The Forgotten Battle Instant
The primary objective of the campaign was to clear the Scheldt Estuary of German forces. While the Allies had captured the city of Antwerp with its port intact, the waterway leading to it was still controlled by the German 15th Army. Without the use of this port, Allied supply lines stretched dangerously thin, originating all the way back to the beaches of Normandy. The responsibility for this daunting task fell largely to the First Canadian Army, a multinational force including British, Polish, and Dutch units.
Today, the Battle of the Scheldt serves as a testament to the resilience of the infantry and the brutal reality of logistical warfare. It was a victory won not through swift maneuvers or grand spectacle, but through sheer endurance in some of the worst conditions of the war. Recognizing this "Forgotten Battle" is essential to understanding the full scope of the Allied effort and honoring those who fought in the cold, wet trenches of the Low Countries to ensure the liberation of Europe. The Forgotten Battle
The geography of the Scheldt presented a nightmare for offensive operations. Much of the terrain consisted of flooded polders, narrow dikes, and thick mud that neutralized the Allied advantage in armor and air power. Soldiers were forced to fight in waist-deep water, exposed to well-entrenched German artillery and machine-gun nests. The amphibious nature of the assault on Walcheren Island, one of the campaign’s final phases, mirrored the intensity of Pacific island hopping, requiring the RAF to breach dikes to flood the island and isolate German defenders. The primary objective of the campaign was to