly staggering ...
The book made me think of a childhood neighbour Mr.Simm who, as a tanker, came through the entire North African, Italian and latter German campaigns unharmed (at least physically) only to die in the 60's from Weil's Disease contracted when he picked up some rat infected litter in his backyard.
To survive all that and be killed by a bloody rat !!
