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The History List

The Battle of the Bulge moisture-wicking 100% polyester interlock with UPF 30+ UV protection - Long-sleeved

The Battle of the Bulge moisture-wicking 100% polyester interlock with UPF 30+ UV protection - Long-sleeved

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Awesome Battle of the Bulge Shirt!
"I already have several shirts from The History List and all of them are great. The most recent one with the Battle of the Bulge theme did not disappoint! Every Military History enthusiast should get one."
— T.T.  ★★★★★


The shirt: 

  • Military green — Sizes S - 4XL: Long-sleeved, moisture-wicking 100% polyester interlock with UPF 30+ UV protection. 3.5 oz.

This design is also available in a crewneck shirt for men and womenwomen's v-neck shirt, a long-sleeved shirt, and a hooded sweatshirt.

Our original design includes these historical references:

• What became known as the "Battle of the Bulge" was the Ardennes Offensive, and the response of the Allies, the Ardennes Counteroffensive.

• The battle lasted for five weeks, from December 16, 1944 to January 28, 1945, towards the end of the war in Europe.

• The 101st Airborne Division was surrounded at Bastogne and being shelled.

• "NUTS" was the (probably sanitized) reply from Brig. Gen. Anthony Mcauliffe to the letter from the attacking German Forces offering an opportunity to surrender. 

• An excerpt from Mcauliffe's Christmas Letter to his troops:

We are giving our country and our loved ones at home a worthy Christmas present and being privileged to take part in this gallant feat of arms are truly making for ourselves a Merry Christmas.

/s/ A. C. McAULIFFE
/t/ McAULIFFE
Commanding.

• The  Sherman Cobra King pictiured broke through to link up with the 101st Airborne Division on the outskirts of Bastogne on December 26.

• The line running down the center is a tracing from the map of enemy positions on December 25.

Included with every shirt: A 5" x 8" card with the entire Christmas letter that McAuliffe had distributed to his troops, the letter from the German Commander offering McAuliffe the opportunity to surrender his encircled troops, and the propaganda flier that the the Germans distributed to American troops encouraging them to desert.

See more historical background below.

Our WWII Collection

Browse through all our original designs in our WWII collection, including Pearl Harbor, Midway, "V" for Victory with all of the battles listed, History Nerd paratrooper / Operation Overlord, Operation Market Garden, She's a W.O.W., a print with more than 100 posters from the homefront, our Victory pin, and more.


Historical accounts and background

The US Army's account of the "NUTS" reply.

 

Sherman Jumbo "Cobra King"

Company C, 37th Tank Battalion, 4th Armored Division

Cobra King at The National Museum of the United States Army

As shown in the photo above, the M4A3E2 Sherman Cobra King is now on display at the National Museum of the United States Army outside of Washington, DC. 

This is the text on the panel beside the tank:

"M4A3E2 Sherman Cobra King links up with encircled defenders of the 101st
Airborne Division on the outskirts of the town of Bastogne on 26 December
1944. The breakthrough opened the way for Allied forces to begin the counteroffensive that ended the Battle of the Bulge. In March 1945, Cobra King was put out of action during the unsuccessful mission to liberate American prisoners of war at a POW camp near Hammelburg, Germany.

"CREW MEMBERS

  • 1st Lt. Charles P. Boggess,
  • Cpl. Milton Dickerman,
  • Pvt. James G. Murphy,
  • Pvt. Hubert S. Smith, and
  • Pvt. Harold Hafner after the Bastogne linkup."

Here's the story of how the tank was tracked down and authenticated in 2008.

 


Thanks to Larisa Chancellor for the suggestion and to Martin Quinn and Mike Manning for reviewing the historical details.

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