Category Archives: Veterans’ Stories

One Small Corner of the Bulge, John Fague, 11th AD

THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE: ONE SMALL CORNER
John W. Fague, Co. B, 21st Armored Infantry Battalion,
11th Armored Division, U.S. 3rd Army

The beginning of our part in the Battle of the Bulge was the 29th of December 1944 near the town of Neufchateau, Belgium [France]. Our column of tanks and half-tracks as Combat Command B had been rolling north all day where to and what for I had no idea. The day was cold and windy. There was a layer of snow blanketing the ground; here and there it had drifted. We met many supply trucks on the road headed for the rear, their mission accomplished. I was particularly aware of the ambulances that we met, red lights flashing, passing to the rear. They were evacuating the wounded and this meant there must be fighting ahead. Finally we passed artillery with their muzzles pointed skyward. The guns would cough and spit and belch their flames and then relax. First we passed the big boys, the Long Toms, 240 mm and 155 mm howitzers, and then closer to the front the standard Army 105 mm pieces which backed up the line. From this I realized that our time had come, the moment of truth had arrived.

Late in the afternoon my company pulled off the road to the left. It was on a hill, which made an ideal place to bivouac. The first thing I noticed was the wreckage of an airplane and two lifeless forms on the snow that resembled bodies. The sight of dead bodies was something new to a nineteen-year-old boy from Shippensburg, Pennsylvania. I was anxious and curious to have a closer look at them. When I inspected the first body in the snow, I knew I should not have looked. It was the body of a German fighter pilot. His face was frozen and gray in color. It had a horrible far away stare. He had been lying there 36 hours or more and was frozen stiff. His fingers were gray and rigid. His legs were broken and doubled up under him. G.I.’s had already looted the corpse. Someone had taken his fleece-lined air corps boots and he lay in his stocking feet. The pockets of his uniform had been pulled out and the contents removed. I noticed the stump of a finger. It had been cut off to get the ring he wore.

That was enough. I had seen more than I wanted to. I walked away with a hollow sickening feeling in my stomach. It was chow time but I didn’t have much of an appetite anymore. This was my first encounter with death. It left a vivid impression on my young mind. All during that sleepless night I could see the face of that flyer before me. In the days that followed I rubbed elbows with death many times. I saw my friends die and the strangeness of the phenomenon of death became blurred.

As had become instinctive with us, the company set up an all around defense and prepared to bed down for the night. We set up our machine gun outposts and dug slit trenches in the event of an air or artillery attack. Other elements before us had dug foxholes and gun positions on this slope so that we had few holes to dig.

Fortunately there was a straw stack in our area around which we made our beds. I pulled some straw off the stack and laid my bedroll on it. I got some more straw to put over me. The night was bright with a moon illuminating the snow. While I took my turn as outpost guard, a German reconnaissance plane swooped low over our position. The second time it came down some of our units arched machine gun tracer bullets in the direction of the sound but with no effect. During the night our artillery kept up its harassing fire on the enemy positions. They were firing on the enemy rear and shell bursts would illuminate the sky. The firing was spasmodic during the night but the tempo increased toward morning.

Early in the morning my platoon leader, Lt. Roy C. Stringfellow, came back from a meeting with the company commander, Capt. Elmore K. Fabrick, and brought information of the attack we were to make the next day. I was lying awake in my bedroll and heard him give the details of the attack to the platoon sergeants and the squad sergeants. One instruction of the lieutenant I could not forget, “There will be enemy artillery fire and plenty of it. The Germans always advance their fire, so keep the men moving.”

At 4:30 a.m. I rolled up my bedroll and took off for the kitchen truck. After eating a hurried breakfast I came back to my half-track and got things ready to move out in the attack. Our company was to follow Baker Company of the 22nd Tank Battalion. The tanks were to pass our area at 6 a.m. For some unknown reason the tanks passed too early. Capt. Fabrick signaled for our platoon to take off down the road after the tanks. We hastily threw our equipment on the half-track and took off down the road. There had been some delay after the last tank had passed and so our platoon lost contact with the tank column. At the first intersection Lt. Stringfellow asked the battalion commander, Col. James R. Hoffman, who was standing there, the direction the tanks had taken. The colonel directed us down the wrong road.

Our half-track was now in the lead heading an independent attack. I noticed a few tanks peeking out from behind some buildings as we went by. And these I soon learned were our advance outposts. The next thing I knew we were out in no man’s land [land between opposing forces] and all hell was breaking loose. The Krauts [nickname for Germans] were preparing to make an attack of their own and their artillery was preparing the way. When the lieutenant realized we were on the wrong road, he brought our little column to a halt. There we sat on the road while he was attempting to establish contact by radio with the rest of our column. It was just beginning to get light, that gray sort of dawn. The German shells were exploding only a short distance away, and I could hear the shrapnel whining through the air. A farmhouse was smoldering in ruins beside our vehicle. It gave me a very terrifying feeling to sit there in that vehicle and hear those shells land. I knew that at any moment one might hit our vehicle or burst in the trees overhead. This was my first experience with the thought that I might die or be horribly wounded. Even though I was scared I tried to make a few jokes out of it but the boys were in no mood for my humor. We all sat huddled together in the half-track trying to make ourselves as small as possible and trying to keep our heads down below the quarter-inch armor plate that formed the sides of the track.

In the meantime Lt. Stringfellow had gone back on foot to the last crossroads and discovered that we should have turned left there. He came back to our vehicle andgot our^column turned around and started back. Once we moved back I felt better.long as we were moving or doing something I had no time to be afraid, but when we stopped I felt helpless. The lines through which were passing were held by another division. They were very worried and concerned when they saw our vehicles withdrawing, and some of them mounted their vehicles and started to withdraw. I saw a line of infantrymen bearing the insignia of the red keystone withdrawing across the railroad tracks. I later learned that they were my own Pennsylvania 28th Division which had been gallantly trying to hold their line against the German onslaught. They had been holding on, I learned, ever since the attack began. Groups of these infantrymen were straggling down the road beside our vehicle. They looked tired and weary, as if they didn’t care any more. Their rifles were slung over their shoulders and a dark growth of beard was on their faces.

The sight of these withdrawing men filled me with fear. I expected to see German infantry coming across those tracks. The fighting was coming closer and I wanted to be prepared. I put a cartridge in the chamber of my rifle, and kneeling on the seat I was ready to fire on any Germans that came over the rise formed by the railroad tracks.

When we reached the crossroads again, the situation was in general confusion. Vehicles were trying to go all ways at once. Several officers were trying to direct traffic and restore order from chaos. The tension was increased by the sound of shells crashing in the trees on each side of the road. We drove up a hill and found our tanks deployed in battle formation at the crest’of the ridge. My vehicle stopped at the top of the hill and then moved on about 20 yards. I heard an explosion behind us and saw that a mortar shell had hit the second squad vehicle behind us when it pulled into our old position. The vehicle was disabled and three men wounded. These were our first casualties so far as I knew at the time. They carried the wounded to a pit that the Germans had evacuated just before we came over the hill. I later learned that several shells had hit the crossroads after we got through. One shell had made a direct hit on the third platoon half-track, killing three and wounding several others.

My position in the platoon was that of runner for Lt. Stringfellow. I followed him around like a dog following its master. When we stopped at the crest of the hill, he dispersed the vehicles and men. The object of this was to keep one shell from injuring more than one or two men. It was here I received my first lesson in German camouflage. In a corner of a haystack the Germans had neatly concealed a machine gun. They had dug out a corner of the stack and placed strands of straw in the fence. You could walk right up to the gun and not notice it. I was so intent on following the lieutenant that I didn’t notice it as we walked by. He pointed it out to me. The Germans who had occupied this position had left only a few minutes before. They had left the machine gun, ammunition, rifles, and personal equipment lying around. I remember that we were all “booby trap” conscious from the lectures we had received on the subject. Leonard Dricks got a long strand of fence wire and hooked it on the gun. He backed off ten yards and jerked. Much to my surprise it wasn’t “booby trapped” in spite of all the lectures to the contrary.

We waited on the hill for a short time until the arrival of Capt. Fabrick. He had taken the other part of the company, which was not with us and gone down into the little town of Jodenville. He came back all smiles telling about the nice little fight they had down there in the town.

Very soon the battalion commander arrived and there was a conference among the officers. It was decided that we would attack cross-country. Our objective was a wooded area on a distant hill. The tanks led the attack. I remember seeing the light tanks scooting across the snow, bucking and tugging and kicking up clouds of snow. The tanks were attacking in a skirmish line and our infantry half-tracks followed in dispersed formation at a distance of 100 yards. I remember as we dashed down the hill seeing several of our General Sherman tanks burning in the plain below. Our tanks were no match for the German low silhouette Tiger tanks with their “88” cannons. The tanks that were leading were already on the crest of the slope facing the woods that concealed the enemy guns. The engagement was on. Our tanks were blasting away and receiving fire. We pulled up beside our tanks and dismounted. We formed a skirmish line of infantry across the hill. It was easy to see that our tanks were taking a beating. All along the line tanks were beginning to burn. The German anti-tank guns and “88” pieces were well dug in and camouflaged. We had failed to register preliminary artillery fire on the enemy position. Our artillery only now was beginning to land a few shells in the woods. As we lay in the snow, Lt. Stringfellow gave the command to fix bayonets. I think every man in the platoon had a little of the hysterical feeling of fear which will grip a new soldier. The enemy must be close or why the order to fix bayonets? I expected to see a wave of German infantry come charging over the slight rise in front of us. All the time a few shells were coming in on us. A piece of shrapnel hit the half-track. Our tanks were firing and being fired at. At the time, the privates were ignorant of the plan of attack. We did not know what we were to do. I had only the faintest idea that the enemy fire was coming from the woods ahead. I saw some of our shells land in those woods, which were about 500 yards in front. I blame our officers for not acquainting us with the situation.

I later learned we were to assault the woods with the tanks in support. The lieutenant must have decided that we were too far from our objective to make a direct foot assault, so he gave the order to mount up. This order didn’t take any coaxing. We all piled into the vehicles. With all the equipment in the track it didn’t seem as if there was enough room. Several of the boys in their haste sprawled across the knees of us who were sitting. We were gripped with a fear that at any time one of those German anti-tank shells, which were knocking out the tanks, would hit our vehicle.

It now became apparent that some of our tanks were pulling back, trying to take shelter behind the crest of the hill and screen themselves from the murderous fire. Our lieutenant yelled to the tank major in the tank next to our track and asked him why the tanks were withdrawing. The major didn’t seem to know. Lt. Stringfellow gave another order to dismount and withdraw. Then began a mad scramble down into the draw from which we had just come. The drivers brought up the vehicles as soon as they could turn them around. We attempted to form a temporary defense line along a fencerow, but when the vehicles came by we mounted up and returned to the town of Jodenville from where we had just come.

At Jodenville the tracks were dispersed in a field behind the town and the men found what cover they could. This was the end of our action for the first day. Except for gaining the town of Jodenville, the attack was a failure from my limited knowledge at the time. The failure was due to inexperienced officers and green troops. After our experience in Belgium we could have done a better job. And we did in the months that followed.

After our withdrawal from the hill, the lieutenant and I went into the town to contact the other officers and learn what the score was. The Krauts started to pour mortar and artillery shells on the town and our vehicles. We ducked into a basement and let the music play outside. As soon as the artillery had let up a little the lieutenant sent me to where the vehicles were parked to bring the men into town where they could get protection in the buildings. When I got out to the boys I found them huddled behind hedges and sprawled in ditches. They looked scared to death and thought I was crazy walking around in the open. Several of the boys had been wounded in the field and a couple killed. Two boys lost control of their nerves and broke down from “battle fatigue.” One was from my squad.

That night was the first of many miserable nights to come. My company had a sector of the town to defend. We dug foxholes and set up machine guns on the outside perimeter. The ground was frozen and resisted our efforts to dig in. My squad finally succeeded in scratching several holes, and we set up our 50-caliber guns from the track. There wasn’t much sleeping that night. Each man did about four hours of outpost duty in the foxholes and then tried to sleep. The entire platoon was jammed into one little house. We slept on the floor and every time someone came in the door I was stepped on. I remember that while I was on the outpost Joe Moran came past me walking down the road leading out of town. I told him he was going toward the enemy lines. He must have been drunk. The next day he wasn’t around when the attack began. We later found the fighting Irishman hiding in an attic.

The next day December 31st, we were to continue our attack. The outposts were called in and we mounted our half-tracks ready to take off. I remember I had great difficulty in deciding whether to wear my heavy wool overcoat or my lighter field jacket. I took it off and put it on several times. The coat was very heavy and clumsy for walking or running, but it was good protection when I lay down in the snow. I finally decided to wear the coat and later that night I was very glad that I had.

There was some delay in making the attack that morning. For one thing our artillery was shelling the enemy position. I went up to visit with a few of the tankers while we were waiting. Several of them were gathered around behind their tanks melting snow for water and trying to make coffee. They told me they had lost 14 tanks the day before and had quite a few boys wounded. The company commander was killed and another boy. Several of the tanks were firing now. They had spotted some activity on the hill in front of us and were trying their accuracy.

At twelve o’clock noon the battalion commander gave the signal to begin the attack. We mounted up and took off with the tanks leading. We raced down the same valley through which we had withdrawn the day before. This time all our machine guns were blazing. It was a comforting sound to hear those guns chatter. Lt. Stringfellow had trouble with the 50-caliber gun mounted on our track. It would fire a few rounds and then jam. Our spearhead of tanks and half-tracks chased down the valley toward the next town until several vehicles bogged down and we came under enemy mortar fire. Here we dismounted from the vehicles and took cover in a ditch by the road. Howard Anderson’s vehicle was hit by a shell and became disabled, but fortunately all the men had taken cover in the ditch before it was hit. The company formed in a skirmish line along the road taking cover behind the bank. As usual I had no idea what we were attacking or where the enemy was supposed to be. I heard machine gun fire coming over our head from the rear but it turned out to be from our own tanks.

It was here that Willie J. Maynard got a lucky shot with his bazooka. He fired at an attic window of a house near the road. It was a beautiful hit, and a Kraut came flying out the other window in the attic. He didn’t get far when he was cut down by four 50-caliber machine guns from an anti-aircraft battery. The plan was for us to attack the hill in front of us. The battalion moved out from the road in basic training fashion, leaps and bounds and rushes, everything according to the book. We charged across the open ground and up the hill until we were ordered to stop. And now the officers decided that we were attacking the wrong hill! The Krauts were not up there. Somebody had made a miscalculation. I was told later that the tank commander yelled to battalion commander, Lt. Col. Hoffman, and asked him if he felt qualified to lead his men. His reply was, “I guess not.”

Later I understood that Col. Hoffman accidentally let the tank hatch drop on his shoulder and he had to be evacuated. That took care of that problem. Col. Hoffman was succeeded by Major Tansey, a dashing West Point officer. I remember him walking around with his 45-caliber pistol strapped to his waist, screaming orders in his high-pitched voice, walking where the fighting was the thickest.

Since we had blundered in attacking the wrong hill, Major Tansey and Capt. Fabrick led our company along a railroad track around the hill. We walked down the railroad tracks in a column of two for several hundred yards and then cut crosscountry up over the hill. I noticed several knocked out American tanks on the hill but nothing more. Although I didn’t know it then, we were heading toward the town of Chenogne, Belgium, which I presume was our original objective. This town was to witness the bloodiest fighting of our campaign in Belgium.

Our company came across the hill in scattered formation, the first platoon leading the way. I remember wading through snowdrifts and crawling under several barbed wire fences. As I came over the top of that open hill I little suspected the trap into which we were to be caught. Several times shells burst in the pine trees 150 yards to my left and some shrapnel hit the snow around me. I couldn’t figure out then if that was close support from our artillery or enemy fire. I guess it was the Jerries [nickname for Germans] because they had spotted every move we made.

Suddenly I had an experience of horror. Again I got that sudden sickening in my stomach. There in front of me were two-man foxholes. I could make out the forms of American boys, G.I.’s slumped over in a sitting position, dead. The snow had drifted over their bodies so I could hardly distinguish their features. I then realized there was something wrong with this place. Some one yelled that the 9th Armored Division had been driven out of here a few days before.

As we walked along, Capt. Fabrick yelled for someone to fire a few rounds into a haystack in front of us. Some one fired a few rounds and this turned out to be very fortunate. The Jerries figured we had spotted them and they opened up with their machine gun. The sound of that gun I will never forget. The German machine gun has a much faster rate of fire than our gun and so they are easily distinguished. The sound of that gun echoed across the snow and everything in me seemed to stop. There were six of us in the first rank as we passed over the crest of the hill. We could see the town of Chenogne 300 yards in front of us. All of us instinctively dove for cover in the snow. I looked for a hole to crawl into but there was none.

The first burst of gunfire had killed two men and wounded three, leaving me the lucky one. As I raised my head to look around, I saw boys to the left kicking and writhing in the snow. I knew they were hit and I wanted to get to them but I couldn’t. I knew approximately who they were although I could not see their faces. Sgt. Carl E. Petersen from Oregon and William Kidney from Toledo, Ohio were dead. Bill Bassert and Charles Hocker from Philadelphia were badly wounded. Johnny Kale, who was lying near me, began to whine in pain. He yelled to me he was hit. I crawled on my stomach through the snow to him. I found a bullet had hit him in the calf of the leg but it wasn’t bleeding badly. It looked like a clean wound. I took the Carlisle bandage from his belt and bandaged his wound. I gave him his sulfa tablets to prevent infection, but the water to take the pills with was frozen in his canteen. I told him to eat snow with the pills. Remembering my basic training, I took the clips of rifle ammunition from his belt and told him to crawl to the rear. As soon as Kale was gone my attention was again drawn to that Jerry machine gun. It was still spitting out death across the snow. I knew I had to get into a hole somewhere or that gun would get me. I spotted a hole 20 yards down the hill and made a run for it. It was filled with snow but I flopped in.

My protection was just a shallow slit trench. Every time I heard that machine gun rip off a burst I tried to draw my buttocks more into the hole or pull in a leg. At this time I experienced the loneliest and most desolate feeling I had ever gone through. I looked back and could see none of the rest of the platoon behind me. The few boys on my right had either been killed or were lying face down and very still. On my left and in front there was nothing but Krauts. A few yards to my right lay a dead German. He must have been killed the day before, as he was frozen stiff.

The idea came into my head that maybe the company would withdraw and leave me there. I thought to myself, “Well Fague, it looks like the end is very near.” My morale was at the lowest it had ever reached. I had a weapon in my hand and I was determined to use it whatever happened. I saw some activity in the house ahead, Krauts running around. I opened up with my rifle. I fired one shot and my rifle jammed. While I had been giving Kale first aid I dragged my rifle through the snow and got snow and dirt in the receiver. I had trouble drawing back the bolt but I could still operate my rifle one round at a time. I doubt if I hit anything but it made me feel good to be shooting and doing something.

My isolated little battlefield soon came to life. I heard machine gun fire coming from my rear and it was a wonderful sound. I saw those beautiful red tracer bullets from our guns arch across the snow into the Jerry position in front of me. I heard our tanks coming from the rear and I knew I was no longer alone. What a wonderful feeling the sight of our tanks gave me. I felt like jumping up and charging the enemy position alone. I was so excited I was no longer afraid. Behind me I heard voices yelling and commands. I saw buddies from my platoon moving over the bodies of those who had just been killed. They were moving in leaps and bounds from bushes to snowdrifts. When they came abreast of me I went along with them. I rushed to an abandoned German tank 75 yards in front of me and took cover behind it.

At the tank I was soon joined by Frank H. Holquist. He brought his machine gun and set up for business. The next arrivals were Robert A. Fordyce, a Perm State freshman from Erie, Pennsylvania, and Paul L. Gentile. They were carrying ammunition for the machine gun. The sergeants soon joined us. Holquist now gave us a tune on his machine gun. He was keeping the Krauts busy who were dug in around the house 50 yards in front of us. I decided this was the time to take my rifle apart and get the snow out of it. When the company had built up enough strength, we rushed the Germans around the house. When we reached the house a German came out, hands in the air. Roy E. Stout from Missouri shot him. Two more Krauts came out of another dugout and Sgt. Frank Hartzel from Philadelphia shot them with his 45 pistol. They were following our orders to take no prisoners. My company had overrun the German positions on the outskirts of the village and we began to push on through. There was general confusion of shouting and grenade throwing. Our tanks were cruising and crashing around. I had trouble keeping from being run down by tanks or getting in the muzzle blast of their 75 mm guns.

We didn’t get far into Chenogne. It was five o’clock in the evening and it was decided to form a defense line for the night running through the outskirts of the village. My company B was dug in on a line on the right side of the road leading into the town and C Company was dug in on the left. Now we had time to count noses and see who was present, time to check up on our ammunition and our rations.

My best buddy, Wilfred L. McCarty from McCool Junction, Nebraska was missing out of my squad. No one seemed to know what had happened to him. Later I learned he had been hit in the shoulder by a mortar shell fragment. James O. Cust, New York City, and I were going to dig our foxhole together. There was snow on the ground and it was frozen six inches deep. We had only little entrenching tools to dig with and the frozen ground resisted our efforts but we hacked feverishly at the crust. We had been told to expect a counter attack soon after taking a position. Cust and I had dug a hole deep enough to sit down in when the Germans began the counter attack. It began with a heavy artillery barrage. We had only 45 minutes to dig the hole but it saved our lives. Robert Fordyce who had been the second man to join me at the tank in the afternoon was killed in his hole behind us. His hole wasn’t deep enough to protect him properly.

While the barrage was going on Cust and I sat in our hole looking at each other. We were two frightened, cold, exhausted boys. Every time a shell hit, we closed our eyes and flinched. Shells crashed around our hole and threw dirt on us. How long would this shelling last I wondered. Would the next shell hit us? What would come after the shelling? The shelling was followed by machine gun fire from the Krauts. I was expecting an infantry attack but our tanks and artillery came to our rescue. Our artillery laid shells in front of our position and our tanks on the hill behind us used their machine guns. This discouraged the enemy from any attack on us.

Now it was near midnight, New Years 1945.1 was in a foxhole, cold, shivering, miserable and wondering if I would live to see the New Year in. I was going to try. I had my rifle lying on a pile of dirt in front of me along with three hand grenades just for good measure. I thought Cust and I were set for the night but soon the squad sergeant informed us that our holes were too far out of the defense perimeter. We were to fall back and dig new holes. Cursing and swearing, we started to dig a new hole. All the time we were digging the new hole we were subject to a possible artillery barrage. Again we had to hack and chew at the frozen ground with our toy tools. I was so cold and exhausted I sat down on the snow and dug between my legs.

December 31, 1944

The houses along the road to my left were burning brilliantly. This gave an eerie touch to the black night. The flames flickered and flashed, illuminating the scene and lighting our little world. I had my gaze focused on a burning house down the road when I saw two figures silhouetted by the light of the fire. They were walking toward the darkness. At first I thought they were G.I.’s but then changed my mind. I opened up on them with my rifle. I heard some moaning and yelling and then “Komerad! Komerad!” Out of the darkness two men trudged toward me, their arms raised in surrender. They were my first prisoners. I turned the two prisoners over to Joseph A. Minnaugh (Harrisburg, Pa.) who could speak German. Later I learned these two men had been taken behind a haystack and shot. The order had been, “Take no prisoners in this drive.”

The fire in the burning buildings looked inviting to me as I shivered in my foxhole. I decided to walk over to the fire and warm up a little. The intense heat from the fire felt good to me and I was beginning to enjoy my little bonfire when I happened to glance at a charred object near my feet. At first I assumed it was a burnt log but on closer inspection I realized it was the charred body of a German. I began to think about the possibility of some Krauts surprising me, as I stood there illuminated by the fire. This idea along with my charred companion caused me to decide to go back to my cold foxhole.

Word was passed around that our half-tracks were on the hill behind us and that we could go one at a time and get food and our coats. Cust stayed in our hole and I went up the hill to the track. For some reason I was very thirsty. While rummaging through the track I found a can of condensed milk, which I thought I would like to drink. I pierced the can with my trench knife and guzzled the milk. It was a bitter dose but I drank it. The C-rations were frozen solid in the can but somehow I managed to pry the stew loose with my trench knife. I was hungry.

About midnight orders came down that we were to evacuate our position in the town and pull back up the hill. I heard rumors that the reason we were pulling back was that the Germans were bringing reinforcements and tanks into the town for an attack. I believed the rumor at the time but now I know the officers had something else in mind. My platoon assembled around that same haystack on the hill where the shooting had started the afternoon before. We were to form a new defense line on the ridge. For the third time that night Cust and I were to scratch out a hole in the frozen ground. Some of the fellows found foxholes dug by the 9th Armored Division before they withdrew. But we had to dig our own holes. Cust was so exhausted he couldn’t dig. He lay down in the snow and told me he didn’t care if he died or not. I felt the same way but I began to pick at the ground, pretending to have a little enthusiasm for the work. When I had gotten some dirt dug I coaxed Jim into shoveling it away. That got him interested in the project.

January 1, 1945

The next day was New Year’s Day 1945. It was a holiday back in the States. Mom would be fixing up a big dinner. I thought of this as I trudged over to our half-track in the dim light of dawn. I was going for another can of C-rations. As it got light that New Year’s morning I was amazed at the collection of vehicles on the slope behind our position. There were half-tracks and tanks, tank destroyers, jeeps and ambulances. Another attack was going to be made on the little town of Chenogne. The tank crews were warming up their tanks in preparation for the big push.

Several hours of the morning wore on as preparations were made for the attack. An artillery preparation was in progress. The tanks were lining up across the hill at the starting line. Our infantry battalion was likewise deployed in a skirmish line behind the tanks. The second and third platoons of our company were on the line and my platoon was immediately behind them. We had suffered the most casualties the day before and so were placed in support. I was to be a busy boy that morning. James Cust had suggested that he and I stick together for the attack and sort of look after each other. This seemed like a good idea. Lt. Stringfellow had also told me to stick by him as he was feeling almost exhausted. He gave me his “walkie talkie” to carry and listen on.

The attack began and the Krauts were ready. As soon as our boys started over the crest of the hill into town, the German machine guns sprang to life. Mortars opened up on our tanks. More artillery was called for. Our tanks and assault guns were moved up on the crest to try to knock out those machine guns. Lt. Dupont of the second platoon was walking around on the crest of the hill trying to locate the enemy machine gun when he was hit in the shoulder by the gun he was looking for. He crawled back from the crest and lay in the snow. Lt. Stringfellow yelled for him not to move. He called for a medical jeep and the Lieutenant and I went up to help load Dupont on the vehicle.

The medics were very busy that morning. All across the line were cries of “Medic! Medic! Bring a stretcher.” The Germans were extremely accurate with their mortar fire. It seemed as if they could drop their shells right in the turret of our tanks. Several wounded tankers were lying in a shell hole waiting for medical aid. The lieutenant sent me in search of a jeep to evacuate them. I couldn’t find a medical jeep so I commandeered a company vehicle. We loaded the wounded on it and it took off for the battalion aid station in the rear. Fortunately the driver knew the way back to Jodenville where the aid station was located. It was a rough ride over the snow and frozen ground but speed was essential. We dumped our load of wounded and headed back to the front.

At first the attack went badly. The enemy had us pinned down on the ridge. Gradually our superior firepower helped us break through. We started down the hill into town. My platoon was supposed to trail in the rear but in the confusion we were mixed in with the rest of the company. We fought in a mass and a “mess.” I particularly remember T/Sgt. Glen R. Warfield walking down the main street firing a light machine gun from his hip. He looked like the hero in a Hollywood war thriller. The belt of ammunition was slug across his shoulder and he was spraying hell out of everything in sight.

The action was going better until machine gun fire erupted from an unidentified location. It sounded like one of our own guns but it was knocking out boys all along the road. It looked as though the fire was coming from a big stone house 30 yards in front of us but we could see no signs of movement or enemy activity. I was crouching in a ditch by the side of the road when a bullet creased my left thumb and smashed the upper hand guard of my rifle. The impact of the bullet knocked the gun out of my hand and spun me around. I lay in the ditch wondering what had happened. My next impulse was to retrieve my rifle. I crawled around to where I could reach it and pulled it to me by the sling. I got out of there in a hurry.

Across the road from me Robert J. Beach of Los Angeles had been hit in both legs from that same burst of fire. I ran across the road to him but several other guys were giving him aid. They told me to stand guard on the corner as we didn’t know where the fire was coming from. When I had time I examined my thumb and rifle. The bullet had cut through the side of my thumb but it was not bleeding seriously. The wooden hand guard on the rifle was smashed and the bullet had hit the barrel and then glanced off. Fortunately it was still in working order.

As I was standing there on guard I noticed an American artillery gun move by me. The tractor bore the olive drab color and the white star of our army. The Germans had captured it in their lightening breakthrough and were using it to tow their artillery. The source of the enemy fire holding up our advance was finally located in a big stone house in front of us. Tank fire was brought on the house from less than 30 yards away and gaping holes were punctured in the walls.

The platoon sergeant then ordered several of us to go forward with grenades and grenade the house. Jim Cust and I went forward and crouched by the house wall. Jim made the first attempt to heave a grenade into a first floor window. In his haste Jim missed the window and the grenade fell to the ground by the house. Jim threw himself on the ground by the building and it exploded within 10 feet of him. The burst of the grenade fragments went upward and miraculously Jim’s life was spared for a few minutes longer. This was the last time I saw Jim alive.

Since Jim had failed I pulled the pin on my grenade and ran forward. I aimed at an upper story window and like Jim in my haste I missed the window. I jumped into an open doorway to avoid the shrapnel. I pulled the pin on a second grenade and tried again. Again I failed and jumped into the doorway for protection. I was green to combat or I would never have tried to grenade an upper floor. As I later learned I should have dropped the grenade in a basement window from where the Germans were firing. They knew from experience that a cellar offered the best protection against our tanks and bombs.

T/Sgt. Kenneth Ferguson called me back from the building in order to give the tanks another opportunity to shell the house. We were lying behind a hedge at the side of the house when I saw the boys on my left running back from the house. My buddy Jim Cust was one of those who never got a chance to withdraw. He raised himself by his arms and then fell back down. A bullet had gotten him in the forehead. Lt. Wilber F. Jones who was standing in the ditch by the road got a bullet in his chest from the same burst of fire and died almost instantly.

In the confusion and excitement of the action I didn’t know that Jim Cust had been killed. I didn’t even realize this deadly machine gun fire was coming from the basement window of the house by which we were lying. A little later I asked the sergeant where Cust was. He said the Krauts got him and that he was lying over by the hedge. I could not believe that anything like that had happened to Jim. I rushed over to the body lying by the hedge. There was Jim, but the boy lying in the snow had little resemblance to the Jim that I knew so well. His face had that horrible look of violent death. His eyes had that glassy stare as though he was seeing something very far away. His teeth were protruding from his face like those of a Chinaman, something that was never characteristic of Jim. The Jim I knew so well had gone from me and so I turned my back on the lifeless boy lying in the snow.

By now the house was blazing fiercely. A tanker down the street yelled that somebody was trying to escape from the basement. All of us stood with our guns ready. We were angry and anxious to kill, to avenge the death of so many of our boys whom these creatures had wounded and killed. The occupants of the basement were being driven out by the smoke. The first thing to appear from the basement door was a German Red Cross flag. They were begging for mercy but there was no mercy in our hearts. We yelled for the Krauts to come out. The first soldier to come out through the smoke was a German medic. He staggered a few steps and a score of rifles cracked. He dropped in the snow, crawled a few feet and dropped again. He lay still.

Frightening cries were coming from the basement. The people were being suffocated by the smoke from the inside and meeting death from our guns on the outside. Another Kraut groped his way through the door, took a few steps and met a hail of bullets. Several more Germans rushed through the door and dropped in the snow outside. A ring of bodies was forming around the doorway.

Soon we realized that there were civilians imprisoned in the basement. We could hear women screaming. We held our fire while women and children rushed from the smoking basement. They had been held prisoner by the Germans to keep them from giving away their position. These unfortunate people rushed around like crazed animals. They also embraced each other and kissed. They were so happy to be free from that burning hell and happy to know that we were not going to kill them as we had the Germans. I remember one young girl about 16 years old had an ugly gash over her kneecap. We coaxed her to lie down on the road while a medic bandaged her leg. The civilians still did not trust us, they were terrified by the excitement and the shells landing nearby. The women soon grabbed their children in their arms and started to run for the woods. We tried to restrain them, as the woods were not safe from our artillery. They would not heed our warnings.

Since this strong point of resistance had been cleared, we proceeded on down the main street of the town. I kept a sharp lookout at all the windows for any signs of activity. From a white stone house on a hill to the left of the road a man appeared with a white flag. I yelled and waved for him to come forward. He came down to the road followed by a dozen others. They lined up on the road while several of our boys searched them for weapons and loot. These were German supermen who had been charged with the task of holding open General Von Rundstedt’s corridor to Antwerp. Many of them were young arrogant boys of 16 and 17, Hitler’s youth. Several of them wore U.S. army clothing which they had taken from our boys whom they had captured or killed. Boys from the 9th Armored Division I presumed.

By now we had cleared the town. Most of the buildings had either been destroyed or were burning from our tank and artillery fire. There were still some Germans hiding in the town and woods. This was evident from the sniper fire that opened up now and then. The main action was over and we were sitting along the road trying to recover from the exhaustion of our morning action. Some of the boys had some prisoners lined up. I knew they were going to shoot them and I hated that business. I hid behind one of the tanks so that the sergeant would not see me and ask me to help with the slaughter. Fortunately one of our fellows decided not to shoot them in the open where Germans hiding in the woods would witness this atrocity. They marched the prisoners back up the hill to murder them with the rest of the prisoners we had taken that morning.

Our tanks were now moving up the road to take a defensive position outside of town. Our mission in the town had been completed; we had cleared the town of the enemy. The next move was for my company to form and reorganize. The boys gathered beside the road to eat any rations they carried and to talk over the morning’s business. Our ranks were looking thin. Many of our buddies lay back on the hill outside of town. I was just beginning to feel comfortable and at ease when a few German shells whistled in and hit along the road. A few of our boys were walking along the road and they got hit. The cry for “Medics” was back again. After a rest of an hour we received orders to go back through the town and join our vehicles on the other side of town. We formed into a semblance of a column and trudged back.

As we were going up the hill out of town I saw that some of our boys were lining up German prisoners in the fields on both sides of the road. There must have been 25 or 30 German boys in each group. Machine guns were being set up. These boys were to be machine gunned and murdered. We were committing the same crimes we were accusing the Japs and Germans of doing. The terrible significance of what was going on did not occur to me at the time. After the killing and confusion of that morning the idea of killing some more Krauts didn’t particularly bother me. I didn’t want any part in the killing. My chief worry was that Germans hiding in the woods would see this massacre and we would receive similar treatment if we were captured. I turned my back on the scene and walked on up the hill.

Back at the half-track we dug out some frozen C-rations and tried to thaw them out on the exhaust pipe of the track. The water in the water can was also partly frozen but I managed to drain a little out to drink.In the meantime I tried to reorganize my equipment. I took my rifle apart and cleaned and oiled it the best I could. I got some more ammunition and grenades to replace what I had used. It was now three o’clock in the afternoon. As tired and exhausted as we were the order came to continue the attack. We were going to push on. Our objective was the Bastogne-Neufchateau highway. The signal was given to mount up and prepare to move out. Four men from my squad were missing. Going back down the road into town I looked into the field where the German boys had been shot. Dark lifeless forms lay in the snow. Leaving the town our vehicles left the road and were traveling cross country through the snow. We pushed on as far as we could in our vehicles and then dismounted and proceeded on foot.

Our line of advance was in a clearing between two patches of pinewoods. We were formed in columns of five, continually on the alert for signs of enemy activity. It was now nearly five o’clock and darkness was rapidly closing in. I had no idea where we were going or what was going to happen. It was merely a case of following the man ahead and hoping that somebody knew what the score was. From time to time we would lie in the snow when artillery shells landed nearby. No one was hit. We continued to plod through the snow that evening until it was considered inadvisable to go further. Orders were received to dig in. My platoon was assigned its sector of defense. It was dark now and our location was confusing. We were on a bare slope with woods or trees 20 yards to our front. I was digging a hole with two other boys. One was Nelson S. Rehnquist and the other was called “Snuffy.” Snuffy was hard of hearing and not too reliable.

We got our entrenching tools and began to dig as rapidly as possible. We scraped the snow away and broke through the crust of frozen ground. The digging was easy, too easy. When we had dug a foot and a half we were in mud, which soon gave way to water. This was most discouraging. We had gone less than two feet and were in water. The night was getting cold, and I knew we could not last long standing in a hole filled with water.

We decided to start another hole nearby on a little higher ground. This time we were going to dig a wider hole and not go very deep. By working in shifts we soon got a hole that was almost three feet deep. This would have to do. We dared not go deeper. Two of us had worked while one listened. We did not want to be surprised. When the hole was finished we took a chance on going down to the edge of the woods and cutting pine boughs. These would help to protect us from the dampness of the frozen ground. We notified the boys on our right and left that we were going into the woods.

While we were digging, an eerie sound came from the woods. It sounded like a man calling for help. It was long drawn out and a frightening sound. No one had the courage to go into the woods and investigate. It may have been a trick of the Germans or a wounded German. Since there were three of us we decided that each of us would pull an hour of guard duty and then wake the next man. Sleep, however, was out of the question. I was too cold, scared, and miserable to sleep. I would doze off for a few minutes and then wake up with a start. I strained my eyes and ears to pierce the darkness surrounding our position. My feet gave me the most unbearable discomfort. I had gotten my shoes wet tramping through the snow the day before and now they were freezing.

January 2, 1945

Sometime during the night our half-tracks were brought up to us. The boys would take turns leaving their holes and going back to the vehicles to get warm. The drivers left the motors running to generate a little heat. A short time before dawn several mortar rounds landed nearby. The boys standing hit the snow. Miraculously no one was hurt. The Germans must have heard the sound of our motors or seen the light from our little Coleman stoves. This scare was enough. Orders were given to take the vehicles back to the rear. In the haste of their departure, I left my gloves on the side of the track. I had been warming my hands over the exhaust pipe. This was a critical matter, left in the freezing weather without gloves. I rushed around to secure another pair but met with no success. I finally received an old pair with holes from the first sergeant. They were better than nothing.

Shortly after dawn we received the surprising news that we were going to withdraw. The rumor was that we did not have enough strength to hold our position. I believed it but I hated to give up the ground we worked so hard to secure. We gathered up the surplus ammunition and equipment strewn around our holes and made a dump of it where it would be convenient for our vehicles to pick up. The boys were chattering and excited about the sudden turn of events. And then in a typical army “snafu mode” came another order that we were going to hold our position. We returned in a sullen mood to our holes.

Somehow in the exchange of equipment I secured an extra machine gun. There wasn’t any tripod for it but I took it to my hole and set it up. The gun was frozen but I did my best to get it in working condition. I was having trouble keeping myself awake when action began to happen. Rounds of white phosphorus smoke shells fell in the woods 200 yards to our left front. My tired eyes imagined figures slinking through the smoke and I fired my rifle at them. I imagined that the smoke was to cover a surprise attack by the Germans. My nerves were getting the best of me. It was all my imagination except for the smoke shells. We could hear the sound of tank motors over the ridge in front of us. I saw several vehicles moving up through the trees. My harried nerves now imagined a tank attack and our tanks were not here to support us.

I was much relieved to learn that these tanks were from another unit attacking on our right flank. The action died down and I relaxed and tried to sleep a little. We were sweating it out waiting for orders to attack or retire. The morning wore on and then the afternoon. About four o’clock orders were received to proceed to the village of Mande, about 1000 yards from our present position. This would give us control of the main road between Bastogne and Mande I learned later. We abandoned our foxholes and assembled on the ridge with our supporting tanks. There were no signs of enemy activity. It was too quiet.

Paul L. Gentile and I were warming our bodies behind a tank when a mortar shell landed. We hit the snow. Paul yelled that he had been hit. I crawled over to assist him and discovered when I rolled him over that blood was spurting from a gaping wound in his chest. I tried to stop it with my gloved fist but I could see this wasn’t enough. I found a medical jeep in a shell crater nearby and persuaded the medics to come for Paul. We laid him on the hood and I crawled on top of Paul to keep him from rolling off. With the jeep careening and bouncing over the frozen ground, it was all I could do to hold on. From the gray color of Paul’s face, I knew it was all over for Paul. But I couldn’t give up.

After depositing Paul’s lifeless form at the battalion aid station, I started walking back to where I had left the company. In my excitement over Paul, I had lost my rifle. I tried to borrow a weapon from the vehicle drivers I passed on my way back but they had none to spare. When I arrived at the spot where we loaded Paul on the jeep I found my rifle. I had laid it against the jeep. When the jeep driver turned around, my rifle was smashed. Fortunately I found a carbine lying in the snow—it probably belonged to Paul.

Darkness had descended by now and the company, what was left of it, was working their way into the village of Mande. Many of the buildings were burning and I could see advancing men outlined against the orange flames. I found my platoon and fell into line as they advanced in single file toward the village. We slopped through a stream, soaking our feet. This would increase the incidence of frozen feet on the cold night, which followed. A house-to-house search was made but no Germans were found. Our shelling had probably driven them off. Since my platoon was to have no guard duty, we located a house for the night. This was our first shelter in four days. The half-tracks were brought up and we unpacked our gear.

Lt. Stringfellow called for his bedroll, which I carried down to the basement for him. I remained on the ground floor. Coleman stoves were lit and we proceeded to warm our C-rations. Just when I had settled down on the floor for a little rest, the Germans started shelling the town. The walls of the room shook and swayed. I expected any minute for a direct hit on the house. A picture of Christ and his Disciples at the Last Supper danced on the wall. Suddenly outside I heard the cry, “Counter Attack.” A chill went up my back. I feared being surrounded and trapped in the house. I grabbed my carbine and dashed outside. There was utter confusion outside. Black human forms were running here and there. A cold driving snow chilled the air.

I found our tanks in a skirmish line on the edge of town and decided this would be the best place to make a stand. Shells were dropping on the village. I knelt in the snow by a tank and peered into the blackness for signs of any attacking infantry. Our artillery and tanks had opened up and it was a real “Fourth of July.” I was cold and scared as usual, but no Germans appeared. There was just suspense. A tanker yelled from the turret that he needed a bow gunner. Their gunner had been wounded that day. Although I had never been in a tank I figured it would be better than freezing in the snow.

It was an intricate task to lower myself with overcoat, canteen, entrenching tools, cartridge belt, and carbine down into the bow hole in the dark, but I squeezed in. The inside of a tank was a strange new world to me. I found the 30-caliber machine gun and the observation slot. All I could see was the flash of bursting shells laid down by our artillery. There was hardly room for my feet with all the ammo boxes. By now my wet feet were freezing. I tried to stomp them but that didn’t stop the cold. I sat in the dark, shivering and waiting. Suddenly there was a deafening explosion, which rocked the tank. The tank commander yelled, “We’re hit!” The crew scrambled to abandon the tank before it caught fire.

This was a new experience for me. I slowly squeezed out through the porthole, canteen, overcoat, carbine, and all. Fortunately only the back end of the tank was scorched with the gear being blown away. The tankers reported the damage to their commanding officer. He instructed them to pull the tank off the line if it could be moved. Since the shelling and excitement had died down and no enemy had appeared, I returned to the house. Back in the house the remains of the platoon were either lying on the floor or stirring up soup and cocoa on the Coleman burners. I stepped over the shrouded forms on the floor and lay down, but not to sleep. The fear of another attack and the occasional shelling prevented anything but a little “dozing” for rest.

January 3, 1945

The next morning was gray with half rain and half snow falling. Oxen were wandering helplessly in the barnyard, some with deep gashes in their sides. One horse had its small intestines protruding from its flank. Many were dead from the shelling the previous night. This was a pathetic sight. First Sgt. John A. Blackburn sent word around that we were to be relieved. I couldn’t believe this was true. I imagined in war you kept going until there was none left. The company was less than half strength. At this point we were too exhausted and frost- bitten to carry out any effective attack.

The platoon assembled and plodded back to the waiting half-tracks. Before our departure I noticed men with the insignia of the 17th Airborne Division had arrived. They were lounging about, waiting. I wondered if they had been in combat before and knew what might lie ahead for them. In my track there were only two other men beside myself, and there should have been eight. The gear was a hopeless confusion on the floor. We just flopped in, too tired and miserable to care, but feeling happy to be leaving. The tension had gone for the moment. It was raining and sleeting on us as the canvas top had been removed when we entered the combat area. I sank into a deep sleep; it was my first real sleep in five days.

I didn’t remember a thing until we arrived in Au-Chene, Belgium that evening. This was to be our rest area. We bedded down in a haymow for the night. Two very kind Belgium girls brought us coffee. It was hot and tasted good. As I snuggled in my bedroll, the war seemed a long way off. I would worry about it on the morrow. We remained at Au-Chene, Belgium for nine days for a maintenance, and what a break it was for us. We had an opportunity to get some good hot food and some much needed rest. We were issued new clothes and equipment.

It was interesting to note that present for duty at this time were 159 enlisted men and 4 officers. When the attack began on December 29th there were 244 enlisted men and 6 officers. Due to this loss of men the second platoon was eliminated and these men were assigned to the first and third platoons. On January 12th we received orders to prepare to march. We moved out that evening and spent most of the night on the road. It was early morning when we reached the town of Villerous, Belgium. The weather was freezing cold. We suffered from cold feet and hands. Men stomped up and down the road in an attempt to keep warm. We built fires and huddled around them. The snow had reached a depth of two feet or more. The combination of deep snow and our clumsy rubber boots made walking very difficult and tiring.

That day January 13th, Company B was attached to Task Force Blackjack. We moved through the now famous town of Bastogne and dug in northeast of town. On the morning of January 14th, when we were preparing to attack, there were now three officers and 142 enlisted men present for duty with the company. Our mission was to give supporting fire to Task Force Shamrock, but we ended up attacking the town of Cobru. By vehicle we moved to woods overlooking the town. After an artillery and tank barrage, we attacked in mounted formation. The town was well fortified by the Krauts. They had dug in positions around the town and were using the houses for defense also. Our display of firepower and tanks was too much for their weakened morale, however, and many of them surrendered when we got within close fighting range.

Clearing this town was difficult as every house had to be searched from attic to basement. The terrified and wounded civilians added to the confusion of our task. Our casualties in men killed were high for we were receiving mortar and tank fire from the next hill. Sniper fire forced us to move with great caution. Two men were killed learning this lesson. By nightfall we had succeeded in occupying most of the town. We outposted the town and settled down to sweat it out. During the night there were repeated rumors of movement by enemy vehicles.

January 15, 1945

On the following day we rejoined the battalion and became part of Task Force Shamrock. Moving through deep snow on foot we attacked cross-country, supported by tanks and tank destroyers. Our first objective was the woods east of Noville and south of the St. Vith highway. We received little resistance from the woods after reaching this position. We then moved to our second objective, which was the woods north of the St. Vith road. When we reached this objective we were under heavy fire. Armor piercing German 88s skipped across the frozen ground. That night we formed our defenses and dug in as usual. The half-tracks were brought up after dark to supply us with C-ration cans and blankets.

January 16, 1945

In the morning we were again on the attack. B Company rode on tanks of the 41st Tank Battalion. Jockeying the tanks over the frozen hills of Belgium was a new experience for us. The machines plunged and bucked through the snowdrifts, necessitating a firm grip in order to stay on. When the tanks stopped, their cannons began firing. The muzzle blast was terrific, rocking and shaking the whole tank. The dark green tanks silhouetted against the white snow on that hilltop made an excellent target for the enemy. The thought of my tank taking a direct hit was scary.

Our attack carried us across the Bastogne-Houffalize highway. By passing the town of Vicourt on the west, we reached our final objective, which was the wooded area on the high ground south of Houffalize. We attacked these woods in a skirmish line, every rifle and carbine blazing. Our firepower was too much for the Germans. They either fled or surrendered. One anti-aircraft gun almost foiled our attack. The Germans tried to depress the barrel to use it as direct fire against us. Fortunately this failed. Their tracers arched neatly over our heads and our attack was a success.

We cleared the woods of Germans and held fast. The enemy was fleeing across the field in the direction of Houffalize. One gun mount was making a desperate attempt to escape. A lone German was trying to hitch a ride on the back of it but he was easy prey for our rifles and fell dead in the snow. When a machine gun opened up on the fleeing mount, it exploded as if it were hit by a 155mm shell. The three Krauts who were the crew of the gun were flung into the air and the vehicle burst into flames. We formed a defensive position around the woods and prepared for the night. Our vehicles brought us food and blankets and much needed ammunition.

That evening Capt. Elmore Fabrick took a patrol out to check on some farm buildings that were in front of us. When they returned they had 50 German prisoners with them who had taken refuge in the buildings. Clearing these woods had been the final action in the severing of the “bulge” into Belgium. That evening units of the 41st Cavalry Squadron made contact with the First Army driving down from the north.

January 17, 1945

We were awakened in the morning by a barrage from a German rocket battery. This cost us several men. That afternoon we were relieved by elements of the 17th Airborne Division and retired by mounted march to the town of Champs, Belgium. Present for duty were 123 enlisted men and our company commander, Capt. Elmore Fabrick. The success of our company’s action during those trying days in Belgium can be largely attributed to Capt. Fabrick. His fearlessness and high spirits kept us going in the face of enemy fire and demoralizing conditions. In this last action Company B resembled a platoon in size with Capt. Fabrick as its leader.

The company arrived at Champs, Belgium in an exhausted condition on January 17th. Our barracks were barns and battered houses; just any place to sleep and find refuge from the cold was all we wanted. It seemed like heaven to us; we could rest our minds as well as our bodies. We remained there from January 17th until January 20th. It was only a short time but it gave us a chance to clean our guns and reorganize our equipment. It was an opportunity to write home to our loved ones. It was hard to write and say that all was well and for the folks not to worry, but you did it and then turned to your other duties. Eighty new men were assigned to the company as replacements.

On the 20th of January we again took to the road, moving to a wooded area southwest of Foy where Task Force Rocket was being formed. We were lucky to find some German dugouts to sleep in that night. The next day we moved to an assembly area near Noville, Belgium. This was the area we had cleared of the enemy the week before. The boys managed to find some wood so that we could spend the day huddled around a fire. We stayed there that night and then the next day moved to the town of Bourcy. Our mission at this time was to support the 17th Airborne Division, which was in pursuit of enemy withdrawing toward the German border. Unsuccessful attempts were made by our cavalry to contact the enemy.

Bourcy was just like so many other towns in Belgium, which had served as a battleground for the American and German forces. Few houses were left untouched; none had window glass in them. Cows and pigs were running in the streets in addition to the carcasses of dead livestock. The few war-weary civilians who still clung to their homes lived in the cellars or anywhere they could find shelter. As usual we were housed in barns or any place that would give us a little shelter from the winter weather. We placed canvas over the windows to keep out the cold and also serve as blackout curtains. Before we could bed down on the floor, we had to shovel the debris off the floor. Our company kitchen was housed in an old school building. We remained in Bourcy for two days, January 22nd to the 24th. At last we were issued shoepacks and heavy wool stockings. Better late than never, but it would have been so much better if we could have received them a month earlier. This would have saved some frozen feet and the need for amputations.

On January 24th we moved to Massul, Belgium. This town had not been hit by the Germans so we were able to find better living quarters. Most of the squads found houses in which to live. The people were very friendly to us, which helped to make our stay more enjoyable. A cherished memory of my stay at Massul was the opportunity to take a shower. We went by truck to Neufchateau, Belgium where the Quartermaster Corps had set up portable showers. This was my first opportunity to shower since leaving England two months before. While at Massul we received 60 more replacements. This brought our company strength to 245 enlisted men and 5 officers. We were now ready to carry the war onto German soil.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Honoring my grandfather by Matthew Swedick, Associate

John Swedick
John Swedick

Pvt. John J. Swedick, 2nd Infantry Division, 23rd Infantry Regiment, K Co
Killed in action 12-17-44

In World War II, my Grandfather John Swedick was a private with the 2nd Infantry Division, 23rd Infantry Regiment, Third Battalion, K Company.   He entered the Army in March of 1944, at Camp Wheeler in Macon Georgia.  Camp Wheeler was an Infantry Replacement Training Center where new recruits received basic and advanced individual training to replace combat casualties.  In September of 1944, Pvt. Swedick was shipped off to Europe.

On October 30, Pvt. Swedick joined his unit near Lutzkampen Germany, where his unit spent a month and a half fending off skirmishes from the Germans and building up defenses in the area.  On December 12th, Pvt. Swedick’s regiment moved up to Elsenborn, Belgium in a reserve position, again building up defenses in that area, while the rest of the Second Division headed for an attack on the Roer Dams.  While in that reserve position on the morning of December 16th, the 23rd Infantry Regiment was called east to back up the 99th Infantry Division, whose lines had just been bombarded by German artillery and were now being penetrated by German infantry.  What was first thought of as a local skirmish in response to the Allied attacks in the north toward the Roer Dams, the attack on the 99th Infantry Division’s position was but a part of a major German offensive orchestrated by Adolf Hitler himself, now historically known as the Battle of the Bulge.  Hitler had a plan to drive his forces west to Antwerp and divide the Allied armies and cut off supply lines.  He was hoping to force a peace treaty in the west.

On the night of December 16th, the 23rd Infantry Regiment was trucked into the frontlines, and immediately upon arrival, the unit was littered with artillery shells and sustained some losses.   Due to the darkness and the lack of intelligence as to the enemy’s position and the terrain, the regiment was ordered to dig in for the night.  On the morning of the 17th, the regiment was ordered to move forward to reinforce the line that the 99th Infantry Division was losing.  As the 23rd moved forward, the remnants of the 99th were retreating back through their lines.  As infantrymen of the 99th came through, soldiers of the 23rd took weapons and ammunition from the retreating unit.  (It was the common feeling among the Allies after the D-Day invasion in June that the War would be over by Christmas.  As such, many units were not fully equipped with the proper winter clothing, weaponry, or ammunition.  As such, much of the unit going in that night were not properly equipped for what the Germans were about to throw at them.)

The 23rd’s position was on the northern shoulder of the Bulge and played a crucial role in   Hitler’s drive towards Antwerp.  The 23rd was burdened with the role of holding off the German offensive in that area until the remaining regiments from the 2nd and 99th Infantry Divisions could be brought back down from the Roer Dams to reinforce the line.  For hours, individual units of the 23rd Infantry Regiment repelled attacks by the German Tiger tanks and infantry.  However, the 23rd was outnumbered and outgunned, having only two tanks and a limited amount of anti-tank guns at their disposal.  Finally, on about the sixth or seventh attack, the Germans started pushing forward, and the 23rd started to sustain major losses.  The order to retreat came through to the individual units, my Grandfather’s included.  However, he and six other infantrymen of the platoon ignored the order and chose to stay and cover their retreating unit.  As the German tanks approached they fired pointblank into the foxholes with artillery and machine gun fire.

My Grandfather, Private John Swedick exited his foxhole with fixed bayonet and rushed towards the German infantry.  When last seen, he had closed with the enemy and was engaged in bitter hand to hand combat.  After that time, mid-afternoon December 17, 1944, my grandfather was declared missing in action and presumed dead.  His body was recovered some days later as the Allies pushed back through the lines towards Germany. His death along with the six others was chronicled in a January 1945 Stars and Stripes newspaper article.

While the Siege of Bastogne is often credited as the central point where the German offensive was stopped, the battle for Elsenborn Ridge was a decisive component of the Battle of the Bulge, deflecting the strongest armored units of the German advance. The attack was led by one of the best equipped German divisions on the western front. Historian John S.D. Eisenhower wrote, “… the action of the 2nd and 99th Divisions on the northern shoulder could be considered the most decisive of the Ardennes campaign.”

For my grandfather’s “heroic and self-sacrificing decision to hold his position ‘at all costs’” and allow the remaining platoon and company to safely withdraw that fateful day of December 17th, my grandfather was posthumously awarded the Silver Star Medal, the United States third highest military decoration for valor awarded for gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States. He also was awarded the Bronze Star,, Combat Infantryman Badge, Purple Heart, WWII Victory Medal, Belgian Fourragere, Honorable Service Lapel Pin and the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal with two Service Stars  (Rhineland Campaign and Ardennes-Alsace Campaign). For his regiment’s extraordinary heroism in action in those opening days of the Battle of the Bulge, the 23rd Infantry Regiment was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation along with the Belgian Fourragère.

At the time of his death, my grandfather was living in Watervliet and worked as a chauffeur for the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. in Albany. He left behind a wife and two children, one being my father. This year marks the 70th Anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge, a battle which took nearly 20,000 American lives in about a month’s time, but a battle which depleted the German war machine and put the Allies on track to end the war three months later.

Silver Star citation

Stars and Stripes article

submitted by Matthew J. Swedick, Associate, President of Hudson Valley Chapter (49)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

C.G. Cooper, 75th ID

C.G. Cooper
C.G. Cooper

C.G. Cooper was born on 11 July 1923 in Lafayette, Tennessee. C.G. decided to leave home after graduating high school to wander America. He ended up becoming a welder at Kaiser Shipyards in California. The draft board finally caught up with him and on 28 June 1943, just shy of his 20th birthday, C.G. was inducted into the United States Army Air Force. He went through basic training at Camp Lee, Virginia and when asked by the Army what he wanted to do, C.G. basically said ‘anything but cooking’. Needless to say, C.G. wasn’t laughing when he was told that he’d be designated as a cook and would go through Bakery & Cook School. He graduated from Bakery & Cook School as a 1st cook and told he would be behind the front lines with plenty of food and warmth and placed in Company E, 289th Infantry, 75th Division.

C.G. was supposed to be quartermaster but because of his excellent marksmanship and the need for more men to fight the elite German forces wreaking havoc on the European front, was chosen to be on the frontlines as a rifleman. Wherever his company went, C.G. was either fighting alongside them or cooking food for them. C.G. received further training at Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky and went overseas from there. He recalled when they gave the 1st cook position to another guy who knew nothing about cooking, much less for an army of men! The new guy asked C.G. the proper amount of beans to prepare for all the men. C.G. told him to figure it out since he was now the cook and especially since he was receiving sergeant pay (C.G. was a Pfc).

The sergeant cook, as I will call him, made 17 pounds of beans for approximately 250 men, when only 7 pounds were needed! Beans, beans, and more beans! The company of men the sergeant cook prepared them for were none too happy with his lack of portion control, as they had to eat them for every meal over the days that followed until every last bean was gone! This was due to the fact that the food was considered Army property and improper disposal of Army property could lead to being court-martialed!

Around this same time period, C.G.’s wife Patricia who was back in Knoxville, Tennessee, was about to give birth. She was a very small lady and the doctor was concerned that she might have difficulty during the delivery. Like any concerned husband and soon to be papa, C.G. wanted to be with her. He was told that if he left he would be court-martialed. This warning did not deter him. Instead, C.G. made his way to the Red Cross and asked permission to go telling them that if they denied his request he would climb the walls and go anyway.

The phone rang and it was the doctor in Knoxville saying that C.G. needed to come immediately. They finally gave him permission and he began his trek by hitch hiking. At one point he was stranded in the rain. Thankfully someone stopped and offered him ride. Unfortunately the vehicle was a motorbike. C.G.’s brother had been killed while riding one so he was a bit apprehensive. He ended up accepting the offer however. He got off in Nashville where his father lived and then caught a bus on to Knoxville. C.G. was supposed to be back on the base that Sunday, but decided to stay in order to hold his baby in his arms. (All had gone well with the delivery.) Of his decision to stay he said, “I didn’t know if I’d live to ever see him again or not.”

On Monday he got orders to go to HQ as he was considered to be AWOL. C.G.’s service record indicates his one AWOL, but it was a decision he never regretted. His son was two weeks old when he left for the battlefields from New York on 22 Oct 1944. His ship arrived at in Liverpool, England on 3 Nov 1944. The men then traveled on to South Wales and finally crossed the channel to France. Once on French ground the men headed to Paris where C.G. says they were treated like heroes. Then it was on to Bastogne, Belgium where they spent their first night in battle with the enemy. This brutal battle would become known as The Battle of the Bulge.

Despite the area having its coldest winters on record up to that time, Allied leaders chose not to send appropriate winter clothing with C.G. and the other men, saying that they would only be involved in a few skirmishes. These leaders were wrong and their decision could have spelled disaster for the Allies. Fortunately our men pulled through like the troopers they are. The men were given C and K rations so there would be no need for cooks on the frontlines. C.G. was put in charge of guarding the kitchen and ammo truck on the first night while the other men were enthralled in battle. The driver of a jeep came up to him saying that a German tank was headed his way and not to let it through.

“What will I do?” C.G. remembers thinking back then. Ideas began swirling in his mind….the .45 pistol on his hip…his rifle. He grabbed a carbine, machine gun, bazooka, grenades, and ammo belts from the truck he was guarding. “I was a walking arsenal”, he said. The ideas continued in his mind…a grenade…no, that won’t work…a Molotov cocktail…no, that won’t work…blast it with a bazooka (he recalled watching a training film that showed a bazooka being used to blast the tracks off a tank)…no, I have no ammo for it. At this point, the tank is right in front of him and his mind is frozen. In the chaos, C.G. slipped falling in the tanks’ path due to the slick mud. Providence was with him as the tank rolled right over him, straddling him and continuing on its path.

The next morning he found out that some of his buddies had been killed. C.G. said it was a gruesome sight, the bodies strewn about the battlefield. The Germans had succeeded in surrounding them and they were now cut off from replacements and supplies. C.G. ate dry hog bran from a farm and was happy with that discovery. He also managed to find a turnip in the root cellar. Another group of the Allies eventually pushed the Germans back and rescued the previously surrounded men. They regrouped and received replacements, some of whom were only teenagers. On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day 1944, a heavy snow had covered everything and C.G. said it was a beautiful sight to behold. Suddenly all heck broke loose with dogfights in the sky and heavy artillery shelling on the ground. He never forgot that Christmas Day.

At one point, C.G. was sent to the hospital due to his frostbitten toes. This was a common occurrence with the lack of appropriate clothing for the extreme weather conditions. While lying in his hospital bed, the soldier on one side said to the soldier on C.G.’s other side, ‘Joe*, I’m dying. Tell my folks how much I love them.’ C.G. later found out that the two men had fought alongside the Russians who had given them poisoned liquor for some reason. (*After a while, soldiers would call one another Joe because by the time you learned someone’s name, it seemed you died or they did.)  The soldier who asked his buddy to give the message to his parents, died later that day and his buddy soon suffered the same fate, blind and calling out for loved ones.

That same morning, soldiers were lined up to be seen by the doctor. Many of the men were there for frostbite and the doctor told most that the affected appendages needed to be amputated. When it was his turn, C.G. put his hand up to jaw and moaned. The doctor asked what was wrong with him and he said he had a toothache. The doc told him that he was in the wrong line and off C.G. went. He remembers thinking, “I came over here with all my body parts and IF I get to go home, I wanna go home with all my body parts…all together.”

From the hospital he hitchhiked back to his outfit. He went to the kitchen truck and told his company commander that he had been on the front lines and knew what it was like. “If you’ll give me permission to have a truck and driver, I would like to take hot chocolate and donuts to my buddies in the foxholes.” Permission was granted and C.G. began making preparations. “While making up the donuts the tent was hit. There was shrapnel all in the donut mix. I picked it all out and continued on,” C.G. shared. He fried the donuts and prepared the hot chocolate, the latter which he put into insulated containers to keep it hot. The refreshments were loaded on the truck and the two men headed to the front lines. On the way there they were caught in the crossfire between both sides. There were bullet holes in the hot chocolate and the truck, with hot chocolate spilling everywhere. C.G. was in the back sliding around with the containers. Thankfully neither he nor the driver was hit.

The driver soon stopped, having taken C.G. as close to the front lines as he could get him. He told the dirver it was fine as he knew where the fox holes were located. C.G. carried the refreshments to each of the fox holes and they were sure a welcomed treat. The men would hold out their steel helmets and C.G. would pour in some hot chocolate and throw in some donuts. Mind you, the soldiers’ helmets were a versatile tool. Not only did they protect their heads or hold food and drink, but they were also used by the soldiers to relieve themselves so they wouldn’t have to leave the safety of their fox hole.

After serving everyone, C.G. made his way back to the truck. The driver said that they were going a different way back since they had come under fire on the way up. It was dark and there was no GPS for them to conveniently use. Suddenly the driver shouted, ‘We’re behind German lines! Look at all those Krauts! What do I do now?’ C.G. told him to push in on the clutch and the gas at the same time to make the engine roar. The driver did so and C.G. threw his arm out the window saluting Hitler and yelling, “Heil Hitler! Comrade, Comrade.”

Once again Providence was on their side as the Germans actually allowed them to pass through safely. Eventually the two men made their way back to camp where they told of what happened. Some of their fellow soldiers were unsure whether or not to believe what they were hearing. A few days later, the 75th captured some of those same German’s and asked them why on earth they had allowed the Americans to pass. The German’s response, ‘We didn’t know what you darn yanks were up to.’

After awhile, the 75th and others were pulled back from the front lines and billeted in Belgian homes for a rest. At the home C.G. stayed in there was a pot bellied stove. “Oh I could not wait to get my boots off,” C.G. said of his delight at having a stove. His feet were so swollen that he couldn’t get his boots off. The ladies of the house offered to assist him and were eventually successful after much tugging and pulling. Immediately they saw how black his feet were. They would each get under one of his arms and walk him outside to wash his feet over and over again in the snow. “Thanks to those ladies I still have my feet and toes,” C.G. said of their nursing care.

Communicating with the Belgians was difficult and it was only through hand signals and motions that they were able to understand one another. He was asked his name and told them Cooper. They said ‘Jackie Cooper’ (American Actor ) and he nodded uh-huh (the two men were the same age and build). The women went into town telling everyone they had a celebrity in their home. Everyone came over with writing tablets wanting an autograph. “What else could I do? They had been so good to me, so I signed ‘Jackie Cooper’,” he said of the experience.

A 90-day wonder (second lieutenant), as the men would call them, decided that a kitchen truck would be put on the front lines and serve hot food to those in the foxholes. “We didn’t think that was too bright of an idea but after all, he was our officer,” said C.G. Snow was everywhere and the kitchen burners weren’t working properly. He had to take them outside and tinker with them. During this time, some of the fuel spilled out and caught fire. There they were in the Ardennes forest with flames shooting up through the trees giving away their position. Heavy artillery began to rain down on the men, busting trees to pieces and causing them to become spears hurling at incredible rates of speed hitting some of the men. C.G. took cover behind the kitchen truck and thankfully was not hit. Unfortunately the second lieutenant who put the kitchen trucks on the front lines was hit. C.G. never saw him again and believes he didn’t make it.

C.G. made another trip to the hospital, this time for a bleeding nose and lips. His nostrils were extremely swollen and he couldn’t breathe through them. At hospital they put him in a barber type chair then placed hot towels on his head and a curved steel cup below his ears and mouth. To thaw him out they placed long steel rods up his nostrils and switched out the towels as they cooled with fresh hot ones. All kinds of bloody ‘corruption’, as C.G. called it, came oozing out his facial orifices until finally he could breathe better. His breathes were still shallow so they wrapped up his chest with an adhesive tape bandage and let him go. Just outside the hospital was a gully which C.G. tried to jump. He was unsuccessful and fell in. Thankfully someone saw what happened and carried him back into the hospital where they loosened his chest wrap a bit.

C.G. told of a facility the soldiers entered that appeared to be a slave labor camp. Nude bodies were lined up 4 – 5 feet high and roughly 20 feet long. “What a horrible sight,” C.G. said, “Some were barely alive…just skin and bones, didn’t have the strength to move. They were a pitiful sight.” One of the camp guards had a pistol and whip on his hip that was likely used on the prisoners. C.G. relieved him of his weapons and kept the whip as a souvenir. It wasn’t long before C.G. became disgusted with the whip and the pain it had induced on innocent people so he got rid of it. He said of the item, “I got sick of that whip and what it had done. I did not even want it as a souvenir, its bad memories.”

C.G. spoke of the mental effect the war had on many of the soldiers, “Some of the soldiers had seen so much horror that they became zombies of sorts. It was as if their spirit had already left their body. Some of them just kept on walking, on into enemy fire. I felt like when they did get shot down, they did not feel the pain of the bullet. They were not in that body anymore…their spirit had left them. Oh, how horrible.” He recalled another horrible experience, “One guy next to me had been hit pretty good. (It) left him like scrambled eggs. I waved my hands in the air and said, ‘Thank you Lord. Joe. No more cold. No more pain. …Why me Lord? Why am I still here?’”

The 75th pushed the Germans back and the medics headed out to help their wounded on the battlefield. Later on the next day or so, C.G.’s unit found their medics stripped of all clothing, tied to trees, and their bodies mutilated. Soon thereafter the 75th believed they had captured some of the Germans responsible for the mutilated medics. Recalling what happened next C.G. shared apprehensively, “It’s not easy to talk about…..the Germans were hollering ‘Mercy, Mercy!’ as they were cornered in a barn and the flamethrowers ending their lives as they hollered ‘Mercy, Mercy!’. They showed no mercy to our fellows. Oh lordy, How cruel a human being can be, one to another.”

Back and forth both sides pushed each other in the Ardennes. Dead German soldiers andAmerican soldiers were piled up on top of one another, covered by the never ending snow. The bodies were frozen stiff. C.G. remembered when they did pick up their dead; they would throw them into the back of a truck like you would a log of wood. All piled up there together, Germans and Americans. In death it did not matter that the two had fought as bitter enemies.

One time when he went to eat his K-rations, he sat down on what he thought was a log. Something was sticking him in his bum so he began digging around in the snow to see what it could be. “It was a Germans belt buckle. I was sitting on a corpse,” C.G. said. He will never forget the bitter cold and ground frozen so hard you couldn’t even dig a foxhole. The men would sleep standing up. One wouldn’t think it possible but C.G. said that 4 of them would huddle together in a circle, putting their arms around each other’s shoulders and actually catch a few winks and maintain some warmth. He also remembers some of the men sleeping as they were walking due to their extreme exhaustion. Being hungry at the same time didn’t help and they often stumbled, falling into the snow which became the final resting place of some.

On one night in the battle, C.G. heard someone holler real loud and then a shot was fired. A soldier had chosen to shoot himself in the foot rather than continue on fighting in hell. He was unable to convince his superiors that it was an accident because of him hollering before he actually shot himself. The soldier ended up receiving some bad time and going without pay for a spell. That night “so many of us got killed,” said C.G. Many officers were among the dead and some of those who made it through told C.G. they were going to make him a second lieutenant. C.G. wanted no part of it because so many of the officers died. Another soldier ended up receiving the promotion. C.G. laughed as he said, “Would you know that sucker made it through every battle fought from then forward and made it back home.”

Near the Belgian barracks where C.G. was staying at the time, he came upon a cow and thought to himself, ‘I haven’t had milk since we left the states…..I’m an old farm boy….I’ll just sit my gun in the corner and milk her.” He patted her on the head and called her Bessie in an attempt to calm her down and placed his steel helmet beneath her udders. As he milked her she continued to moan, which C.G. latter believed was because she hadn’t been milked in so long. He successfully retrieved a helmet full of milk which he then placed in the snow to cool it. When he went to drink it some of the other soldiers said, ‘You’re not going to drink all that blanket blank milk yourself’ to which he turned up the helmet and began guzzling it. He continued with the story, “It was so good but it had no more hit my stomach than it came back out both ways. I was so sick! That milk wasn’t fit for human consumption because poor old Bessie had it in her bag for so long that it had become contaminated.”

As the men managed to push the German’s back once again, they moved forward gaining ground. They came upon a huge beautiful home and C.G. wondered if he might find any dry, clean clothes inside. He and a buddy went to check it out but he couldn’t find any men’s clothing. “There must have been a great big ole woman living there ‘cause I found a great big ole pair of bloomers.” He began to laugh as he recalled what he did next, “They were clean so I put them on. I also found a petticoat and put it on too.” This only illustrates how cold our men were.

His buddy hollered from across the room to look at what he had found. Lo and behold, that soldier had found a tuxedo and top hat. The soldier put on his find as well but left the top hat and off the two goofiest dressed soldiers went back into battle. C.G. couldn’t get the petticoat tucked into his britches so he just left it out. He said that the sight of himself and his buddy made him laugh uncontrollably at the time.

At one time the men were low on rations. One soldier who had been a butcher at a packing company in civilian life told C.G. that the two of them should go out that night and butcher the cow. C.G. thought it a great idea and the two headed out in a Jeep to procure the meat. C.G.’s buddy took his position in front of the cow, raised his knife, and took a good hard swing to cut the cow’s throat. Unfortunately, the young man managed to miss the cow and instead cut his own thigh. C.G. took over from that point, as he too had spent some time as a butcher, and slaughtered the cow. He then tied it to the Jeep and drug it into a nearby building where he butchered it. During that time, someone began knocking on the big metal door of the building. Thankfully, the person soon went away and C.G. was able to finish the task at hand. The men cooked up their meat and everyone wanted a portion, even the inspector general! C.G.  knew that he and his buddy could have been court-martialed for their actions. However, they didn’t regret their actions and their buddies were sure thankful for a reminder of what real food tasted like instead their boxes of rations.

At one point after the 75th had been fighting in the Ardennes for some time, the French needed help in Colmar, France. The men were loaded into ‘forty & eight boxcars’, which got their name during the Great War because they could carry forty men and eight horses. C.G. said they had a lot of men packed into those boxcars like sardines. C.G. was in the middle of the boxcar next to a big container used by the men to relieve themselves. “Oh Lord,” he said laughing, “I didn’t like sitting there.” He continued on describing his ride in the forty & eight saying, “I thought to myself, ‘If I could just work my way back to the corner of this boxcar, I could lean up against the side and rest my head and back. How nice that would be.’” So C.G. began shrugging and pushing, which the other men cussed and fussed at him for. Finally he made his way to the corner he had eagerly scouted out. He leaned back, putting his head to one side and all he could hear was ‘bump, bump bump, bump…’ There was no sleep for this soldier. C.G. remembered the train coming up off the tracks for a split second and then slamming back down.

That’s how the 75th crossed into France to fight with the French 1st Army, who had been struggling against the Germans, in the battle of Colmar Pocket. “Oooh boy. Those Germans really let in on us,” recalled C.G. He was unsure if he would make it through the battle so he kept a picture of his wife and little boy next to his heart thinking that if he died, maybe they would bury him with it. He did make it through that battle and was awarded the Croix de guerre for his efforts. Food was scarce at times and one of the things the French soldiers would do was to put chicken coops on their armored tanks and then go out to local farms to gather whatever sources of meat they could find, including chickens and pigs. They would then put the animals in the coops and tie the coops back to the tanks, taking the animals into battle with them.

The men soon headed into Holland where C.G. says the war had been quite tough. He recalled a pub whose owners had left because of the intense fighting but who didn’t lock it up on their hasty retreat. The men went on in and enjoyed the variety and wealth of drinks and snacks to be had. C.G. spotted a radio set which he turned on to see if there was anything worth tuning in to. The broadcast just happened to be the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee. Uncle Dave Macon and his son Dorris were performing.

C.G. actually knew Uncle Dave from time spent hunting near his cabin in the woods. “I was so shook up. Here I am in battle and the Grand Ole Opry, which I used to go to so often back home….ooohhhh that was so sweet,” he said of that moment. Not all the men (namely some of the yanks), cared for the music and told C.G. to turn it to something else. “I can’t believe what I did next,” C.G. recalled, “I held up my gun and said ‘Don’t nobody touch this radio’ with tears rollin’ down my face.” The yanks backed down and C.G. was able to enjoy a touch of home for a few minutes.

That same evening, in a big farm house, the men drew straws to see who would go out on a recon mission and report back where the enemy was and so forth. One of C.G.’s pals ended up as one that drew a short straw and that fella was downright angry about it. Not that he was trying to shirk his duty but rather because he had this nagging feeling that he wouldn’t make it back alive. In his eyes it was a death sentence. The soldier decided to write a letter home telling his family how much he loved them and such. He asked C.G. to mail it, explaining the 6th sense about his death that he had. C.G. told him that he couldn’t send a letter like that and that he would safely return. The next morning, the rest of the men headed out and found the young man dead, his goodbye letter covered in blood. C.G. said he wishes to this day that he had at least gotten the contact info of his buddy’s family so he could tell them that story.

For roughly 7 – 10 days, the men fought in a fierce battle and finally made their way to the river Rhine. “Those combat engineers….I gotta give them credit,” C.G. said. They went up on the bridge and tried to repair it so the men could cross into Germany. C.G. would watch them at night. Time after time he saw a body fall off the bridge and into the river below, having been shot by the enemy. On one night in particular, he recalls standing in a building watching through a window as the night skies lit up like a 4th of July celebration in America. Suddenly a plane came along and was firing tracer ammo beneath his feet. Thinking to himself, ‘This is a little too close for comfort’, he ran and dove beneath a bed which had a spring sticking out that scratched his back to pieces. One of his fellow soldiers ribbed him about these injuries ‘received in action’ saying that C.G. could get himself a purple heart. C.G. told the guy he didn’t want any part of a Purple Heart, especially for such minor injuries. He explained that he now had a little boy back home and one day that little boy would be asking his daddy how he got that Purple Heart. C.G. did not want to be in such a predicament.

The 75th fought for an extended period in the area. All the time the men had been building a pontoon bridge, which is how the men ended up getting across the river Rhine into Germany. They headed out early one morning that was thick in fog and on the other side of the river there was yet another horrible sight that would leave its mark on the memory of all those who witnessed it. The trees had no leaves on them whatsoever but something was hung in the branches. Upon getting a closer look the men realized it was the flesh and body parts of the dead strewn about throughout the branches. As the men made their way through various German towns, C.G. said that many of the Germans willingly surrendered because they were as sick of the war as the Allies were.

When the 75th came into one German town, they found a barbershop where some of the men decided to stop in to get a haircut and shave. One of the group would stand watch over the others while they were getting some proper grooming. The soldier, who was standing guard while C.G. and another were in the barber chairs, left his post early when a chair became available but before someone else could keep guard. C.G. said he was a bit nervous that the German barbers might cut their throats with the razors and drag them out back with no one the wiser. Thankfully nothing of the sort occurred and the men tipped the barbers VERY well for the services provided

At this time it was coming into spring and the snow was beginning to melt. C.G.’s group needed to get their kitchen truck across a stream but it was too deep to simply drive through. So C.G. decided to take one for the team and wade across the stream, whose waters were still freezing, in order to hook a winch cable from the truck to a tree. While he was doing this, an enemy plane began strafing them. Bark was flying off the trees as they were hit and C.G. was behind one of those very trees. He ended up diving into the water for safety and it worked!

When the war with Germany ended, C.G. was assigned to occupational forces in France, while awaiting orders to head out to Japan. “Thank the Lord for the Atom bomb,” C.G. commented. During his time with the occupation forces, he and the other Allies got to know their one time enemy. C.G. was a part of every battle from the Battle of the Bulge on to Berlin (where they stopped outside and allowed the Russians to take over) and was among those who safely returned home but not without some physical and many emotional scars.

The 75th also fought alongside the British and C.G. remembers how every afternoon round the same time they would have a spot of tea. Bullets would be a flying but the British would still take time out to have their tea. “I don’t know if they were tough, crazy, or if they just loved their tea,” C.G. said of this tradition.

Source http://wwiiwartimememories.blogspot.com/2012/05/cg-cooper-rifleman-cook-in-75th.html

 

Withdrawing to Elsenborn Ridge-Billy H. Clampett, 99th ID

Billy Clampett 99th ID, 395th IR
Billy Clampett 99th ID, 395th IR

The first day, December 16th, of the German Ardennes offensive was a huge success. Up and down the First Army front the Germans advanced as planned. In the Ghost Front area, where the main thrust was made, the 395th and the 394th were hit hard; to their right the 106th was overrun; and, to the right of the l06th, the situation was just as bad. On the 17th the Siegfried Line attack was called off and the withdrawal of the 395th to Elsenborn Ridge began.

Generally speaking, that was the situation. Now, what did soldiers like me know? We knew, first of all, that we were no longer attacking. Secondly, we knew from rumors and bits and pieces of news, that the Germans had launched an offensive of their own and were punishing the 99th and the 106th. Some rumors even had the Germans breaking through and racing for Paris. Next, we knew that the 395th was in a precarious situation; common sense told us that we were beyond the present front line. We did not know, or at least I did not know, that the 395th was carrying out a planned withdrawal. My impression was that 395th was cut off, surrounded, and that we were moving here and there trying to find an escape route. For many years I thought that we had escaped being captured only because the Germans, in their haste to reach and cross the Meuse River, bypassed us.

The four of five days that the 395th struggled to reach Elsenborn Ridge were the worst days that I spent in the Ardennes. Never again was the cold so cold, the shelling so fierce, or the uncertainty so great such specific memories as I have will be shared under their own descriptive headings. At some point, during the withdrawal, the 395th was placed under the command of the Commanding General, 2nd Division.

I have read everything that I could get my hands on dealing with the Battle of the Bulge. So, when I say that in withdrawing to Elsenborn Ridge, the 395th Combat Team utilized the procedure known as leap-frogging, you will already have guessed what I am now going to tell you—that I did not know that leap-frogging was going on until I read about it much later. As I said, my low level sense of the situation was that we were cut off, maybe even surrounded, and were searching for an escape route. Simplified, when leap-frogging unit A withdraws through a defensive line formed by unit B and, having passed through unit B’s defensive line, unit A forms a defensive line through which unit B then withdraws-with this going on until the withdrawal is complete.

As I said, I had no idea that we were leap-froging. I only knew that, endlessly, we were marching, digging in, freezing, getting shelled, and moving out, and going through it all again. Ammunition bearers in a heavy weapons company do not access to the big picture-in the Ardennes in December 1944, this probably was a good thing.

The Long Night

There was a long night. I endured it. Books say that the long night was the night of December 18th. I do not recall the date, but I do recall the night. What happened can be told in one long sentence. On a bitterly cold night, during the withdrawal to Elsenborn Ridge, the weary soldiers of the 395th climbed out of their foxholes, trudged across the frozen ground of the Ardennes for what seemed like forever, then turned around and retraced their steps, climbing back into the same foxholes that they had climbed out of earlier.

How could such a fiasco happen? One answer, if you can picture those weary soldiers trudging across the frozen ground, will bring tears to your eyes. According to books that I have read, that answer is: The 395th was met with “What Order”? No one there knew anything about such an order. With the 395th out of the defensive line, a gaping hole existed. The 395th was instantly ordered to retrace its steps. The incredible part of the story is-the order to pull out had been received by the 395th over the radio and had been given, probably in jest, by an English speaking German officer. That the order had been blindly obeyed seems unreal.

One battalion commander, I have also read, was sacked because, his men being exhausted to the point of dropping, he refused to order them back to their empty foxholes. His conduct paints a better picture of the whole episode than lean paint in words. I knew nothing about the mix up, or joke, or whatever it was. As I said earlier, I thought we were surrounded and trying to escape—that this was just more evidence of our plight.

More than sixty years later, I still remember the long night.

The Tank Battle

One dark, dark night during the withdrawal to Elsenborn Ridge, as our column was stealthily making its way along the edge of a clearing, staying far enough inside the wooded area to be out of sight, the sounds of tanks grinding away on the frozen ground broke the silence. The column halted, for the chilling sounds did not tell how many tanks there were or in which direction they were moving. At that time, remember, Germans were thought to be everywhere.

Just then, from the flashes of their guns, glimpses were caught of the silhouettes of two tanks. Was one of them a Tiger–one of them a Sherman? We could not tell. But the firing told us that they were after each other, not infantry soldiers. Like two prehistoric monsters, they were locked in a battle to the death. The battle did not last long. One of them burst into flames. Where the two tanks came from, and how they happened to meet, only their crews knew. Was one of them trying to find its way to Elsenborn Ridge? The column moved on, the mystery unsolved.

The Borrowed Shovel

My army shovel was a small implement. Its small size, however, was not a measure of its importance. On the contrary, in the Ardennes a shovel was of such importance that I took a substantial risk to replace one. One day, while trying to dig in the snow covered, frozen ground, I broke my shovel. I don’t remember what broke, just that my shovel broke. The timing could not have been worse. It broke just as Company H began to move. Hoping against hope that artillery fire would hold off until I came across a replacement shovel, I joined the column. As it happened, the column soon passed a dead German soldier whose shovel I could see.

I knew that taking the shovel would be risky. First, his body could have been booby-trapped. Next, we had been warned that being captured with a piece of German equipment was very, very dangerous. Weighing the risks did not take long. Scared to death, I borrowed the shovel. Nothing happened; the column kept moving. I got rid of the shovel as soon as possible.

Incoming-Outgoing

It seemed to me that artillery fire never let up—and that was not altogether a bad thing. Artillery fire, I am sure, was a major factor in the failure of 6th Panzer Army’s to break through the Ghost Front I was a fan of anything of ours having two or more wheels and a weapon with a large barrel-I05, 155, or whatever. All infantry soldiers shared my respect for artillery.

One night, during a particularly heavy artillery barrage, I was in a large dugout with four or five other soldiers. Some of them may not have been from Company H; for there was a time during the withdrawal when members of the 2nd Division and the 395th became mingled. One of two of them could have been from the 2nd Division.

As the shells were passing overhead, one of tile soldiers in the dugout kept saying either “incoming” or “outgoing”. He seemed to know from experience how to tell the difference. He probably was a member of the battle-experienced 2nd Division.

My ear was not that good. I never learned to distinguish incoming from outgoing. All sounds to me were incoming. I would say that silence was golden, except that outgoing probably is the reason why the 395th managed to withdraw to Elsenborn Ridge.

Holding Elsenborn Ridge

The 395th made its way hack to Elsenborn Ridge and became a part of the defensive line formed there. The defensive line, which later became known as the North Shoulder of the Bulge, was anchored by the 1st Division, the 2nd Division, the 99th Division and perhaps other units unknown to me. The defensive line held; the 6th Panzer Army did not break through to the Meuse; the Meuse River was not crossed.

When their offensive bogged down at Elsenborn Ridge, the Germans shifted the main thrust of the offensive south to Bastogne. Life on Elsenborn Ridge then eased a little. By January 11th the 395th had resumed attacking and had advanced far enough that I spent the night in a farm house. The night in the farm house ended my part in the Battle of the Bulge.

Strangely, I have few memories of my days on Elsenborn Ridge. I do remember looking out over what we called no man’s land and wondering “Are they coming today?” And, of course, I do remember, in a blurred way, the bitter cold, the miserable snow, the too-small foxholes, and the artillery fire that never seemed to let up.

Editor’s Note: Billy H. Clampett passed away on January 19, 2015. This story was submitted by his son Stephen M. Clampett, Associate, in his memory.

My father, Anthony John Capozzoli, 87th ID

Anthony John Capozzoli, 87th ID
Anthony John Capozzoli, 87th ID

My father, Anthony John Capozzoli was 18 when he was drafted into the U.S. Army in February 1943, the fourth son to go in his family.  He left his job at Temple Music in Rockville Center, Long Island, New York, and reported to Camp Upton, located in Suffolk County, Long Island, for a few days.

He travelled by train to Camp McCain, MS where he was assigned to Headquarters Company 346th Infantry Regiment for several weeks.  “The barracks were made of packing crates with tar paper over them.  There were 2 potbelly stoves you were assigned to maintain.  It was the middle of winter down there,” he explained.

From there he went to Fort Bragg, NC for a few months.  “We went out on maneuvers —learning how to fight—going under barbed wire with real machine guns firing over you—role playing as if you were in combat,” he told me.  He had the job of cleaning the latrines while there, a job that kept him in a warm location.

This training was followed by a 6-month stint at Fort Benning, GA. where he attended school to learn Morse Code.  “We would get up about 3 o’clock in the morning, have breakfast, then we went to an area where we sat at a table, put earphones on and practiced Morse Code.  We had to read what you heard,” he said.

With training in communications as a radio operator, he went back to Fort Bragg to join the rest of his company.  He, along with other members of the 87th Infantry Division, boarded the Queen Mary in October 1944 and travelled to Scotland on a 4-day voyage.  They stayed in Scotland until their equipment arrived.  He drove a big truck down to Dover, England with the rest of the convoy.  “I had never driven a truck in my life,” he noted.

The 87th Infantry Division crossed the English Channel on a liberty ship and arrived in LeHavre, France, in November of 1944.  As part of the 87th, he travelled through France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and Germany mostly by Jeep.  The mission was specific, where “whenever we got to a town, we would cut the lines of communication and set up our own.”  He explained that:  “We camped in houses when we took over a town” noting that “our communications people were behind the infantry.”  They knew they were supporting the troops, but  “we did not know what we were sending because it was in code.  The message center would decode it after it arrived.”

Dad participated in campaigns in the Ardennes, the Rhineland, and in the Battle of the Bulge as part of Patton’s Third Army.  During this battle, he assisted in keeping wire communications for the 346th HQ Company of the 87th Division.  He recalls going as far as Yugoslavia before stopping so that the Russians could come in and occupy part of Germany.  At this point, the war in Europe had finally ended.

He went back to Germany where they were assigned to a camp while waiting to sail home.  Upon his return to the U.S., he was on furlough for 30 days during August 1945, awaiting assignment to fight the Japanese in the Pacific.  But the war ended.

Because Anthony did not have enough points to be discharged, he was sent from Boston where their ship landed, to Sandy Hook, NJ, which was a reception center for new recruits.  Here his job was handing out uniforms.  Whenever possible, he went home on weekends by boat to Brooklyn and from there, by train back to Freeport, NY.

IMG_1356After his discharge, Anthony returned home to Freeport, resumed his job, and attended New York Radio Institute in New York City at night.  He married Joan Michalicki in 1950.  They settled in Merrick 5 years later. Until his retirement in 1989, he owned his own business as a television/radio technician.  He moved to Sebastian, FL in 1991.  This year he celebrated his 90th birthday there with family and friends.

 

Submitted by Mary Jane Capozzoli-Ingui

 

Dorothy Davis, 57th Field Hospital

In the dead of winter with snow and sub-zero temperatures at times, U.S. soldiers, with the help of allied forces, fought brutally during World War II against Hitler’s army at the Battle of the Bulge between Dec. 6, 1944 and Jan. 28, 1945.

Dorothy S. Davis
Dorothy S. Davis

Not far from the frontlines, Dorothy Steinbis-Davis, RN, served the wounded—many of whom suffered from frostbite and other cold-related injuries—and saw many more casualties as they were brought to her small detachment, part of the 57th Field Hospital.

Working in the mobile unit, made up of four physicians, a dentist, a medical administrative officer, five nurses, several enlistees and a small surgical team, proved to be a demanding and exhausting task for Davis.

“Our patients were those who were critically wounded and needed extensive nursing care,” said Davis, a 2nd lieutenant with the U.S. Army Medical Corps. “The mortality rate was high—at times, over 20 percent. This was emotionally difficult. A patient you had over the past 12 to 15 hours, and whom you thought would survive, may have died when you returned to work after a few hours of sleep.”

With gun fire ringing out just a short distance away, Davis shared that there were many times when she and her crew didn’t know if they were going to be able to evacuate before the area was overrun by Germans.

“Transportation in these situations was always a grave problem,” she said.

She added, “You are afraid but on the other hand, you really had to stay focused on what you were doing.”

Though Davis’ detachment wasn’t officially assigned to the Battle of the Bulge, they were on the “French rim,” just close enough to treat any wounded in the area. At one point, the small detachment supported 24 battalions of troops, including a number of civilians who required emergency medical care before they could be transported to civilian hospitals.

“I can distinctly remember crawling into my bedroll after one exhausting day and thinking, ‘My God, what if we should lose the war?’”

During the Battle of the Bulge, Davis recalled how the hospitals often suffered from mass confusion particularly with the continuous need for blood and not knowing the state of the combat situation. Between October 1944, when Davis’ detachment first joined the Theater of Operations, and April 1945, the hospital moved 40 times.

Davis explained that many of the moves took place at night in blackout conditions so that the roads would be available during the day for use by the tanks, infantry and the Red Ball Express, a fleet of over 6,000 trucks and trailers that delivered over 400,000 tons of ammunition, food, and fuel to the Allied armies.

When possible, a schoolhouse or large building was selected for a makeshift hospital. On several occasions, Davis said that her crew would move into a building still occupied by a German hospital.

Because most of the buildings were so war-ravaged, Davis said that oftentimes patients on litters would be waiting for medical service to arrive. Nurses and doctors would immediately have to begin preparing the patients for surgery while the enlistees set to work cleaning the area, setting up a generator for electricity and assembling an X-ray unit, operating room and post-op ward.

By mid-March, as the war was nearing the end, the entire 57th Field Hospital was assigned to Toul, France, to care for 355 Allied national patients, most of whom were Russian, as well as Yugoslavian, Serbian and Polish nationals, who had been liberated from the Germans.

The prisoners, who had been forced by the Germans to work in the lime mines near Metz, France, suffered from tuberculosis, osteomyelitis (infection of the bone caused by the seeding of the bacteria within the bone from a remote source), mine injuries and various nutritional diseases.

“[The prisoners’] state had been reduced to one of animals in their struggle for existence,” said Davis, who helped improve their health status so they could withstand their return trip to Russia.

Davis said the devastation and destruction around her could scarcely be imagined—roads littered for miles with debris and cities destroyed to almost non-existence. But her job in Europe was not over yet.

When her unit reached Germany, they worked at several air strips to serve as air holding hospitals before the wounded were air evacuated back to the United States once physically able. Some days, Davis and her crew saw up to 1,000 patients come through.

For three or four hours before a flight, the medical staff would feed, medicate and change the patients’ bandages.

“Many of them had never been on an airplane before so we really tried to make them feel comfortable and tried to control their worries,” said Davis. She learned many years later that the planes, used to bring food, gasoline and equipment to Europe, were soaked in gasoline. Not a good mix when there were several oxygen tanks set up for patients to withstand the long flight home.

After the war, Davis married a member of the 57th Field Hospital, Col. William V. Davis, an Adjutant from Illinois who had served in the U.S. Army since 1938 and who survived the bombing at Pearl Harbor.

Though Davis retired from the U.S. Army after serving two years, she continued to use her nursing skills volunteering with the American Red Cross, an organization she still dedicates her time to—as a registered nurse—60 years later. Over the years, she helped run school health programs, provided immunizations and eye checks, and has volunteered for numerous other activities.

Davis, who originally wanted to be an “airline stewardess”—a profession that required a nursing background—soon realized that nursing was her love. Several years before graduating from nursing school at the University of Minnesota, she not only signed up for the American Red Cross when representatives came to her hospital to recruit nurses, but she also enlisted in the U.S. Army, which would recruit her as soon as she graduated, passed her boards and turned age 21.

“I fell in love with nursing and then when the war came along there was no thought of becoming an airline stewardess,” said Davis. “The Nurse Corps changed my whole life.”

 

 

Harmonicas, Onions, and Patton-Harry Feinberg, 4th AD

An excerpt from the article “From Minsk, to Hollywood, to Buchenwald” by Joanne Palmer, originally appearing in the “Jewish Standard”, reprinted with permission

Harry Feinberg
Harry Feinberg

Harry Feinberg spent a few years playing with the Harmonica Rascals. The group went to Hollywood, where they appeared in movies. That was Old Hollywood, the place of black-and-white glamour and dangerous glittery prewar dreams. Mr. Feinberg lived very well there. “I met Tyrone Power. We worked with Mischa Auer, and Mae West. (“She was blind as a bat,” Mr. Feinberg said. “Her chauffeur was backstage with her to hold her hand and led her whenever she was ready to go on stage. But every time she passed me, she’d say, ‘Hello, Harry.’”) He never went back to [finish] high school. But in 1940, his parents called him home. The war was coming closer, the harmonica wave had crested, and it was time.

Mr. Feinberg’s father and his uncle had become building contractors, and he worked with them. Then he was drafted. That was 1942; Mr. Feinberg was 21. Basic training was in Fort Dix. “It was a cold winter, and we slept in tents,” Mr. Feinberg said. “You had to look at the bulletin board every day to see what your duty was going to be the next day. One night I saw that I was on KP. That’s kitchen police. I thought that I would have to guard the kitchen with a gun at my side, but it was not that at all.

“We went to the mess hall at 5 in the morning. The sergeant said to the other guy, ‘Come with me.’ There was a cubicle, and inside it were piles of potatoes, bags and bags of potatoes. The other guy had to peel potatoes all day long. “I went to the next cubicle, and there were onions, bags and bags of onions. Up to the ceiling. And there was a pot of boiling water. “So from 5 in the morning until about 11 at night, I peeled onions. I couldn’t see from the fumes. I stunk to high heaven. It was unbearable. My eyes were watery red. “From that day until today, I have never eaten another onion.” If all that had changed for him on that day was the acquisition of a lifelong aversion to onions, that would have been enough.

But it wasn’t. “The funny thing is that I got drafted the same day as a trumpet player who played with all the big bands,” he said. “While I was peeling onions, his name and mine kept being blared out all over Fort Dix. Then, at 11 o’clock at night, I came back to my tent, and one of the guys tells me, and says you’d better go see the first sergeant. As I went to him — they were playing cards at night, they were really rough guys — and one of them picks his head up and says ‘Oh yeah, there is some kind of show, and your name was called.’” He was to have been in it, but he missed the call. He was too busy peeling onions. The show was the review “This Is The Army,” written by Irving Berlin. In the movie version, Mr. Berlin sings his own song, “Oh How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning.”

Instead of being a traveling [harmonica] player, Mr. Feinberg fought in Europe. He was in the army from 1943 to 1945 — “three years and ten months,” he said — and “I was one of General George S. Patton’s tankers. “We really spearheaded the European campaign. I was in all five of Patton’s campaigns. We started out in Utah Beach, in France, then Luxembourg, Belgium, the Battle of the Bulge, and on into Czechoslovakia. “I have no idea why I’m alive today.” Mr. Feinberg drove a tank.

“We came face to face with Germany every day,” he said. “I was a gunner. I had a big gun next to me. I would take a big shell, put it in the gun. I had a telescope right next to the gun. I was in the turret, I would see the enemy, and I would shoot. “I saw heads flying, arms flying. When the dust cleared, I would see bodies all over the place. It didn’t look real. Not a thing for a Jewish boy to see. Or actually for anybody to see.” He eventually was made a tank commander. “I took a few hits,” he said. “I lost two tanks. It was no joke. I don’t know how we got out alive. The second tank just burned to a crisp. “When we were hit, I yelled, ‘Let’s get out of here.’ The gunner was such a polite guy that he said, ‘Go out. I’ll go after you.’ I had to pick him up and throw him out, and then I jumped out and ran. I don’t know how many yards. And then I looked back and saw billows of smoke.

“It drove me a little nuts. The medics saw me and tackled me, and put me in an ambulance, took me to a field hospital. I was there three days, under a doctor’s care. They gave me big blue pills to calm me down. “The doctor had a card table, and we would line up. He smoked a cigar. He said, ‘Follow my fingers. How many fingers do you see?’ I told him and he said, ‘You’re ready to go back to the front.’ I said, ‘Please don’t send me back,’ but he said, ‘Sorry. I have to.’ “I went back. “They got me a third tank, and my company commander said, ‘Harry, we got a new buggy for you.’ I said, ‘I can’t get into a tank again. It’s impossible. My head doesn’t allow it.’ And he said, ‘You’re right. You’re not getting into another tank. Do you realize that they cost $30,000 each?’ So he put me in a jeep, and made me a corporal.

“I would have to go from company to company with a secret message.” It would be on a small scroll of paper that he would hide in a slit cut into his uniform, right next to the zipper. “That was my job until the end of the war,” he said. “It was scary. Everything happened at night, and here I was, driving by myself at night. “One night, my first sergeant and I got to a town in Germany, and we smelled something wrong. “He looked at his map, and said that this is a town called Jenna — and I don’t think this town has been taken. We were the first Americans there. “We said that we’d better get the hell out of there. “As we turned around, we saw two Germans standing there in uniform, a major and his aide. My sergeant says ‘Stop,’ and he runs out and points his gun at them. They both come out with their hands up. He took their guns, and asked me which one I wanted. “I still have it.”

Mr. Feinberg spoke Yiddish, so he interrogated some of the Germans the army captured. “They were happy to give up,” he said. “I mentioned Patton, and they’d stand up. The name would freeze the blood in their veins. “We were not there to liberate anyone,” he continued. “Just to find and destroy. That’s what our outfit did. We were a combat outfit. We would get up, eat breakfast, and shoot.” After attacks, General Patton would come by, drive in his jeep with the four stars, and call us all over to say, ‘Good job, boys. Mr. Feinberg stood close to him at one of these sessions. “I was interested not in looking at him or listening to him, but in looking at the two ivory-handled guns on his belt,” he said. “He was big. Tall. His eyes were always bloodshot. I think he drank a lot of booze. “And he shortened the war for us.”

Although his job was not to liberate, his unit — the Fourth Armored Division — liberated a concentration camp, and then got to Buchenwald six days after its liberation. Mr. Feinberg and his unit entered Ohrdruf, a concentration camp near Weimar, Germany, on April 4, 1945. “We were driving into Germany; we got into Gotha without firing a shot,” he said. “We took over the town. There were no cars, no people, no activity. Of course, everyone was hiding from us. We kept going until we came to the town of Ohrdruf. We had no idea about labor or concentration camps. “We went up into the woods. There were signs on the trees saying ‘Verboten.’” Forbidden. “We came up to the edge of the woods, and we saw fences, and a gate, with only two men there. One was 65 years old and one was 70. They were in German uniforms, with helmets and rifles. As soon as they saw us, they threw them down.

“We saw the ugliest thing that anyone had ever seen, toothpicks walking around. There were bodies in the courtyard, with striped uniforms. We thought that everyone in the pile was dead, but there were barracks. I got off my tank and looked around, with my handkerchief over my mouth. I spooked a man lying on his back, with his head shaved, in a striped uniform, gasping for air. I knelt down, and he sensed that somebody was there. He looks up, and he didn’t have the strength for it but he said, ‘Amerikaner?’ and I said “Jah. Amerikaner.’ He didn’t have the strength, but he put his hands together, thanking me for freeing him.” Mr. Feinberg got a doctor and an ambulance for the man, but he does not know the end of that story. General Dwight D. Eisenhower was there, and so was General Patton. “As tough a guy as Patton was, I saw him go back behind one of the barracks upchucking,” Mr. Feinberg said.

As for Buchenwald, amid all the horrors he saw — the people were gone by then, as were their murderers, but their tools remained — what haunts him most, “what drove me crazy, was a wooden crate with babies’ shoes,” he said. After the war, as part of the Army of Occupation, Mr. Feinberg helped police towns in Germany. “We were on guard night and day to make sure that there was no uprising,” he said. “They gave me a territory of 13 little towns. They were very quaint. Very cute. It was my job to find the mayor of each town. I would go into the town — the road would be lined with cattle. At 4:30 or so, the kids in town would have the job of bringing the cows back home. The cows knew which house to go to, and the kids would make sure that they didn’t stray, but only went to the house they belonged to. I would interrogate the mayor. I was a tough guy, a tough sergeant. No smiles. I told them that I had to know what was going on. I had to know about all meetings. If they had any guns or ammunition or explosives or hand grenades, they had to bring them to their yards, and we would destroy them.

“The Americans would get up at 2 in the morning and raid their houses. It was cruel, but it had to be done. “The mayor knew I was Jewish. They all knew, and they were frightened of me. “One day, I saw a girl who said she spoke English; she said she came from Montclair. I asked, ‘What are you doing here?’ and she said ‘My family was in Germany.’ I said, ‘You mean that your father thought that Hitler was going to take over America, so you’d be safer here.’ She put her head down and wouldn’t answer me. But she was a big help to me.”

Once he came home, Mr. Feinberg took advantage of the GI Bill to go to a school in Paterson that taught building trades, and he got married; he and his wife, Edie, have been married for more than 50 years, and they are proud parents of three children and grandparents of three grandchildren. Mr. Feinberg worked as a contractor until the injuries he’d gotten during the war caught up with him. He is now in a wheelchair. Mr. Feinberg, past president of the national Fourth Armored Division Association, secretary/treasurer of the New York chapter of that association, and past president of the Garden State Harmonica Club, has two Purple Hearts. Last month [November 2013], the French government named him a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, its highest honor.

Harry Feinberg
Harry Feinberg

 

A Christmas Story by Lionel J. Rothbard, 305th Med Bn, Co B

Lionel J. Rothbard
Lionel J. Rothbard

Of the many incidents that happened to me while serving in the U.S. Army in World War II, One evening stands out with great clarity. On December 24,1944,1 was a Second Lieutenant, Medical Administrative Corps, commanding a platoon of ten enlisted men, equipped with ten ambulances and one jeep. Our company, the 587th; had spent a period of rest and recuperation after working in the Alsace region of France, north of Luneville. We received orders to move out and proceed to Luxembourg City.

A few days before we left I had observed very heavy traffic going north. Also, much to my surprise, the vehicles were being driven with their headlights on.   Previously we had always driven under blackout conditions using cats eye illumination. Our company consisting of headquarters and three platoons left the area north of Luneville on December 24 arrived in Luxembourg City in the early evening and reported to a medical battalion headquarters.   It was freezing cold!

Having been through more than a few Windy City (Chicago) December blizzards, I immediately located a Quartermaster store and bought an army trench coat to go with overshoes I had received from the company supply. The trench coat came down below my knees and I had to roll up the sleeves.   I wore an O.D. shirt, an O.D. sweater, a field jacket, the trench coat, G.I. Boots, socks, a helmet with liner and was ready to travel in a jeep with the top down. My platoon was assigned to begin evacuating casualties from the Clearing Station of the 80th Infantry Division at Esch Sur Sur. Not to be confused with another Esch in the south part of the Duchy. One of my men of the Catholic faith had found a church and decided to attend mass that evening. The entire platoon waited outside the church and watched as large flakes of snow started to fall. When mass was over we began motoring north to our destination.

Security was very strict everywhere as there were rumors that the Nazi enemy was infiltrating the American lines with Germans dressed in American uniforms speaking English. Supposedly one of the Germans was Otto Skorzeny, Hitler’s favorite commando. At every village we approached, and there were many of them, we encountered sentries coming out of the darkness with loaded weapons challenging everything and anything. All of them had itchy trigger fingers. At one village, I was sitting in the passenger seat of my vehicle and as we stopped the driver was challenged with the usual sign. That evening it was”eagle” and it was to be answered by the counter sign of “nest”. To my amazement my driver forgot both the sign and the counter sign and Froze speechless! The sentry kept repeating the sign louder and louder all the while poking his rifle through the window closer and closer to me. I finally yelled “you S.O.B. it’s NEST! NEST! And he allowed us to proceed.

It bears mentioning at this point that the 587th was an unusual and unique U.S. Army formation. It was one of the few medical units composed of all black, now known as African American, enlisted men commanded by all Caucasian, or white, commissioned officers. One of which was me! The Germans may have been masquerading as Americans but they sure weren’t black! The snow filled roads were treacherous but we finally arrived at the clearing station, located in a Castle, in the early hours of December 25,1944. Tired and ready to carry out our assignment, but not  to tired however to refuse when the cooks offered me a night cap. They had “found” some medical alcohol (normally used to make cough medicine and other liquid medicines) mixed it with some powdered lemon and Viola, a cocktail. It was the best cocktail I have ever had. I proceeded to find a space on the floor of the castle spread out my bedroll and fall asleep.

Christmas Day we were treated to a traditional repast of turkey with all the trimmings.  The weather had cleared and when we looked up we could see airplanes. To our relief they were American airplanes. The Eighth Air Force B17s flying east to bomb the Germans. After a few weeks in Esch Sur Sur evacuating all kinds of wounded we moved up to Wiltz. Subsequently, we were ordered back to somewhere in France assigned to what was left of the 28th Infantry Division and continued with our job of moving patients from Clearing Stations to Evac Hospitals.

It was a most memorable Christmas Season. I would like to pay tribute to the junior officers and enlisted men who by their bravery and perseverance won the battle, despite the miscalculations of higher headquarters.

 

 

My WWII Experience by F. Keith Davis, 16th FAOBn

F. Keith Davis
F. Keith Davis

I was in the 16th Field Artillery Observation Battalion, Battery A. We were the eyes and ears of the Field Artillery. We fought our way from Utah Beach to the border of Belgium & Germany at a place named Auw, GERMANY, not a town just a place.  We were there in the winter.  Our area was considered a light fighting area. The heavy fighting was North of us at Cologne, Germany and South of us in Southern France. We were fired on by German artillery and the German infantry was very close.

The Germans fired Buzz Bombs over us frequently. A Buzz Bomb is an unmanned airplane that flew very low and is filled with flammable liquid and shrapnel. We could near the motor as it flew over us and when the motor stopped, we knew it would crash in seconds.  We had three land close to us, but no one was injured. Buzz Bombs killed & injured many Americans.

We were in the Hurtgen Forest in the Schnee Eifel Mountains where the snow was deep, the ground was frozen and we did not have winter clothes. On Dec. 16, 1944 Nazi General Von Runsted made a break thru on a fifty mile front. He came thru with the 5th Panzer Army, the 6th Panzer Army and the 7th German Army. He had brand new King Tiger tanks, new heavy artillery and thousands of infantry, most dressed in white for camouflage. Auw, Germany was in the very center of this onslaught.   We lost much equipment and pulled back to St. Vith, Belgium.  We were overpowered there and retreated back to Bastogne where we were surrounded Many of the American soldiers there were killed, wounded or went insane from the constant bombardment.

When the Battle of the Bulge started, it was cloudy and very foggy.  We could hear Tank treads coming toward us, but could not tell if it was a Nazi Tiger Tank or an American Sherman Tank.  General George Patton ordered the 101st and 82nd Airborne up to Bastogne.  They could not jump from planes because of the fog. They were brought up in 6×6 Army trucks and it took them two days to reach us. A paratrooper ask me where the front line was and I told him he was standing on it.  Somehow our battery escaped the Bastogne encirclement. Three us came upon a Belgium farmhouse in the middle of the battlefield.  We went inside and there was a father, mother and two children, a boy and girl about 7 or 8 years old.  The mother gave us some soup and black bread and we save them some candy.  This was Christmas Eve.  We sang Christmas songs that night.  We sang Jingle Bells and Silent Night, the words were different, but the music was the same.   We were wet and cold, but we dried off that night.  We could hear machine guns rattle and Artillery shells bursting all night.  We didn’t get much sleep, but we got warm and dry.

We left the next morning and the family didn’t want to see us go, The 16th was badly shot up and the 285th FAOB in the same area was badly shot up.  The two Observation Battalions decided to form one unit, so they could be more effective in the war.  This did not happen, the Nazi SS Troops captured a Battery of the 285th and herded them into an open snowy field and machine gunned them down in cold blood.  This was not war, this was murder and was known as the Malmedy Massacre.

The clouds and fog started to break up and the Air Force flew thousands of sorties over the area.  They bombed tank positions, artillery positions and machine-gunned infantry troops and supply lines.  We watched C-47 planes fly low over the battlefield and drop by parachute food, guns, gasoline and medical supplies,we were out of everything. We begin to hold our own and gradually fought our way back to Auw, Germany.

On January 30th, 1945 we were at the same location we were on Dec 16, 1944. Up to now were liberators, from now on we will be conquerors.  Over one million men fought in the “Battle of the Bulge”, 600,000  Americans, 500,000 Germans, and 35,000 English, French, Canadians and others.  This is the largest land battle ever fought by any American Army. We fought our way to Koblenz, Germany, crossed the Rhine River, was at the liberation of the Ohrdruf concentration camp, the first camp liberated on the Western Front, fought thru Nuremberg into Czechoslovakia, met the Russian Army and on May 8, 1945 was V.E. Day.  The War in Europe was over.  From the time we went ashore on Utah Beach, until we met the Russians, I was on the front lines the whole time.  I know that Freedom is not Free!

A Friend in Need, John P. Malloy, 75th ID

John Malloy in center
John Malloy in center

A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed
by John P. Malloy, 75th ID, 291st IR

I worried and wondered if my best friend, Dean Lusjenski, had survived the recent vicious fighting at Grand-Halleux. Dean was with L (Love) Company in a machine gun section, in the 291st heavy weapons company. That company had sustained serious casualties in that battle. I decided I should find his company and see if he was still ok.

Dean and I had been called to duty on the same day in March 1943. He was a senior at Creighton University in Omaha, and I was a junior there. We had spent the entire war together and had become fast friends. We looked after one another, as soldiers often do. Now I wondered, and worried, what had happened to him during the vicious battles along the Salm River.

The 291 st Regiment had played an important role in counter attacking the retreating German forces. The Gl’s had suffered severe frostbite and trench foot because of the cold and snow. Huddling for days in a wet, cold, foxhole wore men down. This suffering, combined with battle wounds, had taken a severe toll.

I was lucky I was able to track him down. My job, as wire crew chief, gave me considerable independence and freedom of action. I knew my crew would handle any problems while I was gone. Earlier that morning the Third Battalion, Dean’s unit, had attacked a heavily defended hill-casualties were heavy. I knew the current action was centered in a small village about a quarter of a mile to the east. I took our jeep and headed that way. As I approached the village I stopped and proceeded on foot. When I reached the village center, I could see the German defenders had been forced back, perhaps five hundred yards. There was confusion. Medics evacuated wounded. Tanks slowly ground forward. An artillery spotter moved his vantage point.

Infantry units continued the attack. Apparently another unit had just been relieved. Those men were half hidden in doorways. Others hunkered down, waiting, hoping. They were a disheveled, bearded crew. They were exhausted. Most had not been out of their clothes for days. They hadn’t had a truly hot meal for some time. Artillery fire had devastated the area. Buildings were smoking shambles. Some still stood, in others, men sought what shelter they could find. An improvised aid station was operating. Medics treated bloody wounds. There was the awful smell of cordite-a reminder of death.

A winter sun shone weakly on the chaos. Just a month ago a pristine snow had drifted down, providing a beautiful blanket, covering this remote countryside. Now, brown replaced white. Brown clad warriors brought brown tanks, brown trucks, and brown cannon. Brown buildings burned. Dirty, brown soil lay exposed. It was an ugly place. This was not an unusual sight across France and Belgium. Our War Machine destroyed what little the Germans left when they fled.

There was occasional incoming mortar fire now; this was not a safe area. I tried to identify the units present. I could see that some Third Battalion Companies were involved in the firefight but I could not find L Company. I decided my efforts were futile. I couldn’t find my friend so I decided to return to my outfit. I retreated towards my jeep. The late afternoon light was turning to dusk. I worried about the drive. Driving in pitch black darkness was dangerous. I worried I might encounter a trigger happy Gl. He would shoot first and ask questions later.

Then I saw him. He was slumped in a ruined doorway.

“Dean, Dean is that you?”

He looked at me. I moved closer-he had an unfocused, zombie like, gaze. He stared vacantly.

“Lusienski-Lusienski it’s me, John.”

His only comment was,” I’m cold, I’m cold.”

“Dean I’m taking you with me. You need rest and a hot meal inside you.”

He mumbled,” I can’t. I’ve got to get back to my platoon.”

“You are coming with me and that’s that. Don’t give me a hard time.”

I walked him to the jeep. We took off. A commandeered farmhouse served as the Regimental CP. The wire section’s sleeping bags were on a dirt floor in an adjoining barn. I got Dean out of his overcoat. I removed his boots and put him into my sleeping bag. I covered him with an extra blanket. He slept eighteen hours. I brought him a hot meal. He slept again. When he woke he was a different man. We had a good conversation. We exchanged news. He had another good meal. Then it was time to go. His dry clothes and boots were ready. He got into his overcoat, put on his helmet, slung his weapon over his shoulder. I returned him to his company.

I didn’t see him again for several weeks. After the Bulge, the Division headed south and east to Colmar France near Strasburg. There we continued kitting Germans. Dean, in the weeks following the battles in the Ardennes and Colmar, was promoted to Staff Sergeant and awarded the Bronze Star for his leadership in operations in the Rhine River area.

Epilogue: After the war Dean Lusienski returned to his home in Nebraska. He married and had a family/He used the G\ bill to earn a PhD in Educational Psychology at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. He served for many years as Principal for the world famous Boy’s Town. In later years, I occasionally traveled to Omaha from my home in Milwaukee. Dean and I would have dinner together. We talked about the early years. Dean died several years ago at the age of seventy.

Dean Lusienski was an outstanding example of Brokaw’s “The Greatest Generation”.

I still miss my best friend.

 

 

Ramblings of a Retired Mind

I was thinking about how a status symbol of today is one of those cell phones that everyone has clipped onto the belt or purse. I don’t want one, so I’m wearing my garage door opener.

I also made a cover for my hearing aid and now I have what they call blue teeth, I think.

You know, I spent a fortune on deodorant before I realized that people didn’t like me anyway.

I was thinking that women should put pictures of missing husbands on beer cans!

I thought about making a fitness movie for folks my age, and call it ‘Pumping Rust’.

I’ve gotten that dreaded furniture disease. That’s when your chest is falling into your drawers!

When people see a cat’s litter box, they always say, ‘Oh, have you got a cat?’ Just once I want to say, “No, it’s for company!”

Employment application blanks always ask who is to be notified in case of an emergency. I think you should write 911!

Birds of a feather flock together… and then poop on your car.

A penny saved is a government oversight.

The older you get, the tougher it is to lose weight, because by then your body and your fat have gotten to be really good friends.

The easiest way to find anything lost around the house is to buy a replacement.

He who hesitates is probably right.

Did you ever notice that the Roman numerals for 40 are XL.

If you can smile when things go wrong, you must have someone in mind to blame.

The sole purpose of a child’s middle name is so he can tell when he’s really in trouble..

Did you ever notice that when you put the two words ‘THE’ and ‘IRS’ Together it spells ‘THEIRS’!

And then there’s the question of aging gracefully – eventually you reach a point when you stop lying about your age and start bragging about it. Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not me, I want people to know why I look this way. I’ve traveled a long way and some of the roads had deep potholes.

When you are dissatisfied and would like to go back to your youth, think of Algebra.

One of the many things no one tells you about aging is that it is such a nice change from being young. Ah, being young is beautiful, but being old is comfortable, and thank heaven, you no longer need to take the train in to Manhattan every day to get to work – your wife has enough jobs to do right at home!

I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a whole lot more as they get older. Then it dawned on me, they’re cramming for their finals! (Should they be learning Hebrew?)

As for me, I’m just hoping God grades on the curve.

Lord, keep your arm around my shoulder and your hand over my mouth.

AMEN

submitted by the Duncan Trueman Chapter (59)

 

146th ECB, Wes Ross

Excerpts from “Combat Engineers in WWII”
by Wesley Ross 3rd  Platoon, 146th Engineer Combat Bn.

About 10 December 1944, as a nervous tag-along member of a six man patrol from a 38th Cavalry troop–forward of the front and east of Bullingen, Belgium at the German border–we found plenty of German activity across the bottom of a tree-filled canyon. Trees were being cut down with saws and axes, and tanks and other heavy motorized equipment were moving around over straw covered trails, to muffle their sounds. While watching this activity from a concealed position two hundred yards away on the opposite side of the canyon, we listened to the big tank engines for some time and sensed that “something unusual was afoot”.

When information regarding all of this German activity was sent to army headquarters, their response was “this is just a feint to trick us into pulling our troops away from our planned offensive near Schmidt in the Hurtgen Forest”. If it had not been so serious, an almost comical ploy was our leaders attempt to enhance our perceived troop strength in the Ardennes, in order to draw more Germans troops from the front further north at Aachen. They conjured up a non-existent infantry division to further promote the ruse. (Heard, but not verified—WR)

As a result, our high-level commanders were not suspicious when the Germans began bringing in more and more troops prior to the Bulge—this is exactly what our leaders had hoped–and they happily believed that their scheme was working to perfection. There were a few red faces when the axe finally fell! We at the lower levels, were unaware of these machinations, but were kept alert by the persistent rumors that were floating around. On our return trip from our canyon viewpoint, the cavalry used pull-igniters on three Tellermines left by a German patrol that had been chased off the previous night. Several enemy were killed when they tried to reclaim their AT mines.

While I occasionally had patrolled in areas forward of our front lines, I had never patrolled with the audacity of these 38th Cavalry troopers. They were fearless and not concerned that might bump into German patrols. They probably would have welcomed the opportunity! My 3rd platoon had laid AT mines along the road shoulders near Bullingen a few weeks earlier, but that was probably done to deter small-scale penetrations. Bullingen was on the route to be taken by Kampgruppe Peiper and where his forces captured a large quantity of our gasoline, before heading west, towards Huy on the Meuse River. On 14 December the 2nd Infantry Division launched an attack from the Elsenborn Ridge to capture the Roer River dams–to keep the Germans from flooding the Roer River plain and foiling our advance at Aachen. The “Indian Head Division” was making good progress in a flanking action–thus gaining ground that had been denied us in the September to November frontal assaults in the Hurtgen Forest.

V-Corps called off the attack on the second day of the Bulge–to keep our forces from being decimated by the massive enemy infantry and armored forces that were attacking there. The Bulge was considerably more than a feint–it was a giant leap beyond what any of us could have imagined, and it caught everyone by surprise—even those of us at the lower levels, who suspected that “something unusual was afoot”!

On the morning of 16 December, the well-orchestrated German attack in the Ardennes—that they called the “Wacht am Rhein”— was launched. The name was a subterfuge to hide their offensive intentions behind a pretended defense. Hitler suspected a security leak within his Wehrmacht and so he limited disclosures of the attack plans to only his most trusted generals. He was unaware that the British had broken his Enigma Code, even though some of his advisors had suggested that this may have happened. “Impossible” said der Fuehrer!

There were so few radio intercepts concerning the upcoming Ardennes offensive that our top level commanders were caught off guard—even though many of us at lower levels were antsy about all of the enemy activity nearby. In general, the Wehrmacht followed the mandated secrecy orders, but there were enough slip-ups by their air force and civilian transportation units to have given our commanders sufficient insight had they not been so supremely overconfident. The 14 6ECB was bivouacked at Mutzenich Junction, three miles west of the front at Monschau—which was at the northern shoulder of the German build-up. The 38th Cavalry was also at the northern flank of the Bulge at Monschau and just north of the 3rd Battalion, 395th Regiment, 99th Infantry Division–who managed to hold their ground even though the remainder of the division was badly chewed up, and much of their command was shifted to the 2nd Infantry Division.

For several days this small cavalry force—plus 3rd Platoon, A-Co, 112ECB; A-Co, 146ECB; and their attached 105mm and 155mm artillery—fought off several attacks by vastly superior enemy forces. Several times artillery fire was called in on their own positions to thwart the attacks. Canister rounds—a cannoneer’s shotgun—were used with devastating effect when they were about to be overrun. For their stout defense, all three units were awarded the Presidential Unit Citation–the nation’s highest unit award. According to “Cavalry on the Shoulder”, the 38th Cavalry was the only cavalry squadron to be so honored in WWII.

The 14 6th Engineer Combat Battalion had received a Presidential Unit Citation for their D-Day demolition mission on Omaha Beach, so an oak leaf cluster was added to A-Co’s PUC. The battlefield success of the 38th Cavalry Squadron in the Bulge, was due to a number of elements, including a seasoned cadre that had fought from Normandy—but probably the most important factor was their commanding officer–Lt Colonel Robert 0’Brien–a 1936 West Point cavalry graduate. He was a fanatic in his dedication to patrolling the area forward of his lines–to the extent that his Cavalry Squadron eventually came to own that area! Initially, this was not the case but came to pass after several fierce firefights that inflicted heavy casualties on enemy patrols.

This type of aggressive action was repeated often in the Monschau sector, causing enemy patrols to avoid contact and allowing cavalry patrols to make increasingly detailed reconnaissance reports and sketches of enemy positions. More importantly, it left the German commanders ignorant of the details of the cavalry’s defensive positions. The cavalry’s weapons were carefully positioned, so as to provide interlocking grazing fire along all of the likely enemy avenues of approach. They were further tied into obstacles of concertina wire and personnel mines along these likely avenues. Further, extensive use was made of trip flares to provide early warning of enemy approach. Flares were preferred because they prevented friendly casualties in case of mistakes, and they did not give the false sense of security be associated with an extensive minefield.

All of the weapons were dug in, with overhead cover to survive artillery attack, and they were carefully concealed so that an attacking enemy had to literally be on the position to recognize it as a machine gun position. Finally the positions were integrated into the squadron command and control telephone net. A final point on the preparation of the Monschau defense was a typical characteristic of defense common to the United States army—the thorough integration and abundance of artillery support–105mm and 150mm howitzers, augmented by their organic 60mm and 81mm mortars. “The effectiveness of the artillery support was later verified by a German prisoner. He reported that German troops in the Monschau sector were forbidden to leave their bunkers and foxholes during the hours of daylight. They were reduced to observing their sectors through the use of mirrors in order not to attract rapid and deadly artillery fire.

This dedicated defensive preparation was tested at 0545 on the morning of 16 December 1944, when the intense German artillery barrage announced the start of the Battle of the Bulge. On the night of 16/17 December 1944, the 1,500 man parachute force, under Lieutenant Colonel Frederich-August von der Heydte, dropped into the Hohes Venn in “Operation Stosser”. His group had fought several vicious engagements with the 101st Airborne Division in Normandy and again in General Bernard Montgomery’s flawed Market Garden offensive in September 1944–as portrayed in “The Band of Brothers”. The Hohes Venn is a swampy area on the headwaters of the Roer River. In November, three of us tried to cross through this swampy area. With our Jeep flat out in four wheel drive, we traveled about 50 yards, before dropping it down to its axles. We then had to jack it up out of the mud and build a corduroy road to get back on solid ground.

The paratroopers were a day late because of glitches in getting their gasoline delivered and in getting the troops assembled. They were scattered for 25 miles from Malmedy to Eupen because of inexperienced pilots and the minimal advance notice regarding the mission—dictated by Hitler as a security measure. The unsynchronized twin Jumo engines of their planes generated an interesting slow beat-frequency sound. Many parachutes were found after the drop. I rescued an undamaged white one—also a large section from a brown and green camouflaged model. Both appeared to be silk. The camouflaged silk made fine neck scarves and several still reside in my dresser drawer to be worn occasionally, but I finally gave the white one to the Salvation Army, after it had taken up closet space for more than twenty years.

General Dietrich’s 6th Panzer Army—the main German force in the Bulge–included four Panzer Divisions with the latest tanks, weapons and infantry.  It included the 1st SS Panzer Division–Leibstandarte S S Adolph Hitler.  The lightning strike to the Meuse River near Huy, Belgium was to be led by Joachim Peiper leader of Kampfgruppe Peiper, from this division.  They then would move north to Antwerp and enveloping our northern armies, similar to the 1940 French and British defeat there! In the planning, Dietrich’s forces were to have reached the Baroque Michel crossroads—midway between Malmedy and Eupen—on the 16th, which was to have been captured by the paratroopers by then. The 38th Cavalry’s stand at Monschau blunted that effort, so Dietrich’s forces were directed south toward Elsenborn, Bullingen and Malmedy.

Had Dietrich been able to force his way through Monschau, he very well may have rolled up our front and then captured the large gasoline dumps near Eupen. Had this come to pass, their armies could then have moved almost unimpeded north to Antwerp. Despite all of the negative opinions about the stupidity of launching the Ardennes offensive and taking troops and materiel away from the Russian front, honesty must conclude that with a few fortunate breaks, the Bulge could have been a phenomenal German success and Hitler would then have been trumpeted as a great tactician!

At 1520 hours on 16 Dec, V-Corp’s Colonel Pattillo called Major Willard Baker—our S-3 and ordered 146ECB to furnish a company of engineers to serve as infantry–to be attached to the 38th Cavalry Squadron at Monschau. A-Company was in the line at 1700 that evening, where they furnished support for the outnumbered troopers. At 1525 Hours, Colonel McDonough—the 1121st Engineer Combat Group commander—called our headquarters and ordered another engineer company to be deployed as infantry.The three B-Company platoons moved into position the next morning and for several days formed a barrier line, a short distance behind the front between Monschau and Elsenborn. Our purpose was to slow the advance of the the Panzer Army, should they penetrate our lines. The 3rd Platoon covered a 1,000 yard front in the snow, until relieved on 23 December.

We set up three 50 caliber machine guns in defensive positions and patrolled between them, but being in a semi-wooded area we had inadequate fields of fire and would have been captured or bypassed by any enemy attack in force! Several men manned daisy-chain roadblocks on nearby roads. These are AT mines roped together, so they can be pulled across the road at the approach of enemy vehicles, but they are not effective unless they are adequately supported by covering fire. Trees had explosives strapped to their trunks in order to drop them and form abatis, at the approach of enemy vehicles. Engineers have only occasional needs for machine guns, but we had both the WWI vintage water cooled .30 caliber Brownings and the newer air cooled version—as well as the .50 caliber Brownings that were normally ring-mounted on our truck cabs for anti-aircraft fire. Our .30 caliber Brownings were light-years behind the vastly superior German MG-42. In the early hours of the parachute drop, one of our water-cooled Brownings fired one round only and then sat there mute–the water in the cooling jacket had frozen, jamming the action!

While on outpost duty, the 3rd Platoon had no clue as to the enemy’s intentions, or what was actually taking place nearby at the front. We were located in a sparsely woody area away from our headquarters, but the wealth of rumors and the actuality of the paratroopers and reports of Skorzeny’s men in American uniforms kept us alert.  Unconfirmed rumors abounded! Anyone moving around was challenged–this included even our easily recognized generals. Lt Leonard Fox—now a C-Company platoon leader–was taken prisoner by a patrol from the 38th Cavalry Squadron. He had not received the password for the day. After six hours, while his legitimacy was being confirmed, he was released. Lt Refert Croon led a patrol of Joe Manning, Marvin Lowery, Warren Hodges and others, looking for the paratroopers. Lowery was killed in an ensuing firefight that killed two Germans and wounded several more–the rest surrendered. Nine paratoopers were killed and about sixty were captured—all by C-Company and HQ-Company—as A-Company and B-Company were deployed elsewhere as infantry. Fred Matthews was captured by the paratroopers, but he managed to escape during another firefight.

The 291st Engineer Combat Battalion set up roadblocks near Malmedy. Even more important than establishing the roadblocks was their contribution in slowing Kampfgruppe Peiper by blowing a number of bridges and thwarting his intended drive to the Meuse River. Some of the bridges were destroyed just as Peiper’s tanks arrived on the scene. I believe that their stout defense was a major factor in blunting Kampfgruppe Peiper’s drive to the Meuse River at Huy. The 291st Engineers, along with the 30th Infantry Division, were bombed three times by our 9th Air Force during their days in Malmedy. Misdirected air strikes were not too unusual an occurrence when mists and clouds mask events on the ground–or when the front is poorly defined. These fatalities were related by Colonel Pergrin–the unhappy commander of a battalion of combat engineers.

Julius Mate–whom I had not seen since before the Bulge-related the following at our annual battalion reunion in 1993: “Early on the morning of 17 December, Sergeant Henri Rioux sent Nettles and another radio man to the battalion headquarters for breakfast. When the radio operators had not returned as expected, Rioux told Mate and James France to go to breakfast and to see what had happened to them. Later we heard that the paratrooper’s planned assembly area was this battalion radio shack, several hundred yards from our bivouac area—located away to keep from drawing artillery fire on our headquarters.” On their way, they saw a parachute with an attached bag hanging in a dead tree. Seeing evidence of the paratroopers was not surprising since they had heard the planes overhead the previous night and our men had seen their green recognition lights. Mate attempted to recover the chute by pulling on the shroud lines, but the rotten tree broke and the trunk fell across his ankle, pinning’him to the “ground.”

“After working free, they continued toward the headquarters and breakfast and then saw Nettles up ahead acting very strange. When they ran up to ask what was happening, six paratroopers with machine pistols stepped out of hiding, took them captive, disarmed them and then threw their M-l Garand rifles into a nearby creek–where they were found later that day by a patrol led by Lt Refert Croon.” “Nettles and Mate were directed to make a double-pole support to carry a paratrooper who had compound fractures of both legs. At the end of the day, Mate’s ankle was swollen and painful, so France and Nettles carried the wounded trooper.” “This small group kept moving during the day and slept under fir boughs at night. After wandering about for two days, they joined the main body of about 150 paratroopers and were then interrogated by a German officer who spoke impeccable English. He had studied at a Texas university and so not only knew the language–but also the American idioms and customs.”

“They were combined with twenty others who had been captured from a laundry unit near Eupen. At night they slept in a tight pile to keep warm, as it was very cold. After a time when the body parts against the ground were growing cold, they all turned at a given signal. They kept up a running conversation to keep telling of the importance of moving toes and fingers to avert frostbite.” “One of the captives, who understood German, heard their captors discussing how they should dispose of the Americans by throwing grenades into their midst while they slept. When a patrol from the 1st Infantry Division engaged the paratroopers, the captives ran up waving their shirts and yelling “Don’t shoot–were Americans”. Early in the Bulge, Earl Buffington—from C-Company–was riding in Blaine Hefner’s truck, as they won the race with a German tank to a crossroad near Malmedy. The tank halted and began firing at them as they scurried away.

Earl’s arm was injured by a low hanging tree limb and he was hospitalized near Spa, Belgium. The limb also brushed off his “Omaha Beach Trophy Helmet” which sported two clean 8mm holes. The bullet had passed from front to back nicking his ear and the side of his head. He was not seriously wounded, so he considered that a good omen and he refused to swap the helmet for a new one.  However, his Trophy Helmet was never recovered. Soon after Earl and several others were dropped off at the field hospital in Spa, he was told that the Germans were about to overrun the area, so Earl and a group “af patients scurried out the back. In a similar fashion Mugg Pawless, Julian Mathies and eight others fled out the back door of a hospital in Malmedy just ahead of the attacking Germans and later ended up at a temporary hospital in the Grand Hotel in Paris.

In November—at Vossenack in the Hurtgen Forest—Mugg was wounded in the heel by an artillery round. After returning from that infantry support mission, the wound was periodically sore and treatment was ineffective, so he was finally sent to an evacuation hospital. When German tanks were heard snorting around nearby, he was moved to another hospital in Malmedy. Before his treatment could be completed, the Germans also cut short that hospital stay. Mugg couldn’t don a shoe on his sore foot, so he put on seven socks, slipped on an overshoe and walked out into the snow with his fellow patients. The next morning they wandered into a gasoline dump near Spa that was being evacuated. Mugg and Julian rode atop gas cans to Rheims where the Red Cross fed them doughnuts and coffee and took them to a hospital where Mugg’s wound was dressed.

He was sent by ambulance to Paris where his wound was cleaned surgically and he was given penicillin. After a short stop in a Cherbourg hospital where his wound was again cleaned and antibiotics administered, Mugg eventually ended up in a hospital in England. When that doctor asked what the x-rays had shown, Mugg stated that no x-rays had been taken. The doctor was surprised and the follow-up x-rays showed a small artillery fragment lodged in his heel—cause of the pain that had plagued him for months.  It was removed and his recovery was uneventful.