LeEnfield said:We had more than that when we put our Armies into Europe.
Actually the British forces saw little combat as such in that area, the collapse of the French flank, forced the British to retreat to the Channel ports almost before battle had been joinedCharge 7 said:LeEnfield said:We had more than that when we put our Armies into Europe.
I think LeEnfield is correct. The largest British only land battle in WWII was likely Brits vs. Germans in and around the Belgian border in May 1940 - which of course lead to Dunkirk and that's probably why it isn't a number bandied about.
The total losses of the British in France was 68,000( killed, wounded, and captured) out of a total of around 335,000.Better to remember the men who were saved at Dunkirk rather than the total amount of men who had been fielded. Too easy to see then the amount lost. Not a favorable thing in wartime and now as years have passed still not a thing popular to remember.
redcoat said:Actually the British forces saw little combat as such in that area, the collapse of the French flank, forced the British to retreat to the Channel ports almost before battle had been joinedCharge 7 said:LeEnfield said:We had more than that when we put our Armies into Europe.
I think LeEnfield is correct. The largest British only land battle in WWII was likely Brits vs. Germans in and around the Belgian border in May 1940 - which of course lead to Dunkirk and that's probably why it isn't a number bandied about.
The total losses of the British in France was 68,000( killed, wounded, and captured) out of a total of around 335,000.Better to remember the men who were saved at Dunkirk rather than the total amount of men who had been fielded. Too easy to see then the amount lost. Not a favorable thing in wartime and now as years have passed still not a thing popular to remember.