🔗===========>> The WWII Germany > The ETO > War of Attrition, Fall 1944 Submodule <<=============🔗
subpages: Order of Battle, 15 Sep '44 The Netherlands, Fall 1944
Rhineland: West Wall Aachen Hürtgen Operation Queen Queen/Hürtgen Last Offensives
Lorraine & Alsace: Third Army in Lorraine Seventh Army in Lorraine Seventh Army in Alsace
Order of Battle, 15 Dec '44
some ETO submodules: Liberation of France and Belgium Ardennes/The Bulge Siegfried Line, 1945
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subpages: Order of Battle, 15 Sep '44 The Netherlands, Fall 1944
Rhineland: West Wall Aachen Hürtgen Operation Queen Queen/Hürtgen Last Offensives
Lorraine & Alsace: Third Army in Lorraine Seventh Army in Lorraine Seventh Army in Alsace
Order of Battle, 15 Dec '44
some ETO submodules: Liberation of France and Belgium Ardennes/The Bulge Siegfried Line, 1945
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bigpigeon.us webpage WWII Germany > The ETO > War of Attrition > Lorraine and Alsace, 1944, © 2025 by Robert A. Christiansen, updated by RAC 19 Jun 2025
This webpage and its affiliated webpages summarize US Third and Seventh Army operations in Lorraine and Alsace in northeast France from mid-September to the end of 1944.
This webpage and its affiliated webpages summarize US Third and Seventh Army operations in Lorraine and Alsace in northeast France from mid-September to the end of 1944.
The Geographic and Military Setting
The accompanying maps show northeastern France, since 1984 known as the Grand Est administrative region.
The Ardennes Department in northern Champagne, like the rest of Champagne, was liberated during the Allied sweep across northern France in the late summer of 1944 and remained liberated. The Battle of the Bulge was fought in the Belgian Ardennes, to the northeast, and in northern Luxembourg. In late August 1944, as German forces retreated across northern France, General George Patton's Third Army XX and XII Corps advanced eastward from southern Normandy and entered the Grand Est area.
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Meanwhile the US Seventh and French First Armies landed in southeastern France in mid August 1944 and fought their way northward along the Rhone River Valley, liberating Lyon on 3 September, Dijon on 11 September, and Chaumont (on the above map) on 13 September.
In early September, fuel shortages in the Third Army and developing German resistance in eastern Lorraine caused the Allied offensive in northeastern France to sputter.
Portions of Lorraine and Alsace were not liberated in the fall of 1944, but remained under German occupation until late March 1945, when the last German forces were expelled from what is today the Grand Est region.
In early September, fuel shortages in the Third Army and developing German resistance in eastern Lorraine caused the Allied offensive in northeastern France to sputter.
Portions of Lorraine and Alsace were not liberated in the fall of 1944, but remained under German occupation until late March 1945, when the last German forces were expelled from what is today the Grand Est region.
Follow the three links on the Lorraine and Alsace heading line above for summaries of major fall 1944 military operations in northeastern France.
For serious visitors, he scalable version of the map on the right might be helpful. |
Sources for Big Pigeon's WWII Germany > The ETO > War of Attrition > Lorraine/Alsace, 1944 webpage:
- The Grand Est Region, northeastern France, map, https://www.freeworldmaps.net/europe/france/grand-est/grand-est-map.jpg - C/O Free World Maps, https://www.freeworldmaps.net.
- The Lorraine and Alsace map was taken from The Lorraine Campaign by Hugh M. Cole and was found at https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-E-Lorraine/maps/USA-E-Lorraine-II.jpg.