Fold3: The St Nazaire Raid
Posted: Wed Mar 09, 2022 12:24 am
Before launching on my second career as a genealogist (or so it seems now — I honestly thought it would be only a fortnight), I considered a subscription to Ancestry.com. (Hint, after more than two months of using it: If you are serious about your genealogy, spend the money).
One of the things that initially put me off about it was that Newspapers.com and Fold3.com, an online database with military records, including the stories, photos, and personal documents, were not included in the basic subscription; i.e., they cost extra. "Oh well," I ended up saying, "in for a penny, in for a pound."
Now I am glad that I did. Newspapers.com knocks my socks off with what I can find on there and Fold3 is impressing me with its potential for providing not just genealogical data but as inspiration for my work here. I am thinking of continuing my subscriptions to those services when I let Ancestry.com lapse.
For example, Fold3 sent an e-mail message with a link to their blog article on the St Nazaire Raid of 28 March 1942. First of all, I had never heard of this incident. True WWII enthusiasts will sneer at my ignorance, but this really is the first I have heard of it.
Secondly, I initially said, "Gee, I wish Order of Battle had the capability of reproducing this dramatic raid. Too bad." Then I said, "Wait a minute, maybe . . ."
Below is the HMS Campbeltown being converted to resemble a German torpedo boat. Workers also added armor plating, guns, and time-delayed explosives in anticipation of ramming her into the docks of St Nazaire. The accompanying commando raids flopped, but she did her job famously.
So while I have been using Fold3 to search for the military records of my ancestors (with varying results; sometimes a gold mine, sometimes a ghost town), I am coming to the realization that it is also a good source of materials on wartime events:
One of the things that initially put me off about it was that Newspapers.com and Fold3.com, an online database with military records, including the stories, photos, and personal documents, were not included in the basic subscription; i.e., they cost extra. "Oh well," I ended up saying, "in for a penny, in for a pound."
Now I am glad that I did. Newspapers.com knocks my socks off with what I can find on there and Fold3 is impressing me with its potential for providing not just genealogical data but as inspiration for my work here. I am thinking of continuing my subscriptions to those services when I let Ancestry.com lapse.
For example, Fold3 sent an e-mail message with a link to their blog article on the St Nazaire Raid of 28 March 1942. First of all, I had never heard of this incident. True WWII enthusiasts will sneer at my ignorance, but this really is the first I have heard of it.
Secondly, I initially said, "Gee, I wish Order of Battle had the capability of reproducing this dramatic raid. Too bad." Then I said, "Wait a minute, maybe . . ."
Below is the HMS Campbeltown being converted to resemble a German torpedo boat. Workers also added armor plating, guns, and time-delayed explosives in anticipation of ramming her into the docks of St Nazaire. The accompanying commando raids flopped, but she did her job famously.
So while I have been using Fold3 to search for the military records of my ancestors (with varying results; sometimes a gold mine, sometimes a ghost town), I am coming to the realization that it is also a good source of materials on wartime events: