Zeebrugge: The Greatest Raid of All

Hardback

Main Details

Title Zeebrugge: The Greatest Raid of All
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Christopher Sandford
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:272
Dimensions(mm): Height 228,Width 152
Category/GenreFirst world war
ISBN/Barcode 9781612005041
ClassificationsDewey:940.458
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 32 pages of black and white illustrations and phot

Publishing Details

Publisher Casemate Publishers
Imprint Casemate Publishers
Publication Date 31 March 2018
Publication Country United States

Description

The combined forces invasion of the Belgian port of Zeebrugge on 23 April 1918 remains one of Britain's most glorious military undertakings; not quite as epic a failure as the charge of the Light Brigade, or as well publicised as the Dam Busters raid, but with many of the same basic ingredients. A force drawn from the Royal Navy and Royal Marines set out on ships and submarines to try to block the key strategic port, in a bold attempt to stem the catastrophic losses being inflicted on British shipping by German submarines. It meant attacking a heavily fortified German naval base. The tide, calm weather and the right wind direction for a smoke screen were crucial to the plan. Judged purely on results, it can only be considered a partial strategic success. Casualties were high and the base only partially blocked. Nonetheless, it came to represent the embodiment of the bulldog spirit, the peculiarly British fighting elan, the belief that anything was possible with enough dash and daring. The essential story of the Zeebrugge mission has been told before, but never through the direct, first-hand accounts of its survivors - including that of Lieutenant Richard Sandford, VC, the acknowledged hero of the day, and the author's great uncle. The fire and bloodshed of the occasion is the book's centrepiece, but there is also room for the family and private lives of the men who volunteered in their hundreds for what they knew effectively to be a suicide mission. Zeebrugge gives a very real sense of the existence of the ordinary British men and women of 100 years ago - made extraordinary by their role in what Winston Churchill called the `most intrepid and heroic single armed adventure of the Great War.'

Reviews

The use of first hand accounts is what brings the book vividly and grippingly to life as action is eventually joined and the cruelly depleted marines and seamen storm the Mole...Here we have a cracking read, very different from some more pedestrian analyses. * Army Rumour Service * Listed in Military History Monthly's round up of the best military history titles for June 2018. * Military History Monthly * An extraordinary account of something quite extraordinary... * Books Monthly *