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Remember 51st Highland Division at St Valéry-en-Caux



The following appeared in The Sunday Telegraph, which follows my earlier
entry.

Yours aye

Iain


ISSUE 1836 Sunday 4 June 2000


Survivors of 'sacrificed' division still feel bitter
By Ian Cobain

AS hundreds of war veterans converge on Dunkirk today, 70 old soldiers will
gather in another French seaside town 120 miles away, to remember the events
of 60 years ago after the armada of small boats had departed.
They are the survivors of the entire infantry division that was sacrificed
by Winston Churchill to persuade the French to fight on against Hitler - and
who were then marooned and forgotten as the other British troops sailed
home.

The officers and men of the 51st Highland Division were placed under French
command after Churchill told his opposite number in Paris, Paul Reynaud,
that Britain would "never abandon her ally in her hour of need".

At its heart were some of the proudest regiments in Scottish history: the
Black Watch, the Seaforth Highlanders and the Argyll & Sutherland
Highlanders, and their men stood and fought as the French army collapsed
around them.

After fighting their way back to the Channel and the small town of St
Valery-en-Caux, they found the sea blanketed by thick fog, and no ships
there to rescue them. In a last stand that claimed thousands of casualties,
and in which the grandfather of the actor Hugh Grant played a pivotal role,
the division fought almost to its last bullet.

When its commanding officer, Gen Victor Fortune, finally surrendered to
Rommel, more than 10,000 men were taken prisoner and marched off to spend
the rest of the war in captivity.

The loss of the division shocked the small Highland communities from which
its members were drawn. Alan Carswell, the curator of the National War
Museum of Scotland, said: "It was a huge blow throughout Britain, but
particularly in the Highlands. The 51st had been regarded since the previous
war as perhaps the most effective division in the British Army."

Moreover, many of the the survivors are still bitter at the way in which
they were left to their fate while more than 300,000 other men were plucked
off the beaches.

"We are still very angry about it," said Tommy Parton, then a 20-year-old
private who had joined as a regular with the Seaforth Highlanders."We were
sacrificed by Churchill because he was eager to keep the French fighting. We
were placed under poor command, and expected to fight alongside men who
didn't have the stomach for it." Mr Parton found himself taking part in a
bayonet charge against German positions without any support "because the
French tanks didn't turn up".

Some elements of the division managed to escape to Le Havre, and on to
England by boat, but most of the 51st found itself in St Valery, which was
pounded by artillery and Stuka dive bombers, and surrounded by Rommel's
tanks.

When Gen Fortune eventually ordered his officers to surrender on June 12,
many broke down and wept. However, one of the battalions of the Seaforths
continued to fight at its outpost in a village outside the town.

The men had been led by Major James Murray Grant, the grandfather of the
actor Hugh Grant, after their commanding officer collapsed under the strain
of weeks of continual fighting. Major Grant called his officers and pointed
out that no battalion of the Seaforths had ever surrendered before.

Running out of ammunition, he sent out his wounded, carried by the men who
wanted to surrender, and then organised the rest into small parties who made
a break for freedom under cover of darkness. Many were killed, and others
were captured, including Major Grant, who was later awarded the DSO.

Saul David, a military historian, believes that Churchill sacrificed the
51st because he was anxious that the French continue fighting from her
colonies, or at least resist long enough for Britain to prepare her
defences.

However, Capt Ian Campbell, Gen Fortune's intelligence officer and who later
became the Duke of Argyll, said shortly before his death in 1973: "It has
always been abundantly clear to me that no division has ever been more
uselessly sacrificed. It could have been got away a week before but the
powers that be - owing I think to very faulty information - had come to the
conclusion that there was a capacity for resistance in France which was not
actually there."

Next Wednesday the survivors of the 51st will gather at the granite memorial
to their dead comrades, which was shipped from Scotland and now stands on a
cliff overlooking St Valery.

Mr Parton knows what he will remember most. "People who weren't there think
of it like some black-and-white news reel, but film will never tell you
about the smell of battle or the cries of your friends who are dying."

















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