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  1. The 10th Armored Division (nicknamed "Tiger Division") was an armored division of the United States Army in World War II. In the European Theater of Operations the 10th Armored Division was part of both the Twelfth United States Army Group and Sixth United States Army Group.

  2. 1. US, British, Soviet, and Canadian troops encountered concentration camps and other sites of Nazi crimes as they advanced across Europe in 1944 and 1945. 2. The Allied soldiers liberated sick and starving camp prisoners from Nazi tyranny. They also provided them with food, clothing, and medical aid. 3.

  3. It is an interlocked ornament, found in Nordic monuments, composed of three torques: red for Artillery; blue for Infantry; and yellow for Cavalry. The symbols represent the characteristics of...

  4. 10th Armored Division. November 1, 1944, is a memorable day for the “Tigers” of the 10th Armored Division. On that day the outfit began five busy months of combat during which it bagged 30,000 prisoners and took 450 cities and towns.

  5. On April 23, three days after Hitler celebrated his 56th birthday in his besieged Berlin bunker, the 10th Armored Division reached the outskirts of Ulmabout 40 miles southeast of Stuttgart, and the site of one of the last urban battles of World War II.

  6. Dec 13, 2005 · On the morning of 17 December the 10th Armored Division (General Morris) had moved out of Thionville for Luxembourg, the first step (although at the time not realized) which General Patton's...

  7. Dec 13, 2005 · Middleton counted on CCB of the 10th Armored Division (Col. William Roberts) to heal the breach for a time at least-opened on the main road east of Bastogne.

  8. Major General Wm. H. H. Morris, Jr., commanding the 10th Armored Division, lent his cooperation and basic material was supplied by his staff. HESE pages contain a succinct account of the fighting of the Tiger Division which fought the Germans in Luxembourg, Belgium, Germany, Austria and France.

  9. A research report prepared at The Armored School, Fort Knox, Kentucky, 1948-1949. This is a story of the 10th Armored Division. In particular, this is a story about what the Division did in the Saar-Moselle Triangle during November and December of 1944, and again in February, 1945.

  10. The 10th held defensive positions against heavy opposition near Bastogne, Noville, and Bras. Resting briefly in early January, the 10th moved out again to defensive positions east of the Saar, south of the Maginot Line.

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