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| HMS Belfast served throughout the Second World War, playing a leading part in the destruction of the battle cruiser Scharnhorst, and also the Normandy Landings. Ever since the disastrous raid upon Dieppe in 1942, when the assaulting troops had been cut down by well-protected German gun positions, Allied amphibious operations had been supported by heavy naval bombardments. Now, for D-Day, the biggest landing of all, the bombardment force comprised
5 battleships, 2 monitors, 20 cruisers and 65 destroyers. But this was
only part of the total force of 2,700 seagoing vessels and 1,900 smaller
craft which were deployed in support of Operation 'Neptune', the naval
side of the Normandy landings. |
HMS Belfast Cauldeen and Inver pupils attended the D-Day 60 th Commemorative Service aboard H.M.S. Belfast |
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Over the course of the next five weeks she was almost continuously
in action, firing thousands of rounds from her main 6-inch and secondary
4-inch batteries in support of Allied troops fighting their way inland
against skillful and determined German opposition. |
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