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It is a responsibility to belong to the 101st
Airborne Division with its record of achievement.
The past matters only as a promise
of future accomplishment. We who today
wear the Eagle on our shoulders must assure the
Division a future worthy of the men of
Normandy, Holland, and Bastogne.
Maxwell D. Taylor
Major General, Commanding
THE STORY OF THE 101st AIRBORNE DIVISION
They kept it in Normandy by initiating the Allied assault
on Hitler's Fortress Europe, June 6, 1944; by storming and
capturing Carentan -- initial proof of the division's strength
in coordinated ground action.
They kept it in Holland by liberating the first Dutch city,
Eindhoven, and blazing a path of liberation 20 miles
northward in a campaign that kept them fighting 73 days without
relief.
They kept it at Bastogne where against overwhelming
odds they held tenaciously to doom von Rundstedt's
December counter-offensive to failure.
Success of the division has been the result of a happy
combination of brave men commanded by bold leaders.
Mutual confidence of the 101st is exemplified by the remark
of an Eagle soldier during the siege of Bastogne: "They've
got us surrounded -- the poor bastards!"
A British Corps Commander near the end of the Holland
campaign told Screaming Eagle soldiers: "I have
commanded four Corps during my army career, but the 101st
Airborne Division is the fightingest outfit I have ever had
under my command."
Maj. Gen. Anthony C. McAuliffe (then Brig. Gen.) voiced
the opinion of division officers for their men when he said
at Bastogne: "With the type of soldier I had under my
command, possessing such fighting spirit, all that I had to do
was to make a few basic decisions -- my men did the rest."
His words pay tribute to the gallant fighting Eagle Division
men, who kept their "rendezvous with destiny" in Normandy,
Holland and Belgium.
NORMANDY: FIRST RENDEZVOUS WITH DESTINY
As daylight mellowed into dusk June 5, Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower circulated among 101st troops at England's
departure fields to wish them Godspeed, good luck.
Cocky fighters, armed to the hilt and assigned the mission
of striking the first blow at Hitler's Fortress Europa,
wise-cracked as they boarded C-47s. Less than four hours later
in Normandy, these Airborne soldiers wrote the first pages
of their glorious story with blood and courage.
They penned the lines of a combat diary with a phrase
in French and a hand grenade at Pouppeville, with German
dead stacked in roadside ditches on the march to St. Come
du Mont, with a blinding bayonet dash across the swampy
approaches to Carentan.
From 0015 in the darkness of June 6, 1944, when Capt.
Frank L. Lillyman, Skaneateles, N.Y., leader of the
Pathfinder group, became the first Allied soldier to touch French
soil, and for 33 successive days 101st A/B carried the attack
to the enemy. This was the beginning of the Airborne trail
leading through Carentan in Normandy, to Eindhoven in
Holland and into Bastogne. Belgium.
Gen. Taylor's sky-fighters had been assigned three
missions: secure causeways leading from Utah Beach for
assault troops to storm ashore from landing barges at dawn;
destroy bridges across roads leading into the key road and
rail communication center Carentan; protect the south
flank of VII Corps.
Fighting its way through hedge-lined fields, the division
took every objective. When the "Battle of the Beaches"
was won, many 101st units were awarded the Presidential
Citation.
Congratulating the division on its work. Lt Gen. Omar N.
Bradley told Eagle soldiers: "You have destroyed the
myth of German invincibility."
An odd assortment of men was culled from thorn-thick
hedges and ditches along roads to storm Pouppeville.
Division Commander, Chief of Staff, clerks, MPs,
artillerymen, signalmen, a sprinkling of infantry
parachutists -- all combined to form a task force against this village that
blocked the entrance of a causeway leading from Utah
Beach. So abundant were staff officers that Gen. Taylor
remarked, "Never were so few led by so many."
It was near Pouppeville in early morning darkness that
a passing German patrol caught Maj. Larry Legere, Fitchburg,
Mass., and thinking him a French native, asked him what he
was doing out so late. "I come from visiting my cousin,"
the major replied in French while he pulled the pin on a
grenade and let fly.
Pouppeville fell to this small band. Similar displays of
adaptability and initiative by other groups nullified enemy
opposition at similar key points, and causeways were
secured for beach assault troops. Early in the day, the
4th Inf. Div. marched up causeways without opposition.
The first obstacle to the invasion had been overcome.
At dawn of the second day, the 506th Parachute Inf. Regt.,
commanded by Col. Robert F. Sink, Lexington, N.C.,
advanced southward. Germans stubbornly defended
previously fortified Vierville. The town was taken after severe
fighting, and the enemy grudgingly fell back to St. Come du
Mont.
Angoville au Plain fell to the division by noon, and
skyfighters smashed through hedges and over roads to the
outskirts of St. Come du Mont. Resisting savagely, Germans
blunted the thrust. The 2nd and 3rd Bns., 501st Parachute
Inf.; 1st Bn., 401st Glider and a battery of the 81st AA A/T
Bn. moved in to form a second striking force.
The Eagle was ready. Ahead lay St. Come du Mont,
defended by well dug-in German parachutists. Here,
101st A/B soldiers were committed in the first large-scale
attack launched by the division in the invasion campaign.
From hedgerow to hedgerow, through field after field,
onto the road into town, fierce fighting raged as Eagle
troopers swept into the streets of St. Come du Mont. Here
the 101st Airborne first met the German 6th Parachute Regt.,
later to be encountered again in the Holland campaign.
Twice this crack Nazi unit was to develop a healthy respect
for the fighting skill of the "Yankees with the Big Pockets."
By 2000 June 7, all organized resistance ceased at St. Come
du Mont. Carentan loomed next on the list of vital Allied
objectives. Its seizure would provide the link necessary
to coordinate the assault forces on Utah and Omaha Beaches.
If Germans retained the town, Allied power would be divided
during the campaign's most crucial phase. Carentan had
to be taken. The Screaming Eagles were assigned the job.
But the path leading to it wasn't easy. Later described
as "Purple Heart Lane," the route covered canals, swamp
lands and the Douve River, all guarded by Germans.
The 327th Glider Inf., commanded by Col. Joseph Harper,
College Park, Ga., pushed off to cross the Douve at 0100,
June 9. Corps engineers brought up assault boats by
concealed routes. Under cover of heavy artillery, the
regiment crossed the river, seized the small village of
Brevands, secured a supply route to support the attack on
Carentan from the east.
The 326th A/B Engr. Bn., laying aside weapons of destruction
for tools of construction, set up a temporary footbridge
across the river on 502nd Parachute Inf.'s front north of
Carentan. One battalion attempted to cross by infiltration
but was discovered. The crossing temporarily was abandoned.
Later, 3rd Bn., commanded by Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole,
San Antonio, Tex., followed by 1st Bn. led by Lt. Col.
Patrick F. Cassidy, Seattle, succeeded in crossing the four
consecutive bridges which span Carentan waterways,
established a precarious bridgehead north of the city.
He ordered: "Strip for bayonet attack. Let's get out of
this damn swamp!" Word was whispered from man to
man in the marshy bed -- "The Old Man wants it done with
steel." There, on the last approach to Carentan occurred
the first bayonet attack of World War II.
With bull-like charges through the soggy marsh,
paratroopers rushed forward to close with the Kraut defenders.
Picking up a fallen man's rifle and bayonet, Col. Cole
led the battalion over the bullet-swept ground. Locked in
hand-to-hand fighting, Eagle paratroopers forced back the
Germans, subdued the last defenders.
For his heroic action, Col. Cole won the Congressional
Medal of Honor, posthumously awarded. He was killed the
second day of the Holland invasion.
It was with this spirit that the division, attacking Carentan
from three directions, achieved its objectives. Resistance
ceased within the city June 11. A defensive position was
immediately organized.
Later near Cherbourg, Gen. Taylor stood high atop
a captured pillbox and told his battle-hardened veterans,
"You hit the ground running toward the enemy. You have
proved the German soldier is no superman. You have
beaten him on his own ground, and you can beat him on any
ground." Field Marshal (then Gen.) Sir Bernard Law
Montgomery pinned the British Distinguished Service Order
on Gen. Taylor's jacket.
The Eagle Division was ordered to its base in England,
closing the first chapter in its combat record.
HOLLAND: SECOND D-DAY FOR SCREAMING EAGLES
Twice the division was alerted and moved to departure
airdromes to await the battle signal. Twice the division
trudged to marshalling fields only to return to base camps.
Swift-moving armor eliminated the necessity for both
operations.
But the third operation wasn't a dry run. Its second
combat mission -- Holland!
As part of the newly-formed First Allied A/B Army, Eagle
soldiers were sent skyward toward German defenses in
the land of wooden shoes and windmills. Again it was
a sky dash over the English Channel, over flak towers, and
down behind German lines.
The mission was to secure bridges and the main highway
winding through the heart of Holland from Eindhoven to
Arnhem to facilitate the advance of Gen. Sir Miles C.
Dempsey's Second British Army over the flooded
dike-controlled land.
Flak met the invaders enroute, but the huge armada
droned steadily on. Troop Carrier formations held firm
despite fire. Pilots of burning planes struggled with
controls as they flew to designated Drop Zones, disgorged their
valuable cargoes of fighting men, then plummeted earthward.
Pilot heroism was commonplace, proved inspirational to
Eagle sky fighters dropping well behind enemy lines.
Surprise was complete. There was little initial opposition
from the Germans. Eagle veterans assembled quickly,
then marched on their objectives.
Division missions called for the capture of Eindhoven and
the seizure of bridges over canals and rivers at Vechel, St.
Odenrode and Zon. To attain these objectives the division
had to seize and hold a portion of the main highway extending
over a 25 mile area. Commanders realized units would be
strung out on both sides of the main arterial highway from
Vechel to Eindhoven, that security in depth would be
sacrificed.
Dropping near Vechel, the 501st Parachute Inf. Regt.,
commanded by Col. Howard R. Johnson, Washington, D.C.,
later killed in the campaign, pressed forward. Two hours
later, Vechel was taken and bridges over the Willems
Vaart Canal and the Aa River seized intact.
A sharp skirmish marked the speedy liberation of St.
Odenrode by the 502nd Parachute Inf. under Col. John H.
Michaelis, Lancaster, Pa. Co. H moved to take the highway
bridge leading from Best. This small force was successful
in its mission but driven back when Germans counter-attacked.
The fight for Best raged three days. At stake was a key
communications route through which Germans could pour
reinforcements. The enemy was deployed in strength at the
Best bridge. The 502nd attacked again the second day to
retrieve the bridge but was thrown back.
The bridge finally fell at 1800 the third day after one of the
most bitter battles of the Netherlands campaign. The Airborne
attack, supported by British armor, resulted in the
destruction of fifteen 88s and the capture of 1056 Germans.
More than 300 enemy dead littered the battlefield.
Troopers whipped back the Germans as they drove towards
Eindhoven five miles to the south. A flanking movement
sealed the city's fate. The first major Dutch city to be
liberated, Eindhoven, was in Airborne hands at 1300, Sept. 18.
On Sept. 23, Germans severed the main highway between
Vechel and Uden. Simultaneously, they made a strong
but unsuccessful bid to recapture Vechel.
With the highway cut, long caravans of trucks were halted
along the narrow road leading from Eindhoven to Arnhem.
All available division elements were rushed to the vicinity of
Vechel where they were formed into a task force under Gen.
McAuliffe.
Enemy penetrations were deep. German tanks and infantry
moved within 500 yards of the vital bridges. Vicious
fighting followed, but the Eagle defense held firm. The
enemy was forced to withdraw toward Erp, and the highway
was reopened.
Next day, a fresh German thrust cut the supply line between
Vechel and St. Odenrode. Eagle soldiers combined with
British tanks to smash German defenses and again reopen
the road. Thereafter the thunderous roar of armor and
supply trucks rolling up the highway continued uninterrupted.
Meanwhile, Gen. Taylor shuttled troops up and down
both sides of the British Second Army's supply route to repulse
German forces determined to sever Gen. Dempsey's lifeline.
Airborne troops, glidermen and paratroopers plugged
gaps in the line with courage and M-1 rifles.
During the campaign in the canal-divided lowlands,
hard-hitting Eagle paratroopers and glidermen again met a
reorganized Normandy foe, the German 6th Parachute Regt.
This crack German unit fared no better than before, sustaining
heavy casualties which forced its early removal from the
101st sector.
Following this behind-the-enemy-lines "Airborne phase,"
the 101st moved to an area which soon became known to
troops as the "Island." This strip of land was located between
the Nederijn and Waal Rivers with Arnhem to the north,
Nijmegen to the south.
Within 24 hours Germans struck from the west, slamming
their 957th Regt. hard against the Airborne wall. Told it
was opposing a handful of isolated Allied parachutists,
hungry and without adequate weapons, the Nazi regiment
attacked, confidently and swiftly.
The assault was absorbed by the depth of the 101st defense.
The enemy was stunned at the savage reception accorded
him by the "handful of Allied parachutists, hungry and without
adequate weapons." Doggedly, the Germans drove -- into
destruction. Soon, the 957th Regt. ceased to exist as a
fighting tactical unit.
But the savage warfare wasn't over. Germans reorganized
battered elements and the 958th Regt. arrived the next day to
join its faltering fellow regiment. German artillery and
armor supported a fresh attack. By nightfall, the Eagle
battalion occupying Opheusden, focal point of the German effort
for three days of fanatical fighting, withdrew to a defensive
line east of the town.
Opheusden changed hands several times. Either attacking
or withdrawing, skillful Eagle sky-fighters inflicted
tremendous losses on the 363rd Div., now completely assembled
with the 959th Inf. Regt., 363rd Arty. Regt. and its engineer
and fusilier battalions in the fold. Airborne soldiers
eventually captured the town, blasted retreating and thoroughly
beaten Germans completely out of the Airborne sector.
Order of Battle records of enemy killed, wounded and
captured provide mute testimony to the destruction of the
German division. In its reorganized Volksgrenadier status,
the once-proud 363rd Inf. Div. lasted exactly 10 days in the
claws of the Screaming Eagles.
The patrol crossed the Rhine in a rubber boat at night, and
following a number of narrow escapes, reached an
observation point on the Arnhem-Utrecht highway, eight miles
behind enemy lines. After relaying information back to
the division by radio, the patrol captured a number of German
prisoners who gave additional data on units, emplacements
and movement in the area.
Moving out next day, the six-man team nabbed a German
truckload of SS troops, including a battalion commander.
When the truck bogged down, patrol and PWs,
now numbering 31, walked to the river, then crossed over to the
American-held bank.
Early in November, the division was relieved in Holland
and once again returned to a base camp, this time in France.
Screaming Eagles paused for a breather. But it was brief
because Eagle troops are not accustomed to resting. Since
their activation they have been continually training,
maneuvering -- and now fighting.
Maj. Gen. William Carey Lee, "Father of Airborne Troops,"
was the first Commanding General of the Screaming Eagles.
After guiding the division through the difficult training period,
a heart ailment a few months prior to the Normandy D-Day
prevented him from realizing his ambition to lead the unit
into combat.
Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Chief of Staff, then Artillery
Commander of the 82nd A/B Div. with which he fought the
Mediterranean campaign in 1943, succeeded Gen. Lee.
Brig. Gen. Don F. Pratt was Asst. Division Commander until
June 6, 1944, when he was killed while leading the glider
echelon into Normandy.
Brig. Gen. Gerald J. Higgins, current Asst. Division
Commander, at 34, is the youngest ground force general in the
Army. Gen. Higgins, who entered West Point from the ranks,
has been the Asst. Chief of Staff G-3 and Chief of Staff in the
division.
Col. William N. Gillmore, Ft. Knox, Ky., succeeded Gen.
McAuliffe as Division Artillery commander when the latter
took over the 103rd Inf. Div.
BASTOGNE: "THE HOLE IN THE DOUGHNUT"
The situation was tense. Many American units had been
overrun, others were staggering under the unexpected power
of the Wehrmacht blow, The 101st was ordered to move
within 12 hours.
Clerks, draftsmen and typists hurriedly were awakened.
In the dim early morning hours, division, regiment and
battalion headquarters personnel raced to ready maps and
vital information needed by the first groups before departure.
Gen. Taylor was in Washington on urgent War Department
business. Gen. McAuliffe was in command.
Fighting men awoke at dawn. In some cases it was
"Be ready to leave in four hours!" Others had more time.
It was incredible yet true. The well-deserved rest of
the 101st was short. Men were needed. All fighting
equipment had been turned in, so Division supply room doors
now swung open: "Take what you need and be sure you
have enough. No forms to sign -- no red tape -- help yourself!"
Every man quickly found equipment to transform him from a
"resting" soldier back to a veteran ready for combat.
German objectives were Liege, Namur, across the Meuse
to Antwerp. The plan which sent speeding Panzer columns
westward along Belgium's highways called for capture of
Bastogne, vital hub of a communication network of seven
highways, three railroads. Seizure of Bastogne was imperative
to insure development of the German attack. Without the
city, Germans could hardly hope to succeed.
The 101st rolled to Bastogne in huge carrier trucks.
Re-routing sometimes was necessary, but by 2100 a considerable
number of men already had arrived at temporary Division
Headquarters near the town.
As they made their "jump" from the carrier trucks, an
Airborne man told a driver: "Wait outside. We'll finish this
thing off in a hurry and be right back." With that spirit,
Screaming Eagles entered Bastogne at dawn the following
morning.
Gen. McAuliffe's order to Lt. Col. Julian Ewell, Ft. Benning,
Ga., 501st Parachute Inf. CO, was, "Attack to the east and
develop the situation."
Shortly after 0900, Dec. 18, contact was made near a small
town east of Bastogne, and leading German elements met
their first organized resistance, took a bad mauling.
During these first confused hours the Medical Company
and attached surgical teams were captured west of Bastogne
by German armor. Loss of these units was a severe blow
to the division.
By noon of the following day, 36 hours after the alert, the
division established its headquarters in Bastogne and units
set up a circular defense of the town.
For 24 hours swift-moving German armor and infantry
slammed against Bastogne defenses from the east. Each time
they were repulsed with heavy losses. Nazis suffered
additional grief everywhere they contacted Airborne units.
German commanders maneuvered, deciding on a double
envelopment from north and south. They had had enough
of attacking from the east.
To consolidate lines, the 506th withdrew from Noville on
the north while the 502nd occupied Recogne with the support
of four TDs. CC R of the 9th and CC B of the 10th Armd. Div.,
attached to the 101st, repulsed all enemy attempts to break
through. Although foggy weather and poor visibility helped
them, Germans still were unable to crack the vital road junction
town of Bastogne.
Everyone was excited about the American hole in the
doughnut -- everyone except the 101st. Its fighting men were
accustomed to such a situation, expected in any Airborne
operation.
The Germans knowing that continuance of their offensive
depended on seizure of Bastogne, attacked the complete
circle to find a breakthrough point. Field artillery units
fought head-on tank advances with point blank artillery and
small arms fire. Fog continued to aid German infiltrating
attempts. The 705th TD, a crack outfit in any man's army,
tore out of its central position time after time to destroy
attacking armor.
German artillery concentrated on trying to rid Bastogne
of the tenacious 101st. On Friday, a new technique was
employed. Under cover of a white flag, two German officers
entered Allied lines and offered a "Surrender or be
annihilated in two hours" ultimatum.
Gen. McAuliffe wasted neither time nor words. He sent
back the famous answer, with which every soldier was in
accord: "Nuts."
The German officer receiving the reply was confused -- "I
do not understand 'Nuts'." Col. Harper, who handed him
the General's reply, quickly explained... "It means to go
to hell."
Refusal to surrender meant the enemy might carry out its
threat to throw in every available artillery piece. As Gen.
McAuliffe said: "They can't have much more than they have
already thrown at us. Let it come."
It came. But the 101st stuck. Bastogne held firm.
Here and there outer lines sagged. German tanks were
allowed to infiltrate, infantry following behind were cut to
ribbons by Eagle soldiers. Tanks also were given a rousing
reception by Airborne doughs and their bazookas, by anti-tank
gunners and by tank destroyers. During the siege,
148 tanks and 26 half-tracks were knocked out -- positive
indication of the importance Germans attached to the taking
of Bastogne.
Nazis throw both book and bookcase at Bastogne: armor,
infantry, parachutists, Luftwaffe. Night after night, bombers
searched out Airborne troopers. Hospitals and troop quarters
were hit. Low-flying dive bombers and heavy artillery
were unpleasant and damaging but not unbearable. The
101st stayed on.
Complete encirclement of Bastogne placed the division
squarely behind the eight-ball for supplies. Airborne artillery
long had been accustomed to giving more than it took.
Shells now had to be rationed. Artillery waited "to see the
whites of plenty of eyes" before letting go.
Food became scarce. Screaming Eagles sought clear skies -- flying
weather not only for air re-supply, but for planes
to keep the Luftwaffe down.
Evacuation of wounded became a pressing problem. But
they had to wait -- there was no way out of the doughnut.
Reports circulated daily that the 4th Armd. Div. was on its
way to open a road.
Mutual confidence characterized the vicious battle
preceding the junction of the 4th and the 101st. Airborne troopers
hoped that armor would crack open a path for movement of
supplies and evacuation of wounded: the 4th knew that
sky-fighters would still be there, killing Germans.
It was cold -- freezing cold. Blankets were draped about
the wounded. Somewhere, somehow, medicine was found
to ease their pain. Hospitals were jammed, floors covered
with casualties.
Then, the weather began to clear.
Supply bundles floating to the ground were the prettiest
sight Eagle soldiers had seen in many days. As planes
droned overhead, shouts and cheers went up from the men
below. Trucks, jeeps, trailers and men crowded the fields
a few hundred yards from Division Headquarters in the race
to reach the bundles.
Every man knew that the arrival of these first planes had
broken the German back. Now 101st troopers could go on,
supplied by their comrades of the Airborne Troop Carrier
forces of the First Allied Airborne Army.
Germans attacked again in force the day before Christmas.
But it was different now. Throughout the day, hundreds of
P-47s roared overhead. In fours and fives, fighter-planes
sought out enemy tank and infantry positions. They left
burning vehicles and equipment about the perimeter.
Radio-phone reports "tanks knocked out" weren't necessary.
The 101st had front-row seats.
Christmas Eve, Gen. McAuliffe sent the following message
to the fighting men of the 101st:
What's merry about all this, you ask? We're
fighting -- it's cold -- we aren't home. All true, but
what has the proud Eagle Division accomplished with
its worthy comrades of the 10th Armored Division,
the 705th Tank Destroyer Battalion and all the rest?
Just this: we have stopped cold everything that has
been thrown at us from the north, east, southwest.
We have identifications from four German Panzer
Divisions, two German Infantry Divisions and one
German Parachute Division. These units, spearheading
the last desperate German lunge, were headed
straight west for key points when the Eagle Division
was hurriedly ordered to stem the advance. How
effectively this was done will be written in history;
not alone in our division's glorious history but in world
history. The Germans actually did surround us, their
radios blared our doom. Their Commander demanded
our surrender in the following impudent arrogance:
"The fortune of war is changing. This time the
U.S.A. forces near Bastogne have been encircled by
strong German armored units. More German armored
units have crossed the River Ourthe near Ortheuville,
have taken Marche and reached St. Hubert by
passing through Homores-Sibret-Tillet. Libramont is in
German hands.
"There is only one possibility to save the encircled
U.S.A. troops from total annihilation: that is the
honorable surrender of the encircled town. In order to
think it over, a term of two hours will be granted
beginning with the presentation of this note.
"If this proposal should be rejected, one German
Artillery Corps and six heavy A.A. Battalions are ready
to annihilate the U.S.A. troops in and near Bastogne.
The order for firing will be given immediately after
this two hour's term.
"All the serious civilian losses caused by this artillery
fire would not correspond with the well-known
American humanity."
The German Commander received the following reply:
NUTS!
Allied Troops are counter-attacking in force. We
continue to hold Bastogne. By holding Bastogne we
assure the success of the Allied Armies. We know
that our Division Commander, General Taylor, will
say: "Well done!"
We are giving our country and our loved ones at
home a worthy Christmas present and being privileged
to take part in this gallant feat of arms are truly making
for ourselves a Merry Christmas.
Close fighter-bomber support helped to erase a large
number of German tanks as pyres marked the trail of diving
planes. Christmas night, additional attempts were made
to bomb Division Headquarters. Constant shelling and
bombings reduced the town to rubble.
The rumble of tank fire heralded the approach of
the 4th Armd. Div. At 1715, Dec. 26, first elements of the division
contacted outposts of the 101st.
Minutes later, the gallant Bastogne wounded were evacuated
in a long convoy of trucks and ambulances. The 101st
maintained contact with the enemy and held firm the same
territory it had taken on arriving in the area. Gen. Taylor,
having flown back to the battle zone from Washington, resumed
command with Gen. McAuliffe's assurance that the 101st was
"ready for offensive action."
One of many congratulatory messages arriving at headquarters
read:
All ranks first Canadian Army have watched with
admiration the magnificent manner in which their
friends of the 101st U. S. Airborne Division have
fought it out with the enemy around Bastogne. Our
high regards and congratulations.
And from Maj. Gen. Troy H. Middleton. commanding
VIII Corps:
Dear General Taylor:
While this office has recommended that the 101st
Airborne Division be cited in official War Department
orders for its magnificent stand at Bastogne, Belgium,
I feel that I would be remiss in my duty and appreciation
without further words on the subject.
I desire to take this means of expressing to you and
all members of your splendid command my personal
appreciation for the superior manner in which the
division conducted itself in the action at Bastogne.
Without the will and determination of the 101st Airborne
Division to stop the superior forces of the German
Army thrown against it, there would be a chapter
written in history different from the one which will appear...
For 22 additional days, Screaming Eagles held Bastogne as
Third Army troops fought their way abreast of the
"doughnut." Germans made their last and greatest effort to break
the defenses in an all-out attack against the sectors of the 502nd
and 327th. These regiments, formed into a task force under
Brig. Gen, G.J. Higgins, beat off the assault, inflicting heavy
losses. The division passed to the offensive Jan. 9 and took
Noville and Bourcy as its contribution to the advance on
Houffalize and final liquidation of the German salient.
At ceremonies in Bastogne's bomb and artillery battered
town square Jan. 18, five members of the division were awarded
Silver Stars, and the mayor presented Gen. Taylor the
flag of Bastogne.
Reviewing troops after the ceremony, Gen. Middleton, Gen.
Taylor and assembled staff officers stood beneath a sign high
on the wall of a shell-scarred building. The sign, posted at
the junction of four main roads leading into Bastogne, tells
the story of the siege in a few simple words. It reads:
This is Bastogne, Bastion of the
Battered
Bastards of the 101st Airborne Division.
These were the words of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Supreme Commander, in awarding the Presidential
Citation to the heroes of Bastogne, the 101st A/B Division. This
is what the citation said:
"The 101st Airborne Division and attached units
distinguished themselves in combat against powerful
and aggressive enemy forces composed of elements
of eight German divisions during the period from Dec.
18 to Dec. 27, 1944, by extraordinary heroism and
gallantry in defense of the key communications center
of Bastogne, Belgium...
"This masterful and grimly determined defense
denied the enemy even momentary success in an operation
for which he paid dearly in men, material and
eventually morale. The outstanding courage and
resourcefulness and undaunted determination of this
gallant force are in keeping with the highest traditions
of the service."
This in one of a series of G.I. Stories of the Ground, Air
and Service Forces in the European Theater of Operations,
issued by the Stars and Stripes, a publication of the Information
and Education Division, ETOUSA... Major General Maxwell
D. Taylor, commanding the 101st Airborne Division, lent his
cooperation. Basic material was supplied to the editors by his staff.
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