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The battle for Carpiquet
Broadcast Date: July 5, 1944
It's two minutes to five in Normandy. Sitting with a company of Western Canadian machine gunners in a stone barn, the CBC's Matthew Halton begins his countdown. At five o'clock, the Canadians will attack the German-occupied industrial suburb of Carpiquet — a key piece of territory needed to win the Normandy invasion. It will be, Halton describes, the most enormous concentration of fire ever put down on a small object.Halton reports on the attack in what has become his trademark poetic style, vividly describing the barrage of bullets and bursting shells. With his engineer, he captures every sound in the spectacular and successful battle. "This is the morning we waited for," Halton describes to Canadian listeners back home. "A morning in France, a morning in which the fair fields in Normandy are torn and ripped and split apart."
The battle for Carpiquet
• Only 150 teenagers from the Hitler Youth occupied Carpiquet, and the Canadians outnumbered the Germans by a ratio of 18 to one. But, to their advantage the Germans were positioned on higher ground and could move through a series of interconnected underground blockhouses. They also had a highly sophisticated radio intelligence squad which foresaw the movements of the Canadian forces.• The Canadians failed to capture the Carpiquet airfield but did go on to claim the town of Caen. Of the 2000 Canadian men fighting at Carpiquet, 260 were injured and 117 were killed.
• Matthew Halton covered the campaigns in Sicily, Italy and northwest Europe as the senior war correspondent. From 1945 until his death in 1956, he served as the CBC's European correspondent.
• "The wide fields were red with blood and poppies on that morning of July 4 at Carpiquet. In France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Regalbuto, Moro River, Carpiquet and the appalling hill at Kappelen, the sun shines now. But remember these names, Canada, because they're written on your heart." — Matthew Halton
The battle for Carpiquet
Medium: Radio
Program: CBC Radio News Special
Broadcast Date: July 5, 1944
Reporter: Matthew Halton
Duration: 8:14
Photo: Ken Bell/Canada. Dept. of National Defence/Library and Archives Canada/PA-162527
Last updated:
Oct. 1, 2008
Radio
25:28
May 7, 1945
Victory flags are flying high, church bells are ringing, and people are celebrating in the streets. It's May 7, 1945, and the Allies have secured victory in Europe.
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The battle for Carpiquet.
The CBC Digital Archives Website.
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
Last updated: Oct. 1, 2008.
[Page consulted on Feb. 9, 2010.]