Wow, my great uncle Joe would go spare if he seen those pictures! He was a gunner in the Shermans. He landed on D-Day + 1 and went right through France, Holland, Belgium and Germany.
Wow, my great uncle Joe would go spare if he seen those pictures! He was a gunner in the Shermans. He landed on D-Day + 1 and went right through France, Holland, Belgium and Germany.
Firefly was the name given to Shermans fitted with i believe the British 17 pounder anti tank gun. This was the only Anglo- American afv which had a weapon fitted that was capable of taking on a tiger or panther at a less than suicidal range and knocking it out. Fireflys did for Mr Wittman in his tiger from ambush, i believe 3 or 5 were destroyed or disabled at the same time. I have also read that 2 British officers visited this site in 1945 to see if anything could be learn't about tank tactics. An examination of the tiger revealed that there were still body parts in them.
There has been a debate about the effectivness of allied armour since ww2. There were complaints from servicemen at the time which were raised in the House of Commons by a labour M.P, only for the matter to be hushed up.
The allied armour which went to Europe in 1944 was designed for combat in the desert in 1942, when its opponents were mk 3 and 4's, a decision had to be made as to what was required allowing for the design and manufacture of sufficient tanks to be done. Its a shame really that the T34 wasn't copied but that was a secret Stalin wouldn't have parted with.
Whatevers said and done it still required great courage to get into one of these things day in day out , having seen the results of a brew up, knowing that the vehicle was inferior to your enemies.
As for the model i can well imagine firefly crews, whose vehicle was easily indentifed because it was the only sherman with a muzzle brake, wanting to disguise it. Knock out the firefly, 1 per troop, and the rest of the shermans were easy prey.
Here are the 2 photos of Cuckoo I have found,the side one you can just read the name at the bottom of the turret behind their feet.
The photo at the start of this thread of the Firefly and British airborne jeep in German markings is a Canadian Army photo and the original is in the Library and Archives Canada in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Photo # PA115009 The photo is in the public domains (i.e. no longer copyrighted).
The Valentine tank is likely one of the Canadian made 1,420 Valentine tanks on a contract for the British. Canada received 30 for training purposes and the remaining 1,390 went to the USSR as aid. One of these training valentines is at CFB Borden Museum.
One of the Canadian Valentines was found in soft ground in the USSR and salvaged and is now on display at the Canadian War Museum. It had bogged and sunk during a battle while still in Soviet use. I have uploadeda photo I took of the interior of the Canadian/USSR Valentine. They have preserved it "as found" - just washed off.
Hi Colin, welcome to the forum! Nice to have you here.
Thanks for the pic.
Cheers, Ade.
very interesting, thanks for showing Ade.
Hello-interesting model kit Firefly-dummy guns were common on tanks being used for other roles like the Lee/Grant 'Canal Defence Light' variant but I have never seen one like that-tactically it makes little sense to have the 17 pounder facing away from the action while exposing the weaker rear turret armour to the most likely side where enemy fire would come-an alternative camouflage scheme was developed by the British artist Rex Whistler while he was serving in the Guards Armoured division 1944 in France-a paint scheme on the barrel that made it look like a standard 75mm from a distance side on. As to the captured Fireflys, 'Dragon Armor' models make several prebuilt & painted 1/72 scale examples including the one with extra track lengths draped over it. The idea of using a captured Panther with the skies filled with Allied fighter bombers, lots of Allied armour & A/T guns capable of knocking it out around plus the Jerries as well-it seems like a complicated but sure way to commit suicide.
speaking of deception, that would have been funny to set up one of these unguarded in a field, and then id love to see the face of the german gunner who blows it up literally to shreds
where have all these inflatable tanks gone too???...has any museum obtained one for display?...
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