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Rudi and His Deal with the Devil

Many people are familiar with the 1936 Summer Olympics held in Berlin’s Olympiastadion. That was the Olympics where Jesse Owens won the gold medal in track in front of Adolf Hitler and senior Nazi officials. However, did you know that Germany also hosted the 1936 Winter Olympics? (The last time both winter and summer games were held in the same country in the same year.) Somehow, Hitler obtained a “two-fer” that year for the purpose of showcasing his National Socialism party to the world.

The logo for the 1936 Winter Olympics.
The logo for the 1936 Winter Olympics. Photo by anonymous (date unknown). PD-Life of the author plus 70 years. Wikimedia Commons.
The Olympiastadion in Berlin, site of the 1936 Summer Olympics.
The Olympiastadion in Berlin, site of the 1936 Summer Olympics. Photo by anonymous (c. 1936). Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-R82532/CC-BY-SA 3.0. PD-CCA-Share Alike 3.0 Germany. Wikimedia Commons.

I recently wrote a blog about a Norwegian footballer who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics (click here to read the blog, Two Footballers and a War). Today, you will be introduced to another 1936 Olympian. This time our story is about a hockey player who played for the German national team in the Winter Olympics. What is remarkable is that Rudi was Jewish and Hitler allowed him to participate.


Did You Know?

Did you know that in 1929 the United States Navy sent Joseph Rochefort and two other young officers to Japan for three years to become fluent in the language and culture? Did the navy foresee the future conflict with Japan or was it just dumb luck? For Capt. Rochefort it was the foundation that he and his team of codebreakers needed to determine if they had enough evidence from Japanese radio messages to convince Adm. Chester Nimitz that the emperor’s naval fleet was enroute to attack Midway Island. Unfortunately, Nimitz and his staff did not believe Rochefort. That is, until the codebreakers came up with a plan to change the admiral’s mind.

Lt. Joseph Rochefort
Lt. Joseph Rochefort. Photo by anonymous (15 September 1934). National Security Agency.

The Battle of Midway took place between 4−7 June 1942, and it was the turning point in the Pacific war. Six months after their December 1941 surprise attack on Pearl Harbor and Col. Doolittle’s 18 April 1942 air raid on Tokyo, the Japanese navy under admirals Yamamoto, Nagumo, and Kondō planned a trap for U.S. aircraft carriers. The admirals hoped to lure the carriers to the Coral Sea where their navy would defeat the American navy and clear the way for attacks on Midway, Fiji, Samoa, and Hawaii. During the four-day battle, the Japanese lost four aircraft carriers and a heavy cruiser. The Americans lost the carrier Yorktown and a destroyer. After the U.S. victory, the Japanese were never able to recover from nor replace its loss of ships. Additionally, Yamamoto abandoned his plan to invade Midway.

Lt. Col. James Doolittle performs a full-throttle takeoff from the USS Hornet 650 miles from Japan.
Lt. Col. James Doolittle performs a full-throttle takeoff from the USS Hornet 650 miles from Japan. Photo by anonymous (18 April 1942). PD-U.S. Government. Wikimedia Commons.

Rochefort and his men devised a plan to convince Nimitz their intelligence was correct. They had the U.S. base in Midway send out a message that the Midway desalination system was failing. The Japanese intercepted the message and immediately provided desalting materials to their ships. After Rochefort’s team decoded this information, it proved to Nimitz that Midway was the target and Nimitz’s fleet was waiting to meet the Japanese flotilla. Rochefort and his codebreakers were vindicated. Unfortunately, Rochefort was never given credit for his role in the Midway victory despite being proposed for the Distinguished Service Medal. However, President Reagan posthumously awarded Rochefort with the medal forty-four years after the Battle of Midway.

The USS Yorktown (CV-5) burning after the first attack by Japanese dive bombers during the Battle of Midway.
The USS Yorktown (CV-5) burning after the first attack by Japanese dive bombers during the Battle of Midway. Photo by anonymous (4 June 1942). U.S. Navy Naval History and Heritage Command. PD-U.S. Government. Wikimedia Commons.

Sometimes it takes a while to correct a wrong.


The Führerbunker

After driving into what was left of Berlin three days after Hitler killed himself in the Führerbunker on 30 April 1945, Maj. Gordon Dailley (1911−1989) and Ian Gordon, a British war correspondent and former hockey journalist, found themselves in front of the bunker entrance. There they found several empty jerry cans laying in a shallow trench. They knew Hitler was dead and assumed the fuel in the cans was used to burn the dictator’s body. While no one was looking, they took the cans as souvenirs.

The former Reich Chancellery Garden. The entrance to the Führerbunker is the rectangular building to the left of the conical unit (center) which is an observation tower.
The former Reich Chancellery Garden. The entrance to the Führerbunker is the rectangular building to the left of the conical unit (center) which is an observation tower. To the right of the tower is the grand reception hall of the old Reich Chancellery. In the background are the Foreign Service offices. Photo by anonymous (c. 1947). Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-V04744/CC-BY-SA 3.0. PD-CCA-Share Alike 3.0 Germany. Wikimedia Commons.
Shallow trench outside the Führerbunker in the garden of the Reich Chancelllery where the bodies of Hitler and Eva Braun were burned.
Shallow trench outside the Führerbunker in the garden of the Reich Chancelllery where the bodies of Hitler and Eva Braun were burned. Where are the jerry cans? Photo by William Vandivert (c. May 1945). Life Pictures/Shutterstock.
Outside the entrance to the Führerbunker.
Outside the entrance to the Führerbunker. The shallow trench in the foreground is presumably where the bodies of Hitler and Eva Braun were burned. Photo by William Vandivert (c. May 1945). Life Pictures/Shutterstock.

Before the war, Canadian-born Dailley had been an ice hockey player who played for Great Britain in international competitions including the 1936 Winter Olympics. (Dailley’s national hockey team won the gold medal, and it was Great Britain’s only gold medal.)

Gordon Dailley playing hockey (left) and later in life as the founder of the African Lion Safari in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada.
Gordon Dailley playing hockey (left) and later in life as the founder of the African Lion Safari in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada. Photos by anonymous (dates unknown).

After their visit to the former Führerbunker, Dailley and Gordon drove through the bombed-out streets of Berlin. German citizens who survived the savage fighting by the Soviet soldiers and bombs were queuing in the streets for food that was being passed out by Allied troops. As they passed by one line, Dailley spotted a familiar face. Standing in line was a man whom Dailley faced nine years earlier on the rink at the Winter Olympics. He knew Rudi Ball was Jewish but how on earth did he survive the war?

Let’s Meet Rudi Ball 

Rudolf Victor “Rudi” Ball (1911−1975) was born in Berlin to a wealthy Jewish textile merchant. His mother was a Lithuanian Christian and Rudi was the youngest of three boys. Rudi’s brothers, Gerhard (1903−1982) and Heinz (1907−1966), played hockey but Rudi did not show any interest in the sport but rather concentrated on academic studies. However, by the time he was fifteen, Rudi saw his brothers play against a Canadian, Blake Wilson. For some reason, Wilson’s style of play stoked Rudi’s interest in hockey and he decided to play. One thing concerned him: Rudi was only 5’4” and weighed 140 pounds. His father bought him skates and paid for private lessons with the Swedish hockey player, Nils Molander (1889−1974). As Rudi studied the game, he became convinced his size could be used to his advantage.

Ball family photo.
Ball family photo. From left to right: Heinz, Rudi, father Leonard, and Gerhard. Photo by anonymous (c. 1929). Birger Nordmark.
Nils Molander.
Nils Molander. Photo by anonymous (2 January 1914). Agence Rol. PD-95 years or fewer since publication. Wikimedia Commons.

Professional Hockey 

Seventeen-year-old Rudi Ball was selected to play for the Berliner SC second tier team for the 1927-28 season. He quickly became their top scorer. (He scored eleven goals in thirteen games.) Rudi was fast and agile with laser passes and accurate shots. Teammates, coaches, and opposing players soon realized that Rudi was special. The next year, Rudi was moved up to the club’s first tier team where he joined his brothers (Gerhard was the goalie) and his former tutor, Nils Molander, who was playing in his last year of professional hockey. Rudi played for Berliner SC (now known as Berliner Schlitschuh-Club) between 1928 and 1933 before joining EHC St. Moritz in the Swiss League (his brothers followed) for the 1933-1934 season. A year later, the Ball brothers moved to Italy and joined a Milan-based club. By 1936, the Winter Olympics were fast approaching and as a Jew in Nazi Germany, Rudi was on the outside looking in.

Rudi Ball (right) takes the puck down the ice in a game at St. Moritz, Switzerland.
Rudi Ball (right) takes the puck down the ice in a game at St. Moritz, Switzerland. Photo by anonymous (c. 1928). Ulf May, Schläger, Pucks, und Bodychecks (Munich, 1970).
Rudi Ball (center) facing off for Berliner SC.
Rudi Ball (center) facing off for Berliner SC. Photo by anonymous (c. December 1930).
Berliner SC hockey team in France.
Berliner SC hockey team in France. Rudi Ball is fifth from left. His brother, Gerhard is second from right. Gustav Jänecke is fourth from right with his arm around Rudi. Photo by anonymous (c. October 1931). Berliner SC image.

The Nuremberg Laws 

The Nuremberg Laws were enacted by the Nazis in September 1935. It consisted of two laws: “Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor” and the “German Citizenship Law.” Initially, the laws were aimed at Jews but two months later, the Nazis expanded them to include Romani and Blacks. For international political reasons, Hitler did not enforce the laws until after the 1936 Summer Olympics. (There was a substantial American effort to boycott the games.)

The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor was about Hitler’s desire to sustain the purity of the German people (i.e., Aryan master race).

  • Marriages between Jews and German citizens was forbidden.
  • Extramarital relations between Jews and German citizens were forbidden.
  • Jews were not allowed to employ German female citizens under the age of forty-five as household servants.
  • Jews were forbidden to fly the German or Nazi flags.
  • Punishment for violation of any law was prison with hard labor.

The German, or Reich Citizenship Law was enacted to prevent Jews from being German citizens.

  • Only people with pure German or related blood could be a Reich citizen.
  • Reich citizens would be issued a certificate confirming their status.
  • Only a Reich citizen would be afforded full political rights.

One of the classifications outlined under the laws dealt with the definition of who could be considered Jewish. If a person had three or four Jewish grandparents, they were considered by the Nazis to be a “full Jew.” If a person had only one Jewish grandparent (out of four), they were considered to be a Mischlinge of the “second degree” compared to having two Jewish grandparents which would render them a Mischlinge of the “first degree.” A second-degree Mischlinge was not classified by the Nazis as a Jew according to the law. However, there was quite a debate about the status of a first-degree Mischlinge. Hitler finally ruled that someone with two Jewish grandparents would be considered Jewish if they practiced the Jewish faith or was married to a Jewish spouse.

It is likely Rudi would have been considered a first-degree Mischlinge (two Jewish grandparents on his paternal side).

The German National Team and the 1936 Winter Olympics 

Rudi and his brothers spent the off seasons in Berlin with their parents. When it came time for Germany to announce its national team, Rudi knew he would not be called up because of his religion. He was correct. However, the number one choice for the team, Gustav Jänecke (1908−1985) knew that without Rudi, the team had no chance of winning a medal like they did four years earlier. (Rudi had played in the 1932 Olympics when Germany took the bronze medal in ice hockey.) When Jänecke, Germany’s top defender, refused to play, the team backed him up. Despite Nazi threats, they held out until Hitler realized his team couldn’t compete without both Jänecke and Ball and it would look bad for the German team to sit out the games. So, he instructed his Reichssportführer, or “Reich Sport Leader,” Hans von Tschammer und Osten (1887−1943) to approach Rudi with their approval for him to play.

Gustave Jänecke (left) in Paris to play a professional tennis match
Gustave Jänecke (left) in Paris to play a professional tennis match. Photo by anonymous (c. 1932). Agence de presse Mondial Photo-Presse. PD-Author’s life plus 70 years or fewer. Wikimedia Commons.

As an aside and a sad fact, the head of the U.S. Olympic Committee, Avery Brundage (1887−1975), was the featured speaker at a Nazi rally in Madison Square Garden prior to the 1936 Winter Olympics and revealed his antisemitism and racist views. As president of the International Olympic Committee between 1952 and 1972, Brundage earned an infamous reputation as a racist, sexist, and antisemite. He believed Jews and Blacks were not capable of performing at Olympic standards.

Avery Brundage speaking at Madison Square Garden, New York City for “Deutscher Tag” (German Day).
Avery Brundage speaking at Madison Square Garden, New York City for “Deutscher Tag” (German Day). Photo by anonymous (4 October 1936). University of Illinois Archives.
Aerial view of the Olympiastadion in Berlin
Aerial view of the Olympiastadion in Berlin. Photo by Wolfgang26 (19 August 2010). PD-CCA-Share Alike 3.0 Unported. Wikimedia Commons.

The Deal with the Devil 

Rudi hated Hitler and the Nazis. However, he was passionate about hockey and especially playing with his teammates who supported him. When the Nazi officials confronted him about playing for the national team, Rudi felt obligated to play. However, he had one demand.

Rudi agreed to play in the Olympics under one condition. The Nazi government had to allow his family to leave Germany. It is likely this demand went all the way to Hitler for a decision. Rudi’s family would be given permission to leave if he played in the games. Amazingly, Hitler kept his promise and except for Rudi who stayed behind in Berlin, Leonard Ball and his family were allowed to emigrate to South Africa thereby escaping persecution and likely death in the extermination camps. (Why South Africa? The country had a large immigrant population of Germans.)

Hitler at the 1936 Winter Olympics.
Hitler at the 1936 Winter Olympics. Photo by Lucien Aigner (c. February 1936). Corbis. All rights reserved.

After the family was safely gone, Rudi kept his part of the deal and joined the national team. The government was funding the national program since hockey was considered to be the strongest and most popular winter sport in Germany. Hitler knew this and couldn’t stand the thought of winning any medal less than gold. At the time, Canada was the best team in the world and the one to beat in the Olympics.

Adolf Hitler (right) and Rudolf Hess (third from the right) at the 1936 Winter Olympics.
Adolf Hitler (right) and Rudolf Hess (third from the right) at the 1936 Winter Olympics. Photo by anonymous (6 February 1936). Bundesarchiv, R 8076 Bild-0019/CC-BY-SA 3.0. PD-CCA-Share Alike 3.0 Germany. Wikimedia Commons.
The American flag follows the Nazi flag at the opening ceremonies of the 1936 Winter Olympics.
The American flag follows the Nazi flag at the opening ceremonies of the 1936 Winter Olympics. Photo by anonymous (c. February 1936). FPG/2004 Getty Images.

On 5 February 1936 at the Olympiaschanze in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Hitler formally declared the games open in front of 50,000 spectators and a thousand competitors. The German hockey team faced tough preliminary group competition against the United States, Italy, and Switzerland. By beating Italy and Switzerland, it ensured the team moved onto the second group play. This time, the Germans had to play Great Britain, Canada, and Hungary to advance to the medal rounds. Unfortunately, Rudi was injured badly in the win (2-1) over Hungary but managed to score the winning goal. The team drew with Great Britain and lost to Canada without Rudi’s services as he had a broken shoulder, lacerated leg, and a lacerated forehead. Much to Hitler and Goebbel’s dismay, Germany did not advance on points.

Canadian Olympic team passing by the reviewing stand during the opening ceremonies for the 1936 Olympics.
Canadian Olympic team passing by the reviewing stand during the opening ceremonies for the 1936 Olympics. Photo by anonymous (c. February 1936). Corbis. All rights reserved.
Germany (left) line up to face the United States (right), going through their pre-match battle cry, in their opening match of the 1936 Olympics
Germany (left) line up to face the United States (right), going through their pre-match battle cry, in their opening match of the 1936 Olympics. Photo by anonymous (c. February 1936). Getty Images.
1936 Winter Olympic hockey game with Canada (white jerseys) playing the United States (dark jerseys).
1936 Winter Olympic hockey game with Canada (white jerseys) playing the United States (dark jerseys). Canada won the silver medal while the U.S. took bronze. Photo by anonymous (2 February 1936).

Besides getting his family to safety, Rudi made the deal and played because he thought it was important to show the world (and Hitler) that Germans could stand together regardless of their heritage or religion. He wanted to show Hitler that Jews were not an inferior race and that the Führer’s concept of “racial superiority” was a falsehood. Rudi was proud of being German but embarrassed by the Nazi party’s ascension to power and racial theories.

Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels (seated left) and Adolf Hitler (next right) at the 1936 Winter Olympics closing ceremony.
Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels (seated left) and Adolf Hitler (next right) at the 1936 Winter Olympics closing ceremony. Photo by anonymous (c. February 1936)).
Hitler inspecting troops in Garmisch during the 1936 Winter Olympics.
Hitler inspecting troops in Garmisch during the 1936 Winter Olympics. There was a very large military presence during the games. Photo by anonymous (c. February 1936). USHMM #21761/Süddeutscher Verlag Bilderdienst, Munich, Germany.

Helene Mayer 

Rudi Ball was only one of two German Jews who Hitler allowed to participate in the Olympic games held during 1936. The other was Helene Mayer (1910−1953), a German-born Jew considered to be the greatest female fencer.  Mayer moved to the United States in 1935 to escape the tightening restrictions on Jews in Germany. (Helene would have been considered a first-degree Mischlinge.) Despite losing her German citizenship under the Nuremberg Laws, Helene was persuaded by the Nazis to return to compete for Germany in the 1936 Summer Olympics. (Hitler used her participation as evidence of Nazi tolerance toward Jews.) Helene won the silver medal in individual women’s foil. While on the winners’ podium, she gave the Nazi salute. After the games, Helene returned to America and finished a successful fencing career. In 1952, Helene Mayer settled in Germany but a year later, she died of cancer leaving very little evidence of her thoughts on her career and the real reason why she returned to Nazi Germany to participate in Hitler’s Berlin Olympics.

Helene Mayer
Helene Mayer became one of the first female sporting celebrities when she won fencing gold for Germany as a teenager at the 1928 Olympics. Photo by anonymous (c. 1928).

To this day, Helene’s salute on the podium remains controversial. She has been labeled a traitor and opportunist while some consider her story to be tragic. Helene’s family remained in Germany, and she later said that the salute was given to protect her family. (Her father died in 1931 and her brothers were sent to a labor camp where they survived the war.) Helene Mayer’s story is a complicated one whereas Rudi’s story is clear cut.

1936 Summer Olympic medal winners for fencing.
1936 Summer Olympic medal winners for fencing. Helene Mayer standing on the podium (right) gives the Nazi salute. Photo by anonymous (c. summer 1936). PD-Author’s life plus 70 years or fewer. Wikimedia Commons.

Return to Berliner SC 

Rudi was forced by the Nazis to remain in Germany. He eventually returned to Berliner SC and played for the club until 1943 when Hitler suspended all sports. Although Rudi left the city at that point, there wasn’t a day that Rudi was afraid he would be picked up and deported. It is likely the Nazis kept him alive due to his celebrity status and to play hockey which they believed provided entertainment and morale booster to the public. Like other Germans, Rudi was forced to live on food ration cards and as the war neared its end, he suffered along with the other survivors of bombing and brutal Soviet treatment during the final weeks in Berlin.

Germans queue up for food in Berlin.
Germans queue up for food in Berlin. Photo by anonymous (date unknown).

“Hockey Owes Me Nothing”

Gerhard returned to Berlin shortly after the war ended and persuaded his younger brother to play hockey again but this time for SG Eichamp Berlin. By 1948, Rudi’s brothers convinced him to move to South Africa. Hockey was in its infancy in South Africa, but Rudi joined the Johannesburg Tigers for the 1949-50 season. The following year, Rudi moved to the Johannesburg Wolves and at the end of the season, at the age of forty-one, Rudi hung up his skates and retired. That is, until one last time when he played in the All-Star game between South Africa and Europe. Rudi scored four goals and the South Africa all-stars beat their European counterparts 10 to 4.

Rudi spent the remainder of his life in South Africa where he became a well-respected businessman. In 1970, a journalist asked Rudi if he thought hockey owed him more recognition. Rudi responded, “Hockey owes me nothing. I am the one that owes hockey. It saved me and my family from the Holocaust.” Unfortunately, not all of his family survived as he would learn several years after the war.

In 2004, Rudi Ball was posthumously inducted into the International Ice Hockey Hall of Fame.

So, what happened to the jerry cans that Dailley pinched in May 1945? Before he passed away, Dailley donated the cans to the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.

Next Blog:         “The Rochambelles”


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★ Read and Learn More About Today’s Topic  ★

Frye, Wayne J. How Hockey Saved a Jew from the Holocaust: The Rudi Ball Story. Ladysmith, BC: Peninsula Publishing, 2011.

Haywood, Rob. Rudi Ball: The Jewish ice hockey star who represented and survived Nazi Germany. BBC, 7 June 2023.  Click here to read the article.

Mogulof, Milly. Foiled: Hitler’s Jewish Olympian: the Helene Mayer Story. Bandon, OR: RDR Books, 2001.

Moorhouse, Roger. Berlin at War. New York: Basic Books, 2010.

Rigg, Bryan Mark. Hitler’s Jewish Soldiers: The Untold Story of Nazi Racial Laws and Men of Jewish Descent in the German Military. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2002.

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Mulberry Harbor & The Delta Works

Our topic today is inspired by a trip we took to the Netherlands in May 2023. One of the excursions was to the Delta Works, a massive decades-long engineering project to protect the Dutch from devastating floods in the southern part of the Netherlands.

Little did I know when I signed up for the excursion that the museum we would tour was connected to the Normandy invasion on 6 June 1944 and the ensuing deployment of men, armaments, and supplies used to support the Allies as they broke out of Normandy on the path to Germany.

The museum, Watersnoodmuseum, or “Flood Museum” is located inside four concrete caissons built to be used as part of the two artificial Mulberry Harbors at Arromanches-les-Bains (or simply, Arromanches) and Saint-Laurent-sur-mer, France.

Commemorative plaque at the Watersnoodmuseum identifying the “Monument Watersnood 1953.”
Commemorative plaque at the Watersnoodmuseum identifying the “Monument Watersnood 1953.” Photo by Rene1971 (2 September 2006). PD-CCA-Share Alike 3.0 Unported. Wikimedia Commons.

Did You Know? 

Did you know that we recently ran across rats in the Tiergarten during our visit to Berlin? Yep, it was a similar experience from years ago while we were walking in a Parisian park next to the Seine. After I returned to the states, I found out there was an organized movement in Paris to befriend those friendly furry rodents and I wrote a blog in 2018 on Paris rats (click here to read the blog, Paris Therapy Pets). Fast forward now to several months ago when the newly elected mayor of New York City created a new position and appointed someone to deal with the city’s massive rat problem. (Mayor Adams has been fined several times because his house is infested so I figure he wanted a hot line to someone who could come right away and get rid of his invasive rodents.)

Well, what do I see the other day? No, not more rats but rather a CNN article entitled “Can humans and rats live together? Paris is trying to find out.” It seems to be a bona fide question the Paris politicians are trying to answer. Mayor Hidalgo has formed a committee to study “cohabitation” with the rats while the center-right party is calling for more aggressive action against the proliferation of rat populations. They argue that rats are harmful to the quality of life. The pro-rat organization, Paris Animaux Zoopolis (PAZ), disagrees as do senior members of the Paris government. Paris rats do not pose a public health risk and “we need scientific advice,” says the deputy mayor. I guess she never studied the history of medieval Europe.

So, what does “cohabitation” with the rats mean? According to PAZ, “. . . making sure (rats) don’t suffer and that we’re not disturbed.” I suppose that is what is meant by “having your cake and eating it too.” That is, until the rats eat the cake first. At that point, the old French saying, “Let them eat cake” becomes relevant and solves the problem.

Rats can often be seen on the streets of Paris despite extermination efforts. Photo by Christian Hartmann (date unknown). Reuters/CNN.
Rats can often be seen on the streets of Paris despite extermination efforts. Photo by Christian Hartmann (date unknown). Reuters/CNN.

The Invasion and Mulberry Harbor 

I think everyone is familiar with D-Day and the invasion of Normandy on 6 June 1944 (Operation Overlord, or simply “Overlord”). However, not everyone knows about the two artificial harbors (“Mulberry”) used to facilitate unloading supply ships with the materials necessary to sustain an advancing army. I’m also pretty sure most don’t know the story of Operation Fortitude which was a series of Allied deception plans intended to make Hitler and his senior staff think Normandy was a diversion and the real invasion would take place at Pais de Calais. (Click here to read the blog, The Double Cross System.) Read More Mulberry Harbor & The Delta Works