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At 08:47 on June 14th, 1944, a single Sherman tank sat blind behind a barn in the Norman hedgerows. In front of it waited German Panzers, Pak 40s, and infantry with Panzerfausts. Inside it was a loader who’d been a grocery clerk three years earlier. In this episode of Last Stand History, we follow Corporal James Huitt’s Sherman and its loader, Private First Class Danny Kowalski, as they fight through an eight‑minute hell in the bocage—and how Kowalski’s “stupid” idea of rearranging the ammo racks nearly doubled their rate of fire. You’ll see: Why the hedgerows of Normandy were a death trap for Shermans How a grocery store job trained Kowalski to think like a human factors engineer The exact ammo layout that let him reload in 3 seconds instead of 6–10 A step‑by‑step breakdown of the duel with multiple Panzer IVs How 37 rounds in 12 minutes forced the US Army to rewrite its manuals Why modern tank crews still use variants of his technique today What happened to Kowalski after the war—and where his Sherman sits now If you’re interested in World War II armor, human performance under fire, or how tiny frontline innovations become doctrine, this is a story you won’t want to miss. Chapters: 00:00 The grocery clerk in a Sherman 02:30 Hedgerow hell and the mission 05:00 First contact – impossible reload speeds 09:30 Running dry and the third Panzer 13:30 Oberleutnant Ritter’s ambush 18:00 “That’s not possible” – 37 rounds in 12 minutes 21:00 From battlefield hack to official doctrine 24:00 Kowalski’s life after the war and his preserved Sherman #LastStandHistory #WorldWar2 #ShermanTank #TankWarfare #MilitaryHistory