Pill boxes and Anti Tank bollards isbn 9781873877395 Photographs of World War 2 defences,
Stop Line Green (SLG) was a continuous linear defensive position some 100 mile long running in rough semi circle east of
WAR WALKS Stop Line Green
New 2022 edition
ISBN 9781873877395 by Major Martin Green
WW2 History
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/255480418613
Photographs
and Walks around the World War 2 defences, Pill boxes and Anti Tank bollards
from
Book Review:
Stop Line Green was one of the major defenses against land
invasion during the 1940's Miles Kington's article from The Independent Strange
relics of Wiltshire's forgotten Maginot Line My father-in-law was in the Tank
Regiment during the war - he was most distressed to hear of the death of his
old commander, Michael Carver, the other day - and I suppose that it is because
of his continuing interest in tank warfare that I, who have very little
interest in war of any kind, keep my eyes open for scraps of tank information
that might come my way. I have recently been working on a forthcoming Radio 4
series about General de Gaulle, and I had never realised just how convinced the
old general was of the importance of tanks in the coming war.
All through the 1930s he preached the gospel of tank
superiority, and it was
There are signs of warfare round here, of course. There are
Arthurian battle grounds (doubtful) and castles knocked down in Civil War sieges
(nearby Farleigh Hungerford castle, never rebuilt) and even, on our local
church door, damage which is said to have been done by Vikings trying to get at
the terrified folk seeking sanctuary inside. But the only local legend about
the Second World War concerns an underground motor bicycle factory at the
Big pillboxes, with gun slits. Somewhat sinister looking
things, crouching like huge armed toads, in the brambles near rivers.
Why on earth would anyone want to build pillboxes on the
Wiltshire-Somerset border? To stop German tanks, I now learn from a fascinating
booklet called Stop Line Green by Major Green (Reardon Publishing). In 1940,
when the German tanks had swept across
So he ordered every possible obstacle to be put in the way of
German tanks, and all through that summer a crash programme was put into operation
to build anything that might slow down tanks beside natural obstacles such as
the River Avon, or railway lines. These pillboxes were thrown up in savage
haste, says Major Green, but they were well and solidly built. I can testify to
that. All the pillboxes near me are now camouflaged by dense bramble and elder
trees, and are pretty smelly inside where they have been used as emergency
refuges, but they should stand for at least another hundred years.
There is a wood called Hog Wood near Hinton Charterhouse
where I sometimes take the dog for a walk, and alongside the footpath there is
a meandering ditch which I have always taken to be an old sunken way or perhaps
a drainage gulley.
Not so, I now learn. It is a genuine tank trap, dug in 1940,
never used, never filled in and never forgotten, at least not by Major Green.
Strange, somehow, to wander among these relics of a campaign that never
happened. The Major thinks that the line - built to safeguard
"It is now good tank country offering easy passage with
wide and deep fields of view and fire."
That is one thing I have never heard mentioned in debate
about field usage - that the more hedges you grub out, the easier it is for
tanks to come through. By the end of summer 1940 the ring of defence called
Stop Line Green (which linked up with others called Stop Line Blue and Red) was
nearly ready.
But by October we had won the Battle of Britain and a German invasion had become impossible. Churchill sent out an order: Forget about the Stop Lines - There Won't be Any German Tanks Coming. From that moment, the tank traps, pillboxes and tank bollards lay silent and forgotten, waiting for blackberries to grow on them and for their historian to come along. That man is Major Green (no first name, apparently) and his Stop Line Green, though only 36 pages long, is my military history of the year. Book of the year.
Where to buy it
Ebay:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/255480418613
England and UK
Out of the UK such as America / USA
email orders@reardon.biz as we can give you an order link.
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