Hugh M. Cole

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Hugh M. Cole


Born
in Pittsford, Michigan, The United States
July 14, 1910

Died
June 05, 2005

Genre


Dr. Hugh Marshall Cole, Ph.D. (European military history, University of Minnesota, 1937; B.A., Wheaton College, 1931), taught military history at the University of Chicago until 1942, when he joined the Army as an intelligence officer. After graduating from the Command and General Staff School he was assigned to the staff of the Third Army during its operations in Europe. At the close of hostilities he became Deputy Theater Historian, European Theater of Operations. From 1946 to 1952 Dr. Cole directed the work of the European Theater Section, Office of the Chief of Military History, and wrote The Lorraine Campaign. He joined the Operations Research Office of The Johns Hopkins University in 1952 and continued his active interest in military ...more

Average rating: 3.96 · 275 ratings · 22 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
The War in the Pacific: Oki...

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4.13 avg rating — 468 ratings62 editions
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The Lorraine Campaign

3.89 avg rating — 161 ratings — published 1950 — 34 editions
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The Ardennes: The Battle of...

4.05 avg rating — 111 ratings — published 1965 — 64 editions
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Cross-Channel Attack: The E...

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4.07 avg rating — 90 ratings — published 1985 — 39 editions
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Die Ardennenoffensive: Schl...

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The United States Army in W...

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The Lorraine Campaign (Unit...

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The Ardennes: Battle Of The...

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Survival Guide for New Teac...

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“The Malmédy massacre would have repercussions reaching far wider than one might expect of a single battlefield atrocity in a long and bitter war. This "incident" undoubtedly stiffened the will of the American combatants (although a quantitative assessment of this fact is impossible); it would be featured in the war crimes trials as an outstanding example of Nazi contempt for the accepted rules of war; and it would serve a United States Senator as a stepping-stone toward a meteoric career. But the Malmédy massacre and the other murders of 17 December did not complete the list chargeable to Peiper and the troops of the 1st SS Panzer Division. By 20 December Peiper's command had murdered approximately 350 American prisoners of war and at least 100 unarmed Belgian civilians, this total derived from killings at twelve different locations along Peiper's line of march. PEIPER'S TROOPS ON THE ROAD TO MALMÉDY So far as can be determined the Peiper killings represent the only organized and directed murder of prisoners of war by either side during the Ardennes battle.136 The commander of the Sixth SS Panzer Army took oath in the trials of 1946 that, acting on Hitler's orders, he issued a directive stating that the German troops should be preceded "by a wave of terror and fright and that no”
Hugh M. Cole, The Ardennes - Battle of the Bulge

“With German tanks climbing behind the lone platoon and without any means of antitank defense, Solis seized some of the gasoline from the Francorchamps dump, had his men pour it out in a deep road cut, where there was no turn-out, and set it ablaze. The result was a perfect antitank barrier. The German tanks turned back to Stavelot-this was the closest that Kampfgruppe Peiper ever came to the great stores of gasoline which might have taken the 1st SS Panzer Division to the Meuse River. Solis had burned 124,000 gallons for his improvised roadblock, but this was the only part of the First Army's POL reserve lost during the entire Ardennes operation.”
Hugh M. Cole, The Ardennes - Battle of the Bulge

“The plans for the ground phase of Greif consisted of three parts: the seizure intact of at least two bridges across the Meuse by disguised raiding parties, the prompt reinforcement of any such coup de main by an armored commando formation; and an organized attempt to create confusion in the Allied rear areas through sabotage carried out by jeep parties clad in American uniforms.”
Hugh M. Cole, The Ardennes - Battle of the Bulge

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