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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,085 --> 00:00:02,378 (theme music bellows) 2 00:00:02,920 --> 00:00:06,466 NARRATOR: October 1944, northern Italy. 3 00:00:08,051 --> 00:00:11,137 A Canadian Private from an experimental Tank Hunter platoon 4 00:00:11,137 --> 00:00:14,474 faces down a German Panther tank, 5 00:00:14,474 --> 00:00:17,060 armed only with a PIAT. 6 00:00:17,894 --> 00:00:22,315 He knows the best range to make his shot is less than 20 yards. 7 00:00:22,482 --> 00:00:25,234 It’s an absolutely terrifying ordeal. 8 00:00:25,610 --> 00:00:29,739 You had to practically stand right up in front of the tank in order to hit it. 9 00:00:30,698 --> 00:00:32,116 -(rapid gunfire) -(dramatic theme music continues) 10 00:00:32,492 --> 00:00:35,870 NARRATOR: The soldier waits until the tank is within ten yards 11 00:00:36,079 --> 00:00:37,371 (tank rumbling) 12 00:00:37,914 --> 00:00:39,332 ...before he launches. 13 00:00:39,916 --> 00:00:41,334 (theme music bellows loudly) 14 00:00:42,126 --> 00:00:47,715 On June 6th, 1944. Allied forces finally land troops in Normandy 15 00:00:48,841 --> 00:00:50,593 {\an8}to open the Western Front. 16 00:00:51,969 --> 00:00:53,179 (low mumbled foreign language) 17 00:00:53,805 --> 00:00:56,224 NARRATOR: But Nazi fanatics and die-hards 18 00:00:56,224 --> 00:00:58,935 continue to fight ferociously for survival. 19 00:01:00,561 --> 00:01:03,439 -(rapid fire) -(dramatic theme music bellows) 20 00:01:04,482 --> 00:01:06,234 D-Day was a battle. 21 00:01:08,402 --> 00:01:10,446 They still need to win the war. 22 00:01:11,614 --> 00:01:14,575 -(theme music crescendos) -(flames whoosh) 23 00:01:20,498 --> 00:01:23,626 October 21st, 1944. 24 00:01:24,544 --> 00:01:27,255 The Savio river, northern Italy. 25 00:01:29,799 --> 00:01:34,679 Soldiers from the Seaforth Highlanders of Canada wade warily through the water. 26 00:01:35,680 --> 00:01:39,433 (distant gunfire) 27 00:01:39,934 --> 00:01:43,938 As the Seaforths enter the river, it's really dark, 28 00:01:44,856 --> 00:01:46,858 {\an8}it's raining really hard, 29 00:01:47,150 --> 00:01:52,697 {\an8}and the water levels of the Savio River are beginning to rise rapidly. 30 00:01:53,739 --> 00:01:56,242 NARRATOR: Platoon Leader Lieutenant D.H. McKay 31 00:01:56,242 --> 00:01:58,411 scans the far shore. 32 00:01:59,078 --> 00:02:00,413 (soft thematic music plays) 33 00:02:00,413 --> 00:02:05,084 More than the mud and cold current make the crossing a challenge. 34 00:02:06,419 --> 00:02:10,214 While under fire from the enemy, he must also locate soldiers from 35 00:02:10,214 --> 00:02:15,178 Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry Regiment on the other side. 36 00:02:16,053 --> 00:02:18,097 (distant gunfire) 37 00:02:18,097 --> 00:02:20,141 The PPCLI have crossed before them. 38 00:02:20,141 --> 00:02:22,560 They're being shelled quite heavily and frankly 39 00:02:22,560 --> 00:02:26,230 the Seaforths don't know if the PPCLI have been overrun or not. 40 00:02:29,525 --> 00:02:30,860 NARRATOR: The Canadians had landed 41 00:02:30,860 --> 00:02:32,945 in Italy more than a year earlier. 42 00:02:32,945 --> 00:02:36,365 They started in Sicily, long before D-Day. 43 00:02:37,033 --> 00:02:42,371 Sicily is the supposed soft underbelly of Europe because Churchill, above all, 44 00:02:42,371 --> 00:02:46,709 does not want to invade France and Normandy at this particular time. 45 00:02:46,709 --> 00:02:48,669 He doesn't think the western Allies are ready for it, 46 00:02:48,669 --> 00:02:50,546 {\an8}and yet there's tremendous pressure from Stalin and 47 00:02:50,546 --> 00:02:54,842 {\an8}the Soviets to draw away pressure from the Eastern Front. 48 00:02:57,178 --> 00:02:59,430 NARRATOR: But the progress has been very slow. 49 00:03:00,932 --> 00:03:04,018 {\an8}The Germans incorporate the Italian terrain 50 00:03:04,435 --> 00:03:06,354 {\an8}into their defense lines. 51 00:03:06,646 --> 00:03:10,816 And they built bunkers, barbed wire, minefield and so on. 52 00:03:13,069 --> 00:03:16,364 And this makes it extremely difficult for the Allies to 53 00:03:16,364 --> 00:03:19,700 proceed from bottom of the boot up to the north. 54 00:03:19,700 --> 00:03:21,577 {\an8}NARRATOR: Despite the effort of American 55 00:03:21,577 --> 00:03:26,582 {\an8}and Commonwealth troops, the bitter fighting means that 15 months later, 56 00:03:26,582 --> 00:03:30,127 {\an8}the Germans still occupy a swath of northern Italy, 57 00:03:30,127 --> 00:03:32,380 {\an8}including its industrial heart. 58 00:03:34,006 --> 00:03:37,593 By October 1944, the Canadians who fight with 59 00:03:37,593 --> 00:03:41,055 the British Eighth Army emerge from the Apennine mountains. 60 00:03:41,973 --> 00:03:46,060 The mountains have been such a terrible barrier with river after river. 61 00:03:46,060 --> 00:03:48,854 NARRATOR: From the western edge of the Adriatic sea... 62 00:03:49,897 --> 00:03:52,066 ALEXANDRA: It looks as if they're just finally going to be able to get 63 00:03:52,066 --> 00:03:55,778 to flat ground and actually make a run for Bologna. 64 00:03:57,905 --> 00:04:00,241 NARRATOR: But numerous rivers still cut across 65 00:04:00,241 --> 00:04:03,494 the plain, and the enemy remains determined. 66 00:04:04,036 --> 00:04:08,291 In response to the Canadian breakthrough the Germans know that 67 00:04:08,291 --> 00:04:13,379 this is extremely dangerous for the entire position in northern Italy. 68 00:04:13,838 --> 00:04:17,675 So, they bring in reinforcements to stop the Canadian advance. 69 00:04:19,302 --> 00:04:21,554 NARRATOR: To exploit the natural defenses, 70 00:04:21,554 --> 00:04:25,266 they have withdrawn to the west side of the Savio river. 71 00:04:25,725 --> 00:04:26,726 (thematic music grows suspenseful) 72 00:04:27,101 --> 00:04:31,188 (rapid gunfire) 73 00:04:34,984 --> 00:04:40,323 The German ninth Panzergrenadier Regiment defends a sector about five miles long, 74 00:04:40,323 --> 00:04:43,868 along the Savio, north of the city of Cesena. 75 00:04:44,201 --> 00:04:47,830 The Commander of second Battalion, Captain Ekkehard Maurer, 76 00:04:47,830 --> 00:04:50,708 has been assigned here as part of his officer training. 77 00:04:51,292 --> 00:04:55,796 Captain Ekkehard Maurer is only 25 years of age during this time. 78 00:04:56,130 --> 00:04:58,924 He got posted into this thing only a couple of days earlier. 79 00:04:58,924 --> 00:05:03,137 He pursues a General Staff Officer corps. And at this moment, 80 00:05:03,137 --> 00:05:06,849 he's on a front-line posting, which is rotational. 81 00:05:07,933 --> 00:05:11,479 NARRATOR: Maurer knows Canadians have crossed the Savio. 82 00:05:11,479 --> 00:05:14,940 But he has no idea how far they’ve advanced. 83 00:05:17,443 --> 00:05:19,945 From the village of Pieve Sestina, 84 00:05:19,945 --> 00:05:22,740 Maurer will dispatch the heavily armored vehicles 85 00:05:22,740 --> 00:05:26,202 of a Kampfgruppe towards the river to intercept them. 86 00:05:29,163 --> 00:05:31,874 (thematic music bellows) 87 00:05:35,503 --> 00:05:38,089 (rapid gunfire) 88 00:05:38,381 --> 00:05:40,883 Still under fire, and despite the darkness, 89 00:05:40,883 --> 00:05:45,971 Canadian Lieutenant McKay and his men link up with the Princess Patricias. 90 00:05:45,971 --> 00:05:49,141 The Seaforths must've been pretty excited to connect. 91 00:05:49,141 --> 00:05:51,769 That means that the Canadians had a bridgehead. 92 00:05:51,769 --> 00:05:54,313 They were holding out and the Seaforths weren't going to be 93 00:05:54,313 --> 00:05:56,357 alone in fighting against the Germans. 94 00:05:59,402 --> 00:06:02,363 NARRATOR: The Princess Patricia’s point out enemy positions 95 00:06:04,448 --> 00:06:09,078 including six machine gun nests, that had kept them pinned down. 96 00:06:09,370 --> 00:06:12,206 SOLDIER: Drake, hand over your guns. 97 00:06:12,957 --> 00:06:15,793 NARRATOR: They also volunteer to exchange weapons 98 00:06:15,793 --> 00:06:18,129 with McKay’s men after the wet crossing. 99 00:06:18,963 --> 00:06:22,675 They know that the Seaforths are going to leapfrog over them to engage the Germans. 100 00:06:22,675 --> 00:06:25,511 And to do that they need clean, dry guns. 101 00:06:27,471 --> 00:06:30,057 -(solo gunshots ring out) -(music turns dramatic) 102 00:06:31,559 --> 00:06:32,560 Move out. 103 00:06:32,560 --> 00:06:37,606 NARRATOR: Companies D and B must clear the enemy within 500 yards of the river. 104 00:06:42,319 --> 00:06:46,407 Germans have occupied the local farmhouses and outbuildings 105 00:06:46,407 --> 00:06:50,077 and protect each one with up to three machine gun posts. 106 00:06:51,078 --> 00:06:52,455 (rapid fire in distance) 107 00:06:53,330 --> 00:06:57,001 Many remain concealed until the Canadians step too close. 108 00:06:58,377 --> 00:07:02,298 (rapid gunfire) 109 00:07:07,636 --> 00:07:10,598 But the flashes of their guns in the dark... 110 00:07:14,435 --> 00:07:17,229 allow the Seaforths to outflank them... 111 00:07:20,608 --> 00:07:26,739 (rapid gunfire) 112 00:07:29,241 --> 00:07:32,453 and eliminate the machine gun nests from behind. 113 00:07:36,499 --> 00:07:40,419 (gunshots) 114 00:07:44,924 --> 00:07:46,550 (music intensifies) 115 00:07:49,053 --> 00:07:54,350 As company B and company D secure their objectives on the west side of the Savio, 116 00:07:55,601 --> 00:07:59,647 two more Seaforth Highlander companies A and C arrive and 117 00:07:59,647 --> 00:08:02,358 position themselves to continue the advance. 118 00:08:03,567 --> 00:08:07,613 {\an8}Their mission is to cut off the main north south road to Cesena 119 00:08:07,613 --> 00:08:09,573 {\an8}which runs parallel to the river. 120 00:08:09,573 --> 00:08:12,618 {\an8}This route is an important transportation corridor for 121 00:08:12,618 --> 00:08:15,871 {\an8}the enemy and they expect defenses to be heavy. 122 00:08:19,708 --> 00:08:23,379 A platoon of Tank Hunters is attached to C company. 123 00:08:24,964 --> 00:08:27,091 Like so many of these things in war time, 124 00:08:27,091 --> 00:08:31,095 {\an8}the Canadian Tank Hunting strategy came out of failure. 125 00:08:35,808 --> 00:08:38,477 NARRATOR: Commanders reported soldiers often panicked at just 126 00:08:38,477 --> 00:08:40,479 the threat of enemy tanks. 127 00:08:41,146 --> 00:08:43,357 And so it was very important for commanding officers and 128 00:08:43,357 --> 00:08:45,568 the soldiers themselves to have strategies as 129 00:08:45,568 --> 00:08:47,736 to how to attack these tanks. 130 00:08:47,736 --> 00:08:50,781 NARRATOR: Tank Hunters train to trap and destroy 131 00:08:50,781 --> 00:08:55,035 all kinds of armored vehicles like tanks and self-propelled guns. 132 00:08:56,036 --> 00:08:59,373 They use only weapons they can carry; anti-tank mines, 133 00:08:59,373 --> 00:09:03,127 and Thompson sub-machine guns, and the armor piercing rounds 134 00:09:03,127 --> 00:09:06,505 of the Projector Infantry Anti-Tank; the PIAT. 135 00:09:07,381 --> 00:09:10,509 {\an8}The strategy starts with immobilizing the prey. 136 00:09:10,509 --> 00:09:13,596 {\an8}Tank hunters bury mines across roads in front of 137 00:09:13,596 --> 00:09:15,180 {\an8}the armored advance. 138 00:09:15,556 --> 00:09:18,559 {\an8}When triggered, the mines destroy the tank tracks 139 00:09:18,559 --> 00:09:22,062 to stop it. PIAT teams move in to fire bombs 140 00:09:22,062 --> 00:09:26,942 straight into the tank’s hull. The ideal range is just 20 yards. 141 00:09:26,942 --> 00:09:30,613 {\an8}Soldiers with Tommy guns protect the PIAT operators 142 00:09:30,613 --> 00:09:33,532 {\an8}and take out any escaping tank crew. 143 00:09:35,993 --> 00:09:39,330 After the Germans blew the bridges, the rising Savio river means 144 00:09:39,330 --> 00:09:42,791 the Canadians can’t bring their own armor into the fight. 145 00:09:46,503 --> 00:09:48,380 (thematic music plays) 146 00:09:50,883 --> 00:09:54,595 These platoons are their best chance against German tanks. 147 00:09:58,766 --> 00:10:01,769 C company closes in on the crossroads located beside 148 00:10:01,769 --> 00:10:05,022 the parish church of Pieve Sestina. 149 00:10:09,234 --> 00:10:12,863 With reports of enemy armor, the Commander of the Seaforths 150 00:10:12,863 --> 00:10:16,033 new tank hunting platoon, Sergeant Keith Thompson, 151 00:10:16,033 --> 00:10:18,077 must dispatch his teams. 152 00:10:21,705 --> 00:10:25,501 He positions his men in ditches on either side of the approach 153 00:10:25,501 --> 00:10:28,128 and rushes into the road himself, 154 00:10:28,128 --> 00:10:31,590 to bury the mines before the German tanks arrive. 155 00:10:35,427 --> 00:10:38,931 (tank engine roars) 156 00:10:39,598 --> 00:10:40,933 (dramatic music crescendos) 157 00:10:48,023 --> 00:10:51,819 NARRATOR: According to Canadian Tank Hunter strategy, Sergeant Keith Thompson 158 00:10:51,819 --> 00:10:56,323 must stop, or at least slow down, the approaching enemy column. 159 00:10:59,493 --> 00:11:01,578 (thematic music) 160 00:11:05,499 --> 00:11:09,962 {\an8}As a first step, he moves to bury Hawkins grenades into the road 161 00:11:09,962 --> 00:11:12,464 {\an8}to cut off access to the intersection. 162 00:11:18,929 --> 00:11:21,974 (music continues) 163 00:11:27,438 --> 00:11:31,942 The Tank Hunters use the number 75 or Hawkins anti-tank grenade. 164 00:11:33,652 --> 00:11:38,907 It was developed after Dunkirk for the use of the British army and the Home Guard. 165 00:11:40,451 --> 00:11:44,163 A Hawkins grenade is a two pound explosive charge. 166 00:11:44,288 --> 00:11:47,666 It's rectangular in shape and kind of looks like a flask. 167 00:11:47,666 --> 00:11:51,587 {\an8}It can be buried like a mine, it can be attached to something 168 00:11:51,587 --> 00:11:55,883 {\an8}like an explosive charge, and it can even be thrown like a grenade. 169 00:11:57,009 --> 00:11:59,845 NARRATOR: Multiple Hawkins grenades can be strung 170 00:11:59,845 --> 00:12:02,639 together for a more explosive result. 171 00:12:04,433 --> 00:12:06,727 One grenade might not do the trick, 172 00:12:06,727 --> 00:12:09,980 but you know that a string of them will most likely disable 173 00:12:10,147 --> 00:12:13,525 any sort of armored vehicle that rolls across them. 174 00:12:16,820 --> 00:12:19,490 (thematic music continues) 175 00:12:28,832 --> 00:12:31,418 NARRATOR: Thompson finishes laying his trap. 176 00:12:31,835 --> 00:12:34,671 As the sound of the armored vehicles gets closer, 177 00:12:34,671 --> 00:12:38,467 he camouflages the grenades with leaves and dirt. 178 00:12:38,759 --> 00:12:41,470 (car approaching) 179 00:12:43,722 --> 00:12:45,808 (music intensifies) 180 00:12:47,768 --> 00:12:50,729 His check complete, Thompson jumps in the ditch 181 00:12:50,729 --> 00:12:54,775 with the other Tank Hunters from the Canadian Seaforth Highlanders. 182 00:12:58,654 --> 00:13:00,697 (car approaching) 183 00:13:01,281 --> 00:13:04,993 The lead German vehicle approaches the road junction. 184 00:13:06,745 --> 00:13:10,624 Thompson watches as the wheels roll between the grenades... 185 00:13:10,624 --> 00:13:13,293 ...and fail to detonate the explosives. 186 00:13:14,294 --> 00:13:17,714 Well, Sergeant Thompson's reaction was probably of disbelief. 187 00:13:17,923 --> 00:13:20,843 He had just set up this minefield and somehow this 188 00:13:20,843 --> 00:13:24,847 German staff car goes right through it without triggering one mine. 189 00:13:27,474 --> 00:13:29,810 NARRATOR: Thompson and some of his soldiers spray 190 00:13:29,810 --> 00:13:31,812 the moving vehicle with their machine guns. 191 00:13:31,812 --> 00:13:33,105 (heavy machine gun fire) 192 00:13:33,105 --> 00:13:37,234 While another Tank Hunter jumps up with a PIAT. 193 00:13:38,277 --> 00:13:43,115 At just the right moment, he launches a bomb at very close range. 194 00:13:45,033 --> 00:13:49,329 {\an8}The PIAT is a hand-held weapon that fires a two and a half pound bomb, 195 00:13:49,329 --> 00:13:53,000 {\an8}filled with RDX and TNT explosives. 196 00:13:55,836 --> 00:14:00,883 {\an8}The force of impact can tear through up to four inches of armor. 197 00:14:02,050 --> 00:14:03,635 (loud explosion) 198 00:14:04,386 --> 00:14:08,891 The explosion of the PIAT bomb stops the car and kills the driver. 199 00:14:09,516 --> 00:14:10,726 (music bellows) 200 00:14:13,145 --> 00:14:16,189 A German officer escapes the wreckage and attempts to alert 201 00:14:16,189 --> 00:14:17,941 the armored column behind him. 202 00:14:19,151 --> 00:14:22,487 But Thompson and the others move in for the kill. 203 00:14:24,364 --> 00:14:27,951 - SOLDIER 2: Fall back! - NARRATOR: Then reset the trap. 204 00:14:31,788 --> 00:14:35,834 It doesn’t take long. Not far behind the lead staff car, 205 00:14:35,834 --> 00:14:39,504 a German self-propelled gun bears down on the crossroads. 206 00:14:41,298 --> 00:14:42,591 (music intensifies) 207 00:14:42,758 --> 00:14:46,678 Self-propelled guns, or SPG, look much like tanks. 208 00:14:47,179 --> 00:14:51,141 But their gun is in a fixed case-mate instead of a rotating turret. 209 00:14:51,141 --> 00:14:55,562 But in these conditions, operating both vehicles would be a challenge. 210 00:14:55,562 --> 00:15:00,317 Given the rain and the darkness, visibility was extremely poor. 211 00:15:00,651 --> 00:15:05,113 {\an8}We can assume that the driver of this self-propelled gun didn't 212 00:15:05,530 --> 00:15:09,826 understand and didn't see what was going on in front of him. 213 00:15:21,797 --> 00:15:24,174 (music grows dramatically) 214 00:15:26,426 --> 00:15:29,513 NARRATOR: Most likely unseen, a Canadian Private 215 00:15:29,513 --> 00:15:32,015 takes aim with his PIAT. 216 00:15:34,267 --> 00:15:36,228 But his bomb misses the mark, 217 00:15:38,105 --> 00:15:42,484 and the enemy self-propelled gun continues to rumble toward them. 218 00:15:43,777 --> 00:15:44,861 (dramatic music crescendos) 219 00:15:47,280 --> 00:15:49,866 (intense thematic music) 220 00:15:51,159 --> 00:15:54,037 As the German armor nears the crossroads, 221 00:15:54,871 --> 00:15:59,376 the Tank Hunters hold back to see if Sergeant Keith Thompson’s minefield 222 00:15:59,376 --> 00:16:01,795 can stop the self-propelled gun. 223 00:16:04,756 --> 00:16:08,093 The vehicle’s track crosses the Hawkins grenades. 224 00:16:10,220 --> 00:16:12,764 This time, it sets off an explosion. 225 00:16:15,017 --> 00:16:18,687 What's interesting is that in retrospect Sergeant Thompson is probably pretty happy 226 00:16:18,687 --> 00:16:22,107 {\an8}the staff car didn't set off the mines, because now what happens 227 00:16:22,107 --> 00:16:26,153 {\an8}of course is he's immobilized the higher value target. 228 00:16:26,611 --> 00:16:31,408 NARRATOR: With damage to its track, the self-propelled gun comes to a standstill. 229 00:16:31,408 --> 00:16:34,911 Bringing the vehicle to a stop is ideal for tank hunting. 230 00:16:34,911 --> 00:16:37,706 You have a better chance of hitting it and causing more damage 231 00:16:37,706 --> 00:16:40,751 from the PIAT if you're aiming at a stationary target. 232 00:16:43,420 --> 00:16:48,008 NARRATOR: The Canadian Tank Hunters move into the open to finish the job. 233 00:16:49,885 --> 00:16:52,512 A PIAT team lines up their shot. 234 00:16:55,307 --> 00:16:56,641 (gunshot) 235 00:16:58,185 --> 00:17:02,981 With an armor piercing hit, the SPG ceases to be a threat. 236 00:17:05,650 --> 00:17:09,988 Other tank hunters scramble onto the gun to finish its crew. 237 00:17:14,409 --> 00:17:17,871 - They drop a grenade into the hatch. - Fire in the hole! 238 00:17:18,413 --> 00:17:21,500 -(muffled explosion) -(suspenseful music) 239 00:17:23,710 --> 00:17:27,589 (rapid gunfire) 240 00:17:35,263 --> 00:17:40,060 The self-propelled gun is inoperable and blocks the road. 241 00:17:47,818 --> 00:17:49,903 (tank roaring) 242 00:17:51,863 --> 00:17:55,534 The armored column has been dispatched by Captain Ekkehard Maurer, 243 00:17:55,534 --> 00:18:00,330 second Battalion Commander of the German ninth Panzergrenadier Regiment. 244 00:18:01,873 --> 00:18:04,668 The ninth Panzergrenadier Regiment is the successor 245 00:18:04,668 --> 00:18:09,631 {\an8}of the Old ninth Infantry Regiment, the traditional Prussian Regiment 246 00:18:09,631 --> 00:18:15,762 {\an8}that was based in Potsdam near Berlin, and was seen as a source for 247 00:18:15,762 --> 00:18:20,100 the aristocratic German or Prussian Officer Corps. 248 00:18:23,353 --> 00:18:27,232 NARRATOR: They had arrived in Italy during the summer of 1943. 249 00:18:27,357 --> 00:18:32,779 And moved into defensive position near the east coast in September of ’44. 250 00:18:33,905 --> 00:18:38,451 Maurer needs more information about the Canadian advance in order to thwart it. 251 00:18:38,451 --> 00:18:41,079 The Germans are on their back-foot here, 252 00:18:41,246 --> 00:18:45,125 and they are extremely surprised to see how far 253 00:18:45,125 --> 00:18:48,795 the Canadians have already penetrated into their lines. 254 00:18:49,671 --> 00:18:52,174 NARRATOR: In addition, the Canadian artillery barrage has 255 00:18:52,674 --> 00:18:56,219 disrupted communication lines, compounding the problem. 256 00:18:56,219 --> 00:19:00,182 German Commanders cannot communicate with each other, so, 257 00:19:00,348 --> 00:19:03,852 the left neighbor doesn't know what his right neighbor is doing and... 258 00:19:03,852 --> 00:19:08,356 Or even communication further up the chain of command is barely possible. 259 00:19:10,150 --> 00:19:13,695 NARRATOR: But Maurer still has significant weaponry at his disposal, 260 00:19:13,695 --> 00:19:16,865 including Mark V Panther tanks. 261 00:19:20,452 --> 00:19:23,580 The Panzerkampfwagen or Mark V Panther 262 00:19:23,747 --> 00:19:27,667 is one of the most powerful and feared tanks in Hitler’s army. 263 00:19:28,460 --> 00:19:30,962 The Germans developed the medium sized tank rapidly 264 00:19:30,962 --> 00:19:36,885 in 1941 in response to the threat posed by the Soviet T-34. 265 00:19:38,053 --> 00:19:42,474 {\an8}The Mark V stormed onto the battlefield in 1943 topped 266 00:19:42,474 --> 00:19:46,394 {\an8}with a powerful 75 millimeter high velocity gun, 267 00:19:46,394 --> 00:19:49,064 {\an8}and a pair of MG34 machine guns, 268 00:19:49,064 --> 00:19:52,525 {\an8}capable of unleashing hundreds of bullets per minute. 269 00:19:52,525 --> 00:19:56,780 {\an8}At 45 tons, this Panther is heavy but fast. 270 00:19:57,322 --> 00:20:03,078 A 700-horsepower motor generates a top speed of 28 miles per hour. 271 00:20:14,089 --> 00:20:17,509 As a Mark V tank grinds up the road, 272 00:20:19,511 --> 00:20:23,556 another team of Canadian Tank Hunters dashes across a field. 273 00:20:27,936 --> 00:20:32,023 Private Ernest Smith scouts for the best possible position. 274 00:20:32,023 --> 00:20:35,402 Private Smith is an interesting guy. He's clearly brave. 275 00:20:35,402 --> 00:20:37,112 And he's clearly a natural leader. 276 00:20:37,279 --> 00:20:39,906 When things get hot, even though he's not in command, 277 00:20:39,906 --> 00:20:42,617 he takes the initiative and people follow him. 278 00:20:43,910 --> 00:20:45,704 NARRATOR: Smith’s natural fighting instincts have been 279 00:20:45,704 --> 00:20:51,126 rewarded with numerous promotions. But they don’t seem to stick. 280 00:20:51,126 --> 00:20:55,630 Private Smith earned a reputation for being a troublemaker. Being insubordinate. 281 00:20:55,630 --> 00:21:01,219 He was promoted to Corporal nine times and demoted to Private nine times. 282 00:21:01,219 --> 00:21:04,556 He clearly had a problem with authority, 283 00:21:04,556 --> 00:21:07,809 but there was no question that he was a hell of a soldier. 284 00:21:07,809 --> 00:21:10,687 NARRATOR: With his Commander and fellow Tank Hunters occupied 285 00:21:10,687 --> 00:21:12,981 with the German self-propelled gun; 286 00:21:12,981 --> 00:21:14,899 (explosion) 287 00:21:15,108 --> 00:21:18,695 Smith has his eyes on the Panther tank further ahead. 288 00:21:23,199 --> 00:21:25,410 -(explosion) -(music bellows) 289 00:21:27,704 --> 00:21:32,083 He directs his PIAT team into a ditch with a view of the road. 290 00:21:36,129 --> 00:21:41,176 But as the tank creeps closer, he decides that a single PIAT isn’t enough. 291 00:21:42,635 --> 00:21:48,266 With the operator set, Smith and Private James Tennant hurry to fetch another. 292 00:21:49,559 --> 00:21:53,104 Leaving that one operator by himself is a risky move. 293 00:21:54,939 --> 00:21:59,569 When you are firing a PIAT half of your vision is blocked by the weapon. 294 00:22:02,906 --> 00:22:05,867 {\an8}Normally they work in twos so that if a German does sneak up on you, 295 00:22:05,867 --> 00:22:08,703 {\an8}you have someone watching your back to defend you. 296 00:22:09,829 --> 00:22:12,040 {\an8}NARRATOR: Smith’s company needs to reach the main highway 297 00:22:12,040 --> 00:22:16,711 {\an8}to cut off German reinforcements to the city of Cesena to the south. 298 00:22:18,630 --> 00:22:22,842 But instead, they encountered part of a German tank Kampfgruppe. 299 00:22:23,760 --> 00:22:26,805 To coordinate their action, C company has established 300 00:22:26,805 --> 00:22:29,891 a headquarters in the rural parish church. 301 00:22:31,559 --> 00:22:35,688 With the tank closing in, Smith and Tennant must be quick. 302 00:22:35,688 --> 00:22:39,192 They locate another PIAT at the headquarters. 303 00:22:39,901 --> 00:22:44,030 With the weapon in tow, the duo races back to their position. 304 00:22:50,954 --> 00:22:52,914 As they near the road... 305 00:22:53,206 --> 00:22:57,168 (rapid gunfire) 306 00:22:57,419 --> 00:23:00,547 ...machine gun bullets rip into the ground around them. 307 00:23:05,635 --> 00:23:09,139 (rapid gunfire) 308 00:23:12,851 --> 00:23:14,227 (rapid gunfire) 309 00:23:14,436 --> 00:23:16,104 NARRATOR: From the protection of a ditch, 310 00:23:16,104 --> 00:23:20,024 Canadian Private Ernest Smith gets his bearings. 311 00:23:20,358 --> 00:23:24,821 He sneaks a peek over the edge and sees the tank getting closer. 312 00:23:25,822 --> 00:23:28,616 The Panther sweeps the road with its machine gun. 313 00:23:30,910 --> 00:23:32,912 {\an8}Smith is probably worried about two things, 314 00:23:33,079 --> 00:23:36,166 {\an8}first of all his own position with his friend James Tennant 315 00:23:36,166 --> 00:23:39,043 {\an8}but also the lone PIAT operator that he left behind. 316 00:23:42,172 --> 00:23:45,758 NARRATOR: A minefield like the one which stopped the self-propelled gun earlier 317 00:23:45,758 --> 00:23:49,512 would have been helpful. But it’s too late now. 318 00:23:49,512 --> 00:23:53,725 James Tennant must get the PIAT charged and ready to fire. 319 00:23:55,226 --> 00:23:58,938 Private James Tennant is one of Smith's closest friends in the Regiment. 320 00:23:59,105 --> 00:24:02,525 The sources identify them as thick as thieves. 321 00:24:03,610 --> 00:24:04,903 (yells) 322 00:24:04,903 --> 00:24:08,031 NARRATOR: A machine gun blast strikes Tennant. 323 00:24:08,364 --> 00:24:11,075 -(gunfire continues) -(muffled groans) 324 00:24:12,744 --> 00:24:18,875 He’s alive but seriously wounded, and can no longer operate the PIAT. 325 00:24:21,211 --> 00:24:23,963 Smith likely considers his options. 326 00:24:24,422 --> 00:24:28,009 He can hide in the ditch with Tennant and hope he doesn't get shot. 327 00:24:28,009 --> 00:24:30,220 He can bring Tennant to a medical aid station and 328 00:24:30,220 --> 00:24:36,601 expose themselves to German fire, or he can take matters into his own hands. 329 00:24:36,768 --> 00:24:41,272 He has a split second to make the choice and he decides to engage the Germans. 330 00:24:44,192 --> 00:24:48,988 NARRATOR: Smith grabs the PIAT and readies himself at the edge of the ditch. 331 00:24:53,993 --> 00:24:56,579 At this moment, Smith is one man, 332 00:24:56,746 --> 00:24:59,165 against perhaps one of the most powerful tanks of 333 00:24:59,165 --> 00:25:01,543 the entire Second World War. 334 00:25:03,670 --> 00:25:06,673 If he misses his shot, it's unlikely he will survive. 335 00:25:09,092 --> 00:25:13,263 NARRATOR: He charges the weapon as he waits for the German Mark V Panther tank. 336 00:25:16,015 --> 00:25:20,770 Smith has no back up, and while the PIAT has armor piercing capabilities, 337 00:25:20,895 --> 00:25:24,274 its reputation with soldiers is mixed. 338 00:25:26,150 --> 00:25:31,281 It was really first used by the Canadians in Sicily and it wasn't yet perfected. 339 00:25:32,031 --> 00:25:34,701 {\an8}The shells would hit the sides of tanks and not explode, 340 00:25:34,701 --> 00:25:37,120 {\an8}of course this meant it was still very dangerous 341 00:25:37,120 --> 00:25:40,582 and so the initial use of the PIAT was not really 342 00:25:40,582 --> 00:25:43,042 inspiring a lot of confidence. 343 00:25:43,042 --> 00:25:45,878 NARRATOR: And even as reliability increases, 344 00:25:45,878 --> 00:25:49,632 one thing stays the same; the range. 345 00:25:49,632 --> 00:25:52,635 The maximum range of a PIAT is 100 yards. 346 00:25:52,635 --> 00:25:55,513 NARRATOR: And worse, the Tank Hunters determined 347 00:25:55,513 --> 00:26:00,226 the optimal distance for a hit, to be only 20 yards at night. 348 00:26:01,352 --> 00:26:02,604 (music bellows) 349 00:26:02,937 --> 00:26:06,649 You had to practically stand right up in front of the tank in order to hit it. 350 00:26:06,649 --> 00:26:10,361 And so, it's an absolutely terrifying ordeal 351 00:26:10,528 --> 00:26:14,282 and it really required heroism from these Canadian soldiers. 352 00:26:14,657 --> 00:26:17,160 NARRATOR: Tank Hunters even customize their PIATs 353 00:26:17,160 --> 00:26:20,747 by drilling new sights to accommodate the tight range. 354 00:26:23,291 --> 00:26:28,588 Smith waits until the tank is 30 feet, or just ten yards, away. 355 00:26:29,547 --> 00:26:33,259 Then jumps from the ditch and into the road. 356 00:26:35,053 --> 00:26:38,139 (rapid gunfire) 357 00:26:41,809 --> 00:26:45,063 With a bomb in the spigot and barely time to aim, 358 00:26:45,063 --> 00:26:47,982 Smith launches his attack on the Panther. 359 00:26:51,027 --> 00:26:53,988 As they fight for control of the sector, 360 00:26:54,572 --> 00:26:58,368 the Germans begin to appreciate the scale of the Canadian offensive. 361 00:26:59,452 --> 00:27:04,332 Captain Ekkehard Maurer is forced to further bolster defenses. 362 00:27:06,709 --> 00:27:10,421 To the north, the Canadians are overrunning the German lines 363 00:27:10,421 --> 00:27:13,424 {\an8}so that the Germans are in such a desperate position 364 00:27:13,424 --> 00:27:17,387 {\an8}that they need to deploy their battalion HQ into the battle. 365 00:27:22,350 --> 00:27:23,476 (rapid gunfire) 366 00:27:23,476 --> 00:27:25,728 NARRATOR: Maurer finds himself under attack. 367 00:27:25,728 --> 00:27:27,438 (speaking in native language). 368 00:27:33,569 --> 00:27:37,240 If headquarter troops are deployed into fighting, 369 00:27:37,407 --> 00:27:41,077 it means the situation is extremely critical. 370 00:27:41,411 --> 00:27:45,456 And this is actually one of the last resorts for the defenders. 371 00:27:47,291 --> 00:27:49,419 NARRATOR: The Canadians storm his position, 372 00:27:49,419 --> 00:27:52,797 and Maurer is injured by a hand grenade. 373 00:27:56,801 --> 00:27:59,095 He must withdraw from the fight. 374 00:28:02,223 --> 00:28:05,393 (rapid gunfire) 375 00:28:12,567 --> 00:28:16,988 On the road beside the parish church at Pieve Sestina, 376 00:28:17,572 --> 00:28:19,240 Private Ernest Smith... 377 00:28:22,952 --> 00:28:25,580 ...scores a direct hit on the German Panther tank. 378 00:28:27,874 --> 00:28:30,126 The giant beast grinds to a halt. 379 00:28:31,502 --> 00:28:34,672 The wrecked Panther V tries to reverse. 380 00:28:34,672 --> 00:28:37,633 When Smith hits the Panther he immobilizes it. 381 00:28:38,176 --> 00:28:41,262 {\an8}The problem is he now has to deal with about ten Germans 382 00:28:41,262 --> 00:28:42,805 {\an8}who were riding on the back, 383 00:28:42,972 --> 00:28:46,017 who now hop off and start moving forward towards him. 384 00:28:48,644 --> 00:28:51,355 NARRATOR: At very close range and all alone, 385 00:28:51,355 --> 00:28:53,649 Smith doesn’t have a lot of options. 386 00:28:58,196 --> 00:29:02,742 NARRATOR: The PIAT that Canadian Private Ernest Smith had used against the tank, 387 00:29:02,742 --> 00:29:05,953 is useless against multiple advancing enemy soldiers. 388 00:29:07,705 --> 00:29:10,500 He reaches for his Thompson submachine gun. 389 00:29:16,088 --> 00:29:18,674 Here, Smith does something kind of incredible. 390 00:29:20,760 --> 00:29:25,181 {\an8}Instead of retreating, he moves out farther on the road and engages 391 00:29:25,181 --> 00:29:27,350 {\an8}the German Grenadiers with his Tommy Gun. 392 00:29:29,393 --> 00:29:31,938 NARRATOR: Arguably the most notorious firearm ever, 393 00:29:33,064 --> 00:29:36,567 the Thompson submachine gun was designed as an automatic weapon 394 00:29:36,567 --> 00:29:39,111 that could be operated by a single soldier. 395 00:29:41,572 --> 00:29:45,910 {\an8}The sub of submachine refers to compact bullet caliber relative 396 00:29:45,910 --> 00:29:51,916 {\an8}to those fired by rifles. New box magazines deliver 30 rounds, 397 00:29:51,916 --> 00:29:56,337 {\an8}with a staggering rate of fire up to 700 rounds per minute. 398 00:29:58,089 --> 00:30:01,175 The American weapon was first sold to the British military for 399 00:30:01,175 --> 00:30:04,971 about $225 per unit in 1940. 400 00:30:06,389 --> 00:30:08,683 Winston Churchill himself would quip; 401 00:30:08,683 --> 00:30:11,727 “General Thompson’s gun may be, pound for pound, 402 00:30:11,727 --> 00:30:14,939 the most devastating weapon devised for war.” 403 00:30:17,859 --> 00:30:19,986 Efficiencies to lower the cost make 404 00:30:19,986 --> 00:30:22,947 the Thompson ubiquitous among the allies in Europe. 405 00:30:27,326 --> 00:30:31,163 Smith fires into the attacking German soldiers at very close range. 406 00:30:34,458 --> 00:30:41,132 -(thematic music) -(rapid gunfire) 407 00:30:41,674 --> 00:30:48,055 In the firefight, he kills four. The others fall back in disarray. 408 00:30:59,901 --> 00:31:02,069 As Smith continues to hold the line... 409 00:31:03,946 --> 00:31:07,783 ...a 75 millimeter tank shell explodes nearby. 410 00:31:11,287 --> 00:31:16,083 He sees another tank approach, while more German infantry charge through 411 00:31:16,083 --> 00:31:19,086 - the fields in his direction. - Well at this point, 412 00:31:19,086 --> 00:31:22,006 Smith figures that the second German tank is out of range. 413 00:31:22,006 --> 00:31:26,969 So, in fact the most pressing problem are the German grenadiers bearing down on him. 414 00:31:30,473 --> 00:31:33,935 NARRATOR: Smith maintains a steady stream of fire against the soldiers... 415 00:31:34,560 --> 00:31:38,147 (rapid gunfire) 416 00:31:40,024 --> 00:31:45,863 Until he runs out of bullets. He returns to the ditch to find more, 417 00:31:46,906 --> 00:31:50,576 and locates a spare magazine near Private James Tennant. 418 00:31:51,369 --> 00:31:52,578 Smith is certainly fighting to defend 419 00:31:52,578 --> 00:31:55,998 the Seaforths hard won position, but he's also fighting to defend 420 00:31:55,998 --> 00:31:59,001 his friend James Tennant, who's lying there wounded. 421 00:32:00,086 --> 00:32:04,173 NARRATOR: Smith reloads and jumps back on the road, staying close to Tennant. 422 00:32:04,882 --> 00:32:09,595 (rapid gunfire) 423 00:32:14,183 --> 00:32:16,852 The German infantry retreats. 424 00:32:22,858 --> 00:32:26,404 But once again the advancing tank opens fire. 425 00:32:30,574 --> 00:32:32,535 And forces Smith to re-focus. 426 00:32:33,869 --> 00:32:36,497 (rapid gunfire) 427 00:32:36,497 --> 00:32:40,418 At this point in the battle, he decides to grab his friend and take him to 428 00:32:40,418 --> 00:32:42,586 a medical aide post at a nearby church. 429 00:32:45,172 --> 00:32:49,635 Often when we think of battles, we think of faceless soldiers 430 00:32:49,635 --> 00:32:53,389 sort of firing at each other in a melee of combat and chaos, 431 00:32:53,389 --> 00:32:56,183 but in reality, a lot of battles are made up 432 00:32:56,183 --> 00:32:58,978 of these little human moments. And this is one of those. 433 00:33:00,021 --> 00:33:03,649 NARRATOR: Smith needs to be patient. He must wait for a lull 434 00:33:03,649 --> 00:33:06,569 that will allow him to assist Tennant. 435 00:33:07,903 --> 00:33:11,490 When the tank pauses its attack, Smith uses the opportunity to 436 00:33:11,490 --> 00:33:14,869 help his friend out of the relative safety of the ditch. 437 00:33:19,457 --> 00:33:23,377 (rapid gunfire) 438 00:33:24,962 --> 00:33:29,091 (thematic music grows) 439 00:33:34,430 --> 00:33:37,183 The battle continues in the surrounding fields and 440 00:33:37,183 --> 00:33:40,686 along the road, as the rest of C Company and the Tank Hunters 441 00:33:40,686 --> 00:33:43,606 try to stave off the German counterattack. 442 00:33:49,236 --> 00:33:53,157 The two move as quickly as they can to the nearby church. 443 00:33:53,157 --> 00:33:56,911 The Seaforth Highlanders C Company Commander, Major Stewart Lynch, 444 00:33:56,911 --> 00:34:01,540 has established his headquarters with an aid post at the crossroads. 445 00:34:03,000 --> 00:34:07,379 Smith arrives with the injured Private James Tennant to get help from the medics. 446 00:34:09,048 --> 00:34:13,260 {\an8}When a soldier is injured in battle, he's normally taken to the rear, 447 00:34:13,260 --> 00:34:16,722 {\an8}taken care of either in a temporary medical facility 448 00:34:16,722 --> 00:34:20,851 or brought back to hospital. But when they were at the Savio River, 449 00:34:20,851 --> 00:34:24,313 the river was so swollen there was so much water going through 450 00:34:24,313 --> 00:34:27,608 it that it was simply impossible to get the wounded back and so 451 00:34:27,775 --> 00:34:32,321 they were left there, uh, in terribly vulnerable situations. 452 00:34:32,655 --> 00:34:37,034 NARRATOR: With no way to cross the river, the wounded can’t be evacuated. 453 00:34:37,034 --> 00:34:40,287 And the flooding creates other difficulties for Lynch. 454 00:34:40,287 --> 00:34:44,375 At this point, Major Lynch's biggest concern is reinforcements or 455 00:34:44,375 --> 00:34:48,712 {\an8}the lack thereof. The simple fact is the Savio river water levels have 456 00:34:48,712 --> 00:34:53,259 {\an8}risen so rapidly that he can't get any reinforcements across. 457 00:34:53,259 --> 00:34:55,344 NARRATOR: This has been a re-current problem for 458 00:34:55,344 --> 00:34:58,389 the allies throughout their fighting in Italy. 459 00:35:00,015 --> 00:35:02,643 (melancholy music plays) 460 00:35:04,270 --> 00:35:08,816 Proper Italian bridges were built high above potential flood waters. 461 00:35:08,816 --> 00:35:12,778 But many have been destroyed. Some by allied aerial attacks 462 00:35:12,778 --> 00:35:16,949 to prevent German retreat, others blown up by the Germans to cut off 463 00:35:16,949 --> 00:35:23,330 access to the other bank. Either way, civilians pay the price. 464 00:35:24,665 --> 00:35:27,877 The allies must often rebuild during the rainy season when 465 00:35:28,043 --> 00:35:30,504 the rushing waters complicate the job. 466 00:35:32,590 --> 00:35:37,052 As before, allied forces battle the weather and the Germans. 467 00:35:37,219 --> 00:35:39,513 With the Savio flooding... 468 00:35:39,513 --> 00:35:41,932 The banks are so muddy the engineers can't find 469 00:35:41,932 --> 00:35:45,186 a good spot to build a bridge. So no infantry's coming across. 470 00:35:45,186 --> 00:35:47,521 No supplies and no armor. 471 00:35:47,521 --> 00:35:50,566 NARRATOR: The Seaforths are on their own. 472 00:35:53,861 --> 00:35:56,238 SMITH (muffled): Men are taking a beating. 473 00:35:56,238 --> 00:35:58,657 NARRATOR: Smith would later recall how dire things were. 474 00:35:59,325 --> 00:36:02,661 According to Smith, in the church Major Lynch turned 475 00:36:02,661 --> 00:36:06,290 to him and said, "We're surrounded, what should we do?" 476 00:36:06,290 --> 00:36:10,169 And Smith replies, "Take a window and get your head down." 477 00:36:12,087 --> 00:36:15,090 Whether it happened exactly like that or not, 478 00:36:15,090 --> 00:36:17,218 there's no question that Smith was a good guy to listen to and 479 00:36:17,218 --> 00:36:21,096 a good guy to rely on for advice in such a hot situation. 480 00:36:21,805 --> 00:36:25,017 NARRATOR: But Smith himself leaves the sanctuary 481 00:36:25,017 --> 00:36:27,853 to be ready for more enemy activity. 482 00:36:31,857 --> 00:36:35,319 The Canadians have slowed down the German’s armored column, 483 00:36:35,319 --> 00:36:37,029 but they need to destroy it. 484 00:36:37,196 --> 00:36:40,282 Just outside the church, Sergeant Keith Thompson and 485 00:36:40,282 --> 00:36:44,245 other Tank Hunters hold off German infantry who pour across 486 00:36:44,245 --> 00:36:46,872 the fields and down the road... 487 00:36:55,881 --> 00:36:59,677 When a German self-propelled gun swerves towards them. 488 00:37:01,220 --> 00:37:02,888 (thematic music bellows) 489 00:37:06,350 --> 00:37:10,938 NARRATOR: As the rain continues, Canadian Sergeant Keith Thompson 490 00:37:11,105 --> 00:37:13,732 confronts yet another threat in the dark. 491 00:37:17,403 --> 00:37:22,074 A German self-propelled gun needs to avoid the wreckage of the Kampfgruppe. 492 00:37:23,575 --> 00:37:25,661 (music intensifies) 493 00:37:26,287 --> 00:37:30,291 {\an8}The next German self-propelled gun is kind of stuck at the road. 494 00:37:30,291 --> 00:37:33,043 {\an8}There's wrecked vehicles, there's bodies. 495 00:37:33,419 --> 00:37:38,841 So the Germans attempt to out flank the Canadians by moving towards the church. 496 00:37:45,973 --> 00:37:49,143 NARRATOR: As the teams ready their PIATS, the supporting Tank Hunters 497 00:37:49,143 --> 00:37:52,146 open fire with their Thompson machine guns. 498 00:37:57,568 --> 00:38:00,654 But the bullets ricochet harmlessly off the armor. 499 00:38:03,657 --> 00:38:10,372 As the self-propelled gun comes into range the Tank Hunters unleash their PIAT bombs. 500 00:38:12,583 --> 00:38:15,336 (music grows more dramatic) 501 00:38:21,717 --> 00:38:26,221 There’s a direct hit and a second SPG is put out of action. 502 00:38:37,566 --> 00:38:42,363 With Captain Ekkehard Maurer injured, first Lieutenant Strangen is the 503 00:38:42,363 --> 00:38:46,825 only German officer available to assume control of the battalion. 504 00:38:48,035 --> 00:38:53,624 {\an8}Maurer is wounded by a grenade blast, his adjutant, a First Lieutenant, 505 00:38:53,624 --> 00:38:57,378 takes over command. And this is quite rare that 506 00:38:57,378 --> 00:39:00,631 a First Lieutenant takes command over an entire battalion. 507 00:39:00,756 --> 00:39:05,552 It just shows you what a desperate situation the Germans found themselves. 508 00:39:08,389 --> 00:39:10,974 NARRATOR: But while the Canadians prove tenacious... 509 00:39:14,728 --> 00:39:17,314 ...the battle isn’t over yet. 510 00:39:19,483 --> 00:39:24,696 Sergeant Thompson and his men mop up from the earlier attack on the SPG. 511 00:39:26,198 --> 00:39:29,868 They strain to see what will emerge next from the darkness. 512 00:39:31,954 --> 00:39:34,748 In time, another Panther tank crawls forward 513 00:39:34,748 --> 00:39:37,626 also trying to move around the back of the church. 514 00:39:42,089 --> 00:39:45,592 Thompson’s PIAT teams resight and reload. 515 00:39:48,011 --> 00:39:52,891 The tank slows as it reaches the destroyed self-propelled gun blocking its path. 516 00:39:54,101 --> 00:39:58,772 Operating a 45 ton Panther tank at the best of times would be difficult. 517 00:39:58,772 --> 00:40:02,192 But in this situation, it's dark out. 518 00:40:03,777 --> 00:40:06,113 It would've been extremely difficult to navigate around 519 00:40:06,113 --> 00:40:09,616 this battlefield that was strewn with so much debris. 520 00:40:13,829 --> 00:40:17,040 -(dramatic music grows) -(flames licking) 521 00:40:21,712 --> 00:40:23,630 NARRATOR: The conditions prove disastrous. 522 00:40:24,715 --> 00:40:30,429 DAVID: It's wet, it's muddy and the Panther ends up sliding into a ditch. 523 00:40:33,557 --> 00:40:37,853 NARRATOR: Thompson seizes the opportunity and motions his PIAT team forward... 524 00:40:38,687 --> 00:40:42,191 - SOLIDER: Tank! Tank! - THOMPSON: PIAT! PIAT! 525 00:40:47,029 --> 00:40:48,655 NARRATOR: Flanked by the machine gunners. 526 00:40:54,536 --> 00:40:57,164 They knock out the tank with their PIATS. 527 00:41:03,295 --> 00:41:06,924 (rapid gunfire) 528 00:41:08,050 --> 00:41:11,762 As the German crew tries to flee, two are killed. 529 00:41:11,929 --> 00:41:14,223 Others escape into the darkness. 530 00:41:17,100 --> 00:41:21,480 (thematic music swells) 531 00:41:25,984 --> 00:41:31,573 By 0-600, the Germans withdraw after losing over 100 men and many vehicles, 532 00:41:32,491 --> 00:41:36,370 including the two self-propelled guns and two Panther tanks. 533 00:41:39,289 --> 00:41:44,419 Casualties for the Seaforth Highlanders during the operation amount to 106 men; 534 00:41:44,419 --> 00:41:47,798 including 18 killed and 61 wounded. 535 00:42:00,769 --> 00:42:04,314 The Canadian victory is so quick and so complete... 536 00:42:04,314 --> 00:42:05,732 Hey! 537 00:42:05,732 --> 00:42:09,653 A group of German soldiers who had been bypassed in the dark, 538 00:42:09,653 --> 00:42:12,698 turn up at their former command post for breakfast, 539 00:42:12,698 --> 00:42:15,659 not aware it had been captured overnight. 540 00:42:19,580 --> 00:42:21,707 (speaking in native language) 541 00:42:21,707 --> 00:42:26,003 56 are rounded up and taken as prisoners of war. 542 00:42:28,463 --> 00:42:33,176 (soft thematic music plays) 543 00:42:39,224 --> 00:42:40,767 For his coolness and tenacity, 544 00:42:41,184 --> 00:42:44,605 Sergeant Keith Thompson earns a distinguished conduct medal. 545 00:42:45,647 --> 00:42:48,734 He’s credited with the preservation of the Canadians’ bridgehead 546 00:42:48,734 --> 00:42:53,280 in the face of a determined and strongly supported counterattack. 547 00:42:56,408 --> 00:43:00,662 Ernest Smith earns the Commonwealth’s highest military honor; 548 00:43:00,662 --> 00:43:02,873 The Victoria Cross. 549 00:43:03,248 --> 00:43:06,043 {\an8}Smith was the only Canadian Private to earn 550 00:43:06,043 --> 00:43:08,337 {\an8}the Victoria Cross during the Second World War. 551 00:43:08,337 --> 00:43:13,175 {\an8}And this is an incredible achievement, but he was also a very colorful character. 552 00:43:13,175 --> 00:43:16,553 {\an8}For instance, before he was to meet King George VI 553 00:43:16,553 --> 00:43:19,431 they supposedly locked him in jail with a few beers to 554 00:43:19,598 --> 00:43:25,479 make sure that he would show up the next day. And when he did he refused to bow. 555 00:43:25,479 --> 00:43:28,774 He saluted instead. And I think this was a testament to his 556 00:43:28,940 --> 00:43:32,694 rather complicated relationship with authority. 557 00:43:40,869 --> 00:43:43,789 {\an8}NARRATOR: Smith was Canada’s last living Victoria Cross recipient 558 00:43:43,789 --> 00:43:50,545 {\an8}when he passed away in 2005. He was honored as a national hero. 559 00:43:52,422 --> 00:43:55,759 {\an8}Despite allied hopes for a quick victory in northern Italy, 560 00:43:55,926 --> 00:43:58,387 {\an8}after the breakout from the Apennine mountains, 561 00:43:58,387 --> 00:44:03,392 {\an8}Bologna wouldn’t be liberated until April 1945. 562 00:44:03,392 --> 00:44:06,061 {\an8}And by then, Seaforth Highlanders of Canada would be 563 00:44:06,061 --> 00:44:07,979 {\an8}fighting the Germans in the Netherlands. 53560

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