Torcross tank 23rd August 2020 #2 by John Durston Via Flickr: Sherman DD at Torcross as a memorial to those who lost their lives during Exercise Tiger off the south Devon coast in April 1944
seen from Japan
seen from Albania
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Mauritius
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Singapore
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Austria
seen from Italy

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Malaysia
Torcross tank 23rd August 2020 #2 by John Durston Via Flickr: Sherman DD at Torcross as a memorial to those who lost their lives during Exercise Tiger off the south Devon coast in April 1944
Exercise Tiger: The Forgotten Tragedy of D-Day Rehearsals
As the Allies prepared for the momentous D-Day landings in 1944, a critical rehearsal was conducted to simulate the real invasion of Normandy. Known as Exercise Tiger, this training exercise became a forgotten chapter in World War II history due to the devastating loss of life it incurred and the secrecy surrounding the incident. However, its impact on the success of the D-Day invasion is…
Here, 80 Years Ago
A moment of historical solemnity. I took this video a few weeks ago. I was standing on Slapton Sands beach, a few miles from where we live here in Dartmouth, Devon: [Slapton Sands beach, Devon. Video by me, April 1, 2024.] Slapton Sands, with its shingle surface, and the fact that behind it, just a few yards inland, is a lagoon… [Looking toward Slapton Sands beach, just inland, across part of…
View On WordPress
On This Rainy Devon Morning
I was in the town center along the water early this morning. I still love to take photographs. There is always something “new” to see… [Boat Float, Dartmouth, Devon. Photo by me, April 2024.] There’s a certain warmth to the town early in the day… even in the rain. Continue reading On This Rainy Devon Morning
View On WordPress
Exercise Tiger
Private tours might entail not only paying a price for the guiding, but also paying for their conveyance, snacks, as well as lunches, particularly for all-day scenic trips. Aside from the guide, you might also need a driver. Know the whole price of the private trip and make sure your funds are in order. Visit www.Travelenglandtours.com if you want to know more about this topic. Exercise Tiger is indeed the best.
Amazing Exercise Tiger Tour of Travel England Tours
Summary: Travel England Tours is specialized in offering Military History tours and has a variety of half-day and one-day tours available to US Connections and Cruises operators in and around Plymouth, Devon, and Cornwall. Exercise Tiger is one of them. Exercise Tiger is a one-day tour. The TET professional guide commences the presentation of this incredibly heartrending story. They drive through the tranquil Devon landscape where the 2nd part of the T4 convoy sailed from. After a short ferryboat ride, you can see and hear the tragic events that the American Allies suffered whilst on Exercise/Operation Tiger.
Let’s take a look at some of the key features of TET:
Safety, wellbeing, and comfort
A professional yet welcoming mood so clients can settle down and feel at ease.
Clean and tidy vehicles, ensuring a stress-free trip
We focus on the value for the money of our clients, thus provide great service.
We contribute to visits with extra details and information.
We counsel on places to visit based on customer’s concerns.
Tours in Cornwall
Cornwall is a place where pleasure looks onward to you all the time. It is located in the southwestern of the UK. This region is a ground steeped in record and legend boasting eye-catching seashores with perfect towns, ancient castles, and fine modern art. With hindsight, the well-known King Arthur fought ardently for this rugged outlying land and it surely is not hard to see why. From smugglers to surfers, cream teas to the yummy Cornish pasty; Cornwall casts a spell on every visitor, with its unique charm, unspoiled beauty, and the sense of mystery often leaving those that visit feeling as though they have gone back in time. With Dacey’s, you can tour Cornwall in a distinctive and stress-free way.
The West Cornwall Tours
The West Cornwall tour is certainly an admired Cornwall tour choice. You can explore unseen fishing villages and beaches as well as World Heritage Sites. West Cornwall offers plenty of unspoiled green lands, quaint village fishing harbors, golden sandy beaches, views of the lively Atlantic Ocean, and historical architecture which all tell the story of Cornwall’s past which you can see in your private chauffeur tour of West Cornwall. This chauffeur West Cornwall tour can enable you to see many of West Cornwall’s prize locations whilst traveling in comfort within one of our fleet Mercedes vehicles.
For further details please visit www.Travelenglandtours.com.
The largest amphibious assault in history began seventy-four years ago today, on the northern coast of France. British and Canadian forces came ashore at beaches code-named Gold, Juno and Sword. Americans faced light opposition at Utah Beach, while heavy resistance at Omaha Beach resulted in over 2,000 American casualties.
By end of day, some 156,000 Allied troops had successfully stormed the beaches of Normandy. Within a week that number had risen to 326,000 troops, over 50,000 vehicles and more than 100,000 tons of equipment.
The first phase of Operation Overlord, code named ‘Neptune’, achieved its stunning success as the result of lessons learned from the largest amphibious training exercise of WW2, the six phases of “Operation Fabius”, itself following the unmitigated disaster of a training exercise that killed more Americans, than the actual landing at Utah beach.
Slapton is a village and civil parish in the River Meadows of Devon County, where the southwest coast of England meets the English Channel. Archaeological evidence suggests human habitation from at least the bronze age. The “Domesday Book”, the recorded manuscript of the “Great Survey” of England and Wales completed in 1086 by order of William the Conqueror, names the place as “Sladone”, with a population of 200.
Slapton Sands
In late 1943, the place was home to 750 families, some of whom had never so much as left their village. Some 3,000 locals were evacuated with their livestock to make way for “Operation Tiger”, a full-scale rehearsal for the landing scheduled for the following spring.
Thousands of US military personnel were moved into the region during the winter of 1943-’44. The area was mined and bounded with barbed wire, and patrolled by sentries. Secrecy was so tight, that even those in surrounding villages, had no idea of what was happening.
Exercise Tiger was scheduled to begin on April 22, covering all aspects of the “Force U” landing on Utah beach and culminating in a live-fire beach landing at Slapton Sands at first light on April 27.
Nine large tank landing ships (LSTs) shoved off with 30,000 troops on the evening of the 26th, simulating the overnight channel crossing. Live ammunition was used in the exercise, to harden troops off to the sights, sounds and smells of actual battle. Naval bombardment was to commence 50 minutes before H-Hour, however delays resulted in landing forces coming under direct naval bombardment. An unknown number were killed in this “friendly fire” incident. Fleet rumors put the number as high as 450.
Two Royal Navy Corvettes, HMS Azalea and Scimitar, were to guard the exercise from German “Schnellboots” (what the Allies called “E-Boats”), the fast-attack craft based out of Cherbourg.
HMS Scimitar withdrew for repairs following a collision with an LST on the 27th. In the early morning darkness of the following day, the single corvette was leading 8 LSTs carrying vehicles and combat engineers of the 1st Engineer Special Brigade through Lyme Bay, when the convoy was spotted by a nine vessel S-Boat patrol.
8 LSTs (Landing Ship, Tank) in single-file didn’t have a chance against fast-attack craft capable of 55mph. LST-531 was torpedoed and sunk in minutes, killing 424 Army and Navy personnel. LST-507 suffered the same fate, with the loss of 202. LST-289 was severely damaged and grounded in flames, with the loss of 123. LST-511 was damaged in yet another friendly fire incident. Unable to wear their lifebelts correctly due to the large backpacks they wore, many men placed them around their waists. That only turned them upside down and that’s how they died, thrashing in the water with their legs above the waves. Dale Rodman, who survived the sinking of LST-507, said “The worst memory I have is setting off in the lifeboat away from the sinking ship and watching bodies float by.”
LST (Landing Ship, Tank 289: “Severely damaged by a German E-Boat torpedo attack off Slapton Sands, England, 28 April 1944, during Operation Tiger, the rehearsal for the Normandy invasion”. H/T ExerciseTiger.org.uk
Survivors were sworn to secrecy due to official embarrassment, and the possibility of revealing the real invasion, scheduled for June. Ten officers with high level clearance were killed in the incident, but no one knew that for sure until their bodies were recovered. The D-Day invasion was nearly called off, because any of them could have been captured alive, revealing secrets during German interrogation and torture.
There remains a surprising amount of confusion, concerning the final death toll. Estimates range from 639 to 946, nearly five times the number killed in the actual Utah Beach landing. Some or all of the personnel from that damaged LST may have been aboard the other 8 on the 28th, and log books went down along with everything else. Many of the remains were never found.
The number of dead would surely have been higher, had not Captain John Doyle disobeyed orders and turned his LST-515 around, plucking 134 men from the frigid water.
Today, the Exercise Tiger disaster is mostly forgotten. Some have charged official cover-up, though information from SHAEF press releases appeared in the August edition of Stars & Stripes. At least three books describe the event. It seems more likely that the immediate need for secrecy and subsequent D-Day invasion swallowed the Tiger disaster, whole. History has a way of doing that.
Exercise Tiger Memorial, Slapton
Some of Slapton’s residents came home to rebuild their lives after the war, but many never returned. In the early ’70s, Devon resident and civilian Ken Small discovered an artifact of the Tiger exercise, while beachcombing on Slapton Sands. With little to no help from either the American or British governments, Small purchased rights from the American Government to a submerged Sherman tank from the 70th Tank Battalion. The tank was raised in 1984 with help from local residents and dive shops, and now stands as a memorial to Exercise Tiger. Not far from the monument to villagers, who never came home.
A plaque was erected at Arlington National Cemetery in 1995, inscribed with the words “Exercise Tiger Memorial”. A 5,000-pound stern anchor bears silent witness to the disaster in Mexico, Missouri.
In 2012, a granite memorial was erected at Utah Beach, engraved with the words in French and English: “In memory of the 946 American servicemen who died in the night of 27 April 1944 off the coast of Slapton Sands (G.B.) during exercise Tiger the rehearsals for the D-Day landing on Utah Beach“.
In 1988, volunteers from the Army Brotherhood of Tankers repaired, repainted and re-stenciled an M4 Sherman tank, installing a mirror image of the Slapton memorial at Fort Taber Park in the south-coastal working class city New Bedford, Massachusetts.
New Bedford veteran’s agent Christopher Gomes lost his right leg during the Iraq War, in 2008. Gomes was succinct that Memorial Day 2016, when he spoke of this difficult chapter in British/American military history. “People only die”, he said, “when they are forgotten about″.
Left – Memorial Day 2018, WW2 Navy combat veteran Vincent Riccardi, the oldest survivor of Exercise Tiger, salutes his fallen comrades at Fort Taber Park in New Bedford, Massachusetts, to remember the 74th anniversary of Exercise Tiger, held April 28, 1944. H/T South Coast Today
Right – The M4 Sherman Tank Tank at the Fort Taber – Fort Rodman Military Museum at Fort Taber Park in New Bedford mirrors the one built to the fallen at Slapton Sands, Devon, England.
H/T “Ghosts of time” for this image, Today and Now.
If you enjoyed this “Today in History”, please feel free to re-blog, “like” & share on social media, so that others may find and enjoy it as well. Please click the “follow” button on the right, to receive email updates on new articles. Thank you for your interest, in the history we all share.
June 6, 1944 Dress Rehearsal The largest amphibious assault in history began seventy-four years ago today, on the northern coast of France.
Preparing for D-Day: Exercise Tiger
Seventy years ago this week, Allied Forces attempted amphibious landing operations at Slapton Beach, England. "Exercise Tiger" was suppose to be a training exercise to prepare for Operation Overlord, but failed when the landing crafts were attacked by German patrol boats on the night of April 28, 1944.
-This year marks the 70th anniversary of D-Day. Follow the historic planning process for D-Day on Twitter and Facebook from the Eisenhower Library.