Everything about Us Ninth Army totally explained
The
Ninth United States Army was one of the main
U.S. Army combat commands used during the campaign in northwest
Europe in 1944 and 1945. It was commanded from its inception by Lieutenant General
William Simpson. It had been designated Eighth Army, but on arrival in the
United Kingdom it was renamed to avoid confusion with the famous British formation of the same designation.
Ninth Army was the fourth US Army to come into action in France, after
First Army which had taken part in the initial
Operation Overlord landings,
Third Army which had first been used just after the breakout from Normandy, and
Seventh Army which had landed in southern France on
15 August. The first responsibility for Ninth Army, upon its arrival on
5 September was to take part in the final reduction of the German forces holding out in the French port of
Brest. After the surrender of the town fifteen days later, Ninth Army was sent east to take its place in the line. It came into the line in between Third Army and First Army.
In November, Ninth Army was shifted to the very left flank of
12th Army Group. It undertook operations to close the front up to the
Roer River.
December 16 saw the opening of the last great German offensive of the war, the
Battle of the Bulge. Ninth Army was isolated from the headquarters of 12th Army Group, and it was thus placed (on
December 20) under the command of General
Bernard Montgomery's
21st Army Group along with First Army, despite opposition from General
Omar Bradley. Simpson reoriented his command quickly to help in the reduction of the salient that the Germans had created. Many of Ninth Army's units passed to the command of First Army, which was doing the main work of reducing the German salient from the north. In the meantime, the remainder of Ninth Army continued to hold the line along the Roer. When First Army and Third Army had finished reducing the salient, First Army returned to the command of 12th Army Group, but Ninth Army remained under the command of 21st Army Group for the remainder of the
Rhineland Campaign.
Late February and Ninth Army launched
Operation Grenade, which was the southern prong of a pincer attack coordinated with
Canadian First Army's
Operation Veritable, with the purpose of closing the front up to the
Rhine. By
10 March, the Rhine had been reached in all sectors of Ninth Army's front. It wasn't until after
20 March that Ninth Army units first crossed the Rhine itself. However, after doing so, the Army quickly struck east around the north of the
Ruhr. An enormous pocket soon formed containing the
German Army Group B under Model. By
4 April, Ninth Army had reached the
Weser and was switched back to 12th Army Group.
The end was now clearly in sight, and as part of Ninth Army, along with the newly arrived
Fifteenth Army, reduced the enormous
Ruhr Pocket, other elements reached the Elbe on
18 April.
2 May saw the whole of Ninth Army's front reached the agreed demarcation point with the Russians, and the advance ceased.
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