Saturday, 3 August 2019

Taxi Charity Veterans Travel to the Netherlands for Wandeltocht

This September the Taxi Charity for Military Veterans will take a group of Operation Market Garden Veterans to Holland for Wandeltocht

 

Every September, the town of Oosterbeek in the Netherlands hosts the Wandeltocht Event the largest organised walk in the world, to commemorate WWII’s Operation Market Garden and the route taken by British 1st Airborne Division as they headed towards Arnhem from the drop and landing zones. 

People head to the town each September to walk the route and participants can choose from the full 40km Wandeltocht to a slightly easier 10km. 

The eight proud London cab drivers will volunteer their time and vehicles to escort the Market Garden veterans to the Wandeltocht on this Taxi Charity trip funded totally by donations. 

The veterans will not be walking the route but will attend as honoured guests to be saluted and applauded by the passing crowds.

Ian Parsons, Chairman, Taxi Charity for Military Veterans said “Operation Market Garden made massive use of Airborne Forces, whose tactical objective was to capture and secure the bridge at Arnhem and to allow a rapid advance by armoured ground units. 

The Taxi Charity is delighted to be once again taking veterans from this iconic WWII battle to commemorate the event and remember the comrades they left behind on the battlefieldsand who now rest in the CWGC at Oosterbeek.”

Frank Ashleigh, a Market Garden veteran (pictured above right) who will be traveling with the Taxi Charity to Arnhem said, “In 1944 I got to the Hartestein on the Tuesday morning and with Lofty Cummins, dug a slit trench in the grounds. All was peaceful. 

The thought that came to mind at this early stage was that this was too good to last. I volunteered to go on a reconnaissance to find where the enemy was located and in what strength. 

We found out only too soon. Surrounded and trapped in the roof of a Roman Catholic church with two other Glider Pilots, we were trapped for four days before they found us and took us Prisoner of War. Altogether a far from enjoyable time, made harder as we had nothing at all to eat for the four days we were in hiding.”

About Operation Market Garden
Operation Market Garden was a WWII military operation fought in the Netherlands from 17 to 25 September 1944 to create an allied invasion route into Germany’s industrial heartland. The operation succeeded in liberating the cities of Eindhoven and Nijmegen and many Dutch towns, creating a 97 km spur into German-held territory.

Market Garden consisted of two operations: Market, an airborne assault to seize key bridges; laying a carpet of airborne troops and Garden, a ground attack moving over the seized bridges creating the salient.

TAXI LEAKS EXTRA BIT : A Bridge Too Far For Uncle Ronnie
On a more personal note, on the 17th September 1944, my mothers brother, Ronald Sharwood, a young man of just 21 years and one of three brothers on active service... was shot in the head by a German sniper as he parrashuted into the Netherlands as part of the First Allied Airbourne Army's role in operation Market Garden.

  

He was picked up by medics and rushed to a make shift field hospital by American Troops, where he underwent an emergency operation that saved his life.

After the War Ronnie tried to repay his dept of gratitude by working the rest of his life at the American air base at Mildenhall Suffolk.  


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