The Fart That Killed 10,000 People, and Other Weird Moments From History

The Fart That Killed 10,000 People, and Other Weird Moments From History

Khalid Elhassan - July 18, 2020

The Fart That Killed 10,000 People, and Other Weird Moments From History
George Patton in France, during WWI. Wikimedia

27. George Patton and the “Abandoned Rear”

After the D-Day landings and the breakout from the Normandy beachhead, George S. Patton led the US Third Army on a great sweep in the summer of 1944, that liberated a huge chunk of France. It was Patton’s second go-around in France, having fought there once before during WWI. In that earlier conflict, Patton had received a visit from a local village mayor, who tearfully asked why he had not been told a Doughboy had died nearby.

As Patton described it: “Being unaware of this sad fact and not liking to admit it to a stranger, I stalled until I found out that no one was dead. However, he insisted that we visit the ‘grave’“. When they got there, Patton and his subordinate officers found a freshly covered pit with sticks forming a cross and holding a plaque that read “Abandoned Rear”. It was the start of a weird comedy of errors.

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