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Hill 112 - July 11, 1944

Operation Jupiter - Operation Jupiter
Western Front By: yangtze - Last update: 04/07/2009
Axis Player: Allied Player:
x5 x6 x5 x6
    first You play first
CLASSIFIED Classified scenarios are usually official scenarios published in print but not on the Web. This is why their content is not displayed. However, you may still rate them and write After Action Reports.

Historical Background:
Montgomery began a frontal assault on the city of Caen on July 7. At the same time, he renewed attacks west of the city to capture the high ground between the rivers Odon and Orne. Part of this high ground was Hill 112, which had been captured and then abandoned during Operation Epsom. From the elevation of the hill, both valleys of the Odon and Orne could be seen and the Germans argued that whoever controlled Hill 112 controlled Normandy.

Between June 25 when they occupied Hill 112, and July 23 when they were finally driven from the town of Maltot, the 2nd SS Panzer Corps fought to hold the hill. The area around Hill 112 changed hands many times, and thousands of Allied and German troops were killed or wounded on its slopes.

The first action of Operation Jupiter on July 11 was a British assault to regain the hill. The British 43rd (Wessex) Division, with Churchill tanks in support, lost more than 2,000 men in the first 36 hours. The Allied advance faced dug-in tanks of the 102nd SS Heavy Panzer Battalion in front of Maltot and SS infantry units concealed in cornfields. Casualties from both sides were so high it was reported that the Odon River was dammed with corpses. The 43rd Division's commander, Major-General G.I. Thomas was known as "the Butcher" for his seeming indifference to casualties as he pushed his men forward. Operation Jupiter was hailed a strategic success, although it wasn't until the American forces launched Operation Cobra that the German forces withdrew from the area.

The stage is set, the battle lines are drawn, and you are in command. The rest is history.

Briefing:
Axis Player [Germany]
Take 5 Command cards.

Allied Player [Great Britain]
Take 5 command cards.
You move first.

Conditions of Victory:
6 Medals.

The indicated hex in the town of Maltot and Hill 112 are Temporary Medal Objectives for the Allied forces.

Special Rules:
Place a badge on the German elite tank unit and on the mechanized infantry unit (Troops 2 - Specialized units).

Air rules are optional: If used, give one Air Sortie card to the Allied player, and shuffle the other in the deck, at game start.

Scenario Bibliography:
(*) based on an original scenario from Yangtze.

www.army.mod.uk/lightinfantry/ history_traditions/major_battles/hill_112_1944/
Tim Saunders, Hill 112, Pen-and-Sword Books Ltd.

Text by: yangtze . Last update: Thu Dec 4 12:09:21 2008


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