It was the year of ‘39 and I was at the train station awaiting my train, being transported to the training camp. I remember the constant feeling of shaky legs as my mother kissed me on my forehead. As her little boy was getting deployed off to an unholy war, she weeped. She weeped as she held my hand to the station, and she weeped as she wiped my tears.
In 1939, Germany was well on its way to winning the war. So it was a good time to be sixteen. …show more content…
Where we saw the aftermath of the Battle of the Atlantic over the years. Me and Eski heard the Japs really gave the Americans hell during sea time. So much so that the US decided to drop some bombs on ‘em in ‘45 just to really give ‘em some turmoil. What’s even crazier than that is this one gentleman survived both blasts. Nagasaki as well as Hiroshima. He lived to see the Manhattan project that was worth 2 million in U.S. currency.
Americans buried Germans and stuff during their missions to kill German Commanders. Before that Hitler was convinced that he would win battles on top of battles. But since the British were helping the Americans they had an advantage. On top of that, bombing runs killed thousands.
Pretty soon the Russians really put German soldiers into many of their graves after deploying another corps. They already deployed a tank corps and that added to the chaos. Then there was the mechanized corps. Along with all that they had their cavalry which had smaller personnel strength. Each side’s combatants made the war long. Added corpses were a bit of a burden for Germany.
The Russians Mosin Nagant which was specially designed to pierce the helmet of us German Soldiers increased the Rifle Corps’s power tenfold. Allowing it to be just as efficient as the