Photos, Articles, & Research on the European Theater in World War II
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This is one of a series of G.I. Stories of the Ground, Air and Service Forces in the European Theater of Operations, to
be issued by the Stars and Stripes, a publication of the Information and Education Division, Special and Information
Services, ETOUSA... Major General Lunsford E. Oliver, commanding the 5th Armored Division, lent his cooperation to the
preparation of the pamphlet, and basic material was supplied to the editors by his staff.
Obviously this booklet can do little
more than highlight the military miracles performed by the men of the 5th Armored Division
in their fighting drive to and into Germany. The countless deeds of individual
heroism, the many inspiring examples of devotion to duty and the willing, cheerful
spirit shown, by all of you can never be written.
It is in the hearts of your fighting
companions—those men with whom you have shared the triumphs and despairs
of this war—that your glory will be remembered forever.
The Story Of The 5th Armored Division
"V" FOR FIFTH AND VICTORY
Word flashed from Col. John T. Cole's
CC B (Combat Command B) to division, to army, to the world. The Reich
border had been cracked. Initial patrols to cross the Our River into Germany
were units from the 81st Tank Bn. and 85th Cavalry Recon. Sqdn.
Other patrols followed to prepare for
the grinding armored thrust of Col. Glenn H. Anderson's CC R which was
later to drive completely through the German's western defense line. Brig. Gen.
Eugene A. Regnier's CC A was in ready reserve.
The Victory Division lays claim to being
the first able to send the historic message—Americans were fighting on
German soil. The Victory Division had crashed into Germany after an 800-mile
fast-fighting drive through France, Belgium and Luxembourg.
A XV Corps field order read: "This advance is
to be pursued with the utmost energy inasmuch as on its success may hinge the
success of the whole campaign in western France."
Fifth Armored tanks already were rolling
swiftly southward through the newly-made gap between Coutances and St. Lo, across
the Selune River and down to Vitre—a hundred miles of congested narrow roads
and familiar Normandy hedgerows. The approach march began Aug. 2, after the
division stripped for action during a hectic week at its assembly area near
St. Sauveur le Vicomte.
Lt. Col. Kent Fay's 85th Cavalry Recon. Sqdn.
streaked south to reconnoiter routes and search out possible enemy positions. Although
resistance was light, the squadron encountered strong delaying action at
Cosse le Vivien. After several fire fights Aug. 6, the enemy withdrew. Next day
the highway from Laval to Le Mans was clear.
Thus began the 5th Armored's spectacular 300-mile
exploitation behind the German Seventh Army. Thus ended Gen. Gunther Von Kluge's hopes
of stopping the Allied onrush.
In the second week of action, 5th Armored's hard-riding
tankers and mounted infantrymen encircled and captured Le Mans. Tough German rear guards
and scattered units were pushed north to the main body of the German Army fighting a losing
battle against British and Canadians below Caen.
As the division pushed through to Argentan and Gace,
Canadians from above broke through to Falaise. The now-famous Falaise trap was sprung. Artillery
and fighter bombers pulverized the Germans in their wild eastward flight through the narrow
gap. Result: one badly squeezed German Army was written off within a few days. Higher
authorities acclaimed the action as the first large scale exploitation made behind
enemy lines by a full armored division.
In the first half of the operation, all three combat commands
catapulted through Coutances, Gavray, Ducey and Fougeres. At Vitre they swung east toward
Le Mans. CC A raced to cut the Paris highway northeast of the city, CC R blocked
the roads south. Germans fled as CC B entered Le Mans Aug. 9. The 79th Inf. Div.
followed to mop up.
When CC A swung around Le Mans, Lt. Marvin W. Orgill
of Co. B, 34th Tank Bn., changed tanks three times rather than stop for ammunition.
At Chemire sur Sarthe, Lt. Col. William Hamburg's task
force routed the enemy, captured a warehouse laden with supplies intended for the 2nd SS Panzer Div. An
81st Tank Bn. platoon led by S/Sgt. Field Morrow Kling, later commissioned a second lieutenant, left
six burning Germans tanks in Meslay du Maine. Battle was at such close quarters a German tank
rammed Kling's
When CC A paused in Savigne l'Évêque, six German
personnel carriers and a volkswagen rode headlong into the column. Engineers riddled surprised
enemy from half-tracks.
Steel-tipped forces of the 5th Armored now pointed
north to Argentan. Two combat commands sped to the Orne River, started bridging that
night. Next morning CC A forces crossed near Ballon and CC R at Marolles. Now
Sees was the objective.
Resistance stiffened. Both task forces of CC A ran
into German tanks, artillery and anti-tank guns north of the river. Lt. Col. Thomas B. Bartel's
task force pushed through the Germans at Dangeul. Lt. Col. William H. Burton's task force
was heavily engaged at Nonans, its advance guard cut off by three 88s and infantry. Quick,
accurate fire from the 47th Armd. FA, the 46th Armd. Inf.'s assault guns and 81mm. mortars
ended the threat. When the Burton force reassembled that evening, it struck a German motor
pool and destroyed 30 vehicles.
At Mortree, Lt. Richard J. Monihan of the 46th dashed
to rescue a wounded man from a knocked-out tank. While Lt. Monihan stood on the tank pulling
him out, a second direct hit threw both to the ground. But the lieutenant carried the
tanker 300 yards through machine gun fire to safety, firing his carbine with one
hand, killing two Germans on the way. Rushing for medical aid he captured 13 more. Lt. Monihan
became the first 5th Armored man to be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.
Co. A, 34th Tank Bn., commanded by Capt.
Richard E. Biederman, pushed the point of the column to Argentan and by midnight Aug. 12
was in the outskirts, its artillery shells thundering into the city.
Meanwhile, CC R overpowered stubborn enemy
forces to cut a path to the north at CC A's right. At the Orne, artillery and infiltrating
enemy threatened Col. Anderson's headquarters. Counterattacks threatened the CC R
crossings. All were repulsed. CC B came up to take the river line, CC R headed
north for Sees.
With the help of fighter-bombers and artillery, Lt. Col.
Howard E. Boyer's task force dispersed German armor at Essai to win its first decisive
battle.
CC R by-passed Sees Aug. 12, fought German rear
guards to the northeast. CC A was similarly engaged northwest of Sees. Despite heavy
anti-tank and artillery resistance and the first minefield encountered, by nightfall two
task forces of CC R blocked main highway junctions south of Le Pin au Haras and Gace.
The lower jaw of the Falaise trap snapped shut
Aug. 13. CC A was ordered to establish defensive positions south of Argentan. CC R
stood off counterattacks below Gace. Forces of the 85th outposted Courtomer and Moulins le Marche,
patrolled northeast to Laigle. CC R blocked the roadnet east of Argentan. The
2nd French Armd. Div. cut the highway from the west.
Lt. Col. Thomas R. Bartel was wounded outside Argentan and
Maj. Glenn Foote took over the 34th Tank Bn.
Artillery and planes had a field day breaking the spine
of the German Seventh Army as it streamed backward through the trap.
The Eure-Seine Campaigns
"V" SPRINGS A TRAP FOR NAZIS
CC B drew the assignment of capturing Dreux. CC R was
to cut off the city from the north and protect the division's exposed flank. CC A was
in reserve.
Col. Cole's tanks and infantry, Maj. Tony Giorlando's
task forces leading, raced toward Dreux Aug. 16. They came under a hail of fire
from
With Dreux liberated, the Victory Division turned
north to batter Seventh Army remnants streaming toward the Seine. Paris lay only 50 miles
to the east.
But all hopes of Paris were laid aside as the division
pursued its objective—the high ground at Heudebouville near the junction of the Eure
and Seine Rivers. CC A and CC B marched abreast up the narrow corridor between the
two rivers. CC R and the 85th protected the Eure flank and the rear. Artillery pounded
all possible Seine crossings.
It was as though the division crunched a giant
nutcracker on the enemy as he fought to escape the trap and cross the Seine before
Paris and all northern France fell to the Allies.
CC R seized the heights west of Anet Aug. 19, bloodily
smashed an attacking German infantry battalion supported by artillery, counterattacked at Ivry. The
enemy suffered heavy losses there and at Pacy where massed artillery fire shattered a tank
concentration.
CC A engineer patrols reconnoitered for Seine crossings
on the 20th and next day CC B patrols found Vernon vacated by its German garrison. These
and bridgehead forces of the 79th Inf. Div. were among the first Allied troops to reach the
Seine. River operations were nothing new to old running mates like the 5th Armored and
79th Inf. They had fought many knotty problems along the Cumberland River during Tennessee
maneuvers the year before. They were teamed, too, under XV Corps, for the Normandy operations
that first put their Tennessee training to practical use.
Capt. James W. Ray's advance guard by-passed the
village and reached St. Vincent des Bois. During the night Germans slipped into the
two-mile gap separating Capt. Ray's force and the main body. Lt. Col. Burton
was wounded the next morning while leading a strong reconnaissance in an attempt
to rejoin the two elements. However, the 46th Armd Inf. Bn. CO refused medical attention
and exposed himself again to enemy fire to radio instructions to his forces. Then the
advance guard and main body attacked simultaneously from north and south, wiping out all
resistance at La Heuniere.
The 46th had four commanders before the day was out.
Lt. Col. Scott M. Case, CC A executive officer, who took over when Lt. Col. Burton was
evacuated, was wounded at Mercey in the afternoon. Then Maj. Jack B. Day took charge until
Lt. Col. Kenneth P. Gilson assumed command that night. When Lt. Col. Burton returned on
the 28th, Lt. Col. Gilson was given command of the 15th Armd. Inf.
CC A and CC B combined to smash a strong defensive force in
wheat fields north of Champenard Aug. 22. Task Force Day attacked from the village, at the
head of CC A. Lt. Col. LeRoy H. Andercon's task force of CC B cut across from
the right. Artillery flushed two tank from the area and P-47s swooped down to destroy them. Tanks
of Co. C, 81st, sprayed grain shocks with murderous fire and infantrymen of Co. C,
15th, dropped grenades in foxholes and mopped up with rifles and bayonets. Bodies
of 200 SS infantrymen were counted later.
The battle raged north as CC A approached
Heudebouville. Artillery and planes hammered German tank forces, supply trains, and
other columns heading for the Seine. CC A's engineers and "married" B Cos.—tank
and infantry companies working together—under Capt. Robert T. Bland on the
night of the 23rd drove a strong enemy force off the hill at Fontaine Bellanger, only
a mile below the objective.
Three forces closed in on Heudebouville next day.
Maj. Giorlando's task force, attached to CC B, attacked from the left, captured
Ingremare. Maj. Joseph W. Boxley's tanks and infantry drove in from the south.
Capt. Bland's force completed the liberation of Fontaine Bellanger and eased
into Heudebouville without opposition at 1830 hours.
The reconnaissance squadron took over in the
Heudebouville-Vernon area on the 25th, and CC A and CC B moved to an area
near Mantes for intensive maintenance work and rest. For them, it was the first lull in
operations.
However, CC R was still in action after crossing
the Mauldre River at Beynes, 12 miles west of Versailles. There Col. Anderson assembled
his force on the night of Aug. 24 without a loss despite German interdicting
fire and at least 100 rounds of armor piercing shells. Next day the command closed in
to the south bank of the Seine to outpost the area between Les Mureaux and Poissy.
The Eure-Seine campaign was at an end. Once again
5th Armored had struck a mighty blow at the enemy. From Mantes down the Seine to Louviers and
from there up to the Eure to Dreux lay the charred wreckage of German armor and the grave of
many a German soldier.
Corps Commander Maj. Gen. Wade H. Haislip, in
turn, commended the 5th Armd. Div. in these words addressed to Gen. Oliver: "I desire
personally to thank you and every member of your command for the splendid accomplishment
of every task assigned. Your achievement as a first class fighting division is playing a
large part in the liquidation of the German Army which is our eventual goal. My best wishes
to you and your command for continued success."
While 5th Armored men changed tank motors and reconditioned
equipment as they paused near Mantes, the 4th Inf. Div. and the 2nd French Armored completed
the liberation of Paris that civilian patriots had started a few days before.
A hard first month of combat had paid big rewards
for the three years of training in the U.S. and England.
Officers and men who were the cadre of the division
trained at Knox until Feb. 16, 1942, and then moved to newly completed Camp Cooke, Calif.
Inductees who arrived during March and April brought the division to full strength.
The division left Camp Cooke Aug. 8 for eastern
California where it trained in open tank tactics on the vast Mojave desert. Desert maneuvers
over, the division returned to garrison training at Cooke Nov. 23.
Gen. Heard was transferred from the division, and Maj. Gen.
Lansford E. Oliver took command March 2, 1943. Gen. Oliver came as an officer experienced
in armored warfare as fought in World War II. Shortly before he had returned from
North Africa where he led Combat Command B of the 1st Armd. Div. in the initial invasion
of Oran and the drive east into Tunisia.
For his successful campaign in Tunisia, Gen. Oliver was
promoted to major general, awarded the Distinguished Service Medal, and returned home to
command a division.
Two weeks after Gen. Oliver assumed command the division went
east for maneuvers in Tennessee. In July 1943 it moved to Pine Camp in northern New York.
Dec. 6 the division made another move—to Indiantown Gap
Military Reservation. Here the men completed unit combat tests, received pre-overseas furloughs
and on receipt of movement orders moved to a staging camp.
Men of the 5th Armd. Div. walked up the gangplank in
New York Feb. 10, 1944, and Feb. 24 they walked down the gangplank in England. They went
immediately into training at Camps Chiseldon, Ogbourne-St. George and Tidworth-Perham Downes, all
in Wiltshire.
In April there came a new job for the division. Its men were
called on to operate hundreds of camps and hotels in Cornwall and Devonshire. There they serviced
First Army troops as they embarked for the invasion of France.
When their charges left England's shores for the invasion
of the continent, 5th Armored men returned to their tanks and guns and bivouacked in
Wiltshire. There they made their own final preparations for combat. On July 22 the division
moved to its assigned marshalling points and the following day embarked for France and
the job for which it had been preparing nearly three years.
Belgium, Luxembourg Liberated
ACROSS THE MEUSE, PAST SEDAN
The march through Paris was no sightseeing tour—it was the
start of an incredibly swift drive to the Belgian border, 130 miles north.
Smashing through enemy rear guards and attempted ambushes, the
push overtook many German forces that had fled Paris. Resistance was strong from the very outskirts
of the city, where 5th Armored forces pushed through the 4th and 28th Divs. Lt. Col. Fay was killed
at Rully while leading one of his reconnaissance troops in an armored car.
Led by CC R, the division cut through historic Compiegne Forest,
crossed the Oise and Aisne Rivers, then the Somme. Columns sped forward toward Belgium so rapidly
that most of the reconnaissance was done by artillery liaison planes.
For leading that column more than 70 miles Sept. 2,
Gen. Oliver was decorated with the Silver Star by Maj. Gen. L. T. Gerow, commander of First Army's
V Corps, to which 5th Armored was attached.
By midnight the division was at Conde on the Belgian
border. More than 500 prisoners, 70 two-horse teams and several saddle horses were captured. Most
of the enemy's vehicles already had been destroyed by the division in its three-day drive.
On Sept. 4 new orders sent the Victory Division racing
another 100 miles to the Meuse River, advancing southeast below the Belgian border. Its
mission: to cross the Meuse at Sedan and Charleville.
The Meuse River and Sedan, names already familiar to war
and its history, now stood for a new delaying defense line as the Wehrmacht hastily retraced
its once-victorious steps of four years before. The 100 miles between the 5th and the Meuse
were defended only by road blocks and blown bridges. The biggest threat was the first
gasoline shortage to confront the division after its long, fast marches and extended supply
lines. Fuel soon caught up with the columns and the division raced on.
CC R dashed 96 miles to the edge of Charleville in
one day, Sept. 5, and with barely a pause for breath began to locate river crossing sites
that night. For the first bridgehead, Cos. B and C, 47th Inf., crossed a partly destroyed
dam. Covering the crossing were Hq. Co. mortars and assault guns, tank guns of the
10th Tank Bn. and 105s. of the attached 196th FA.
Turning south, CC R ripped through to Sedan to liberate
the city. CC A established a bridgehead at Pont Maugin south of Sedan where a flat
river plain offered no protection against intense enemy fire from high ground around
Bazeilles. The battle raged through the night of Sept. 5. Next day CC A captured
the heights and completed the bridge. On the 7th, the 28th Inf. Div. started clearing
the way eastward.
The Meuse behind, 5th Armored now lashed out toward
Germany. Nearest border of the Reich was along the Moselle-Saur-Our Rivers 100 miles east
of Sedan across a corner of Belgium and the small Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. Routes
traversed wooded hills with many dangerous defiles, roads that had been made treacherous
by enemy blocks and demolitions.
A combat team of the 28th Div. passed through CC A
and advanced to the south and east from Sedan to the Belgian border near Thonne-le-Thil. From
there CC A again took the lead on Sept. 9, plunging through 20 miles of Belgium
to Aubange and Athus to enter Luxembourg at the village of Petange and fight to within five
miles of the City of Luxembourg.
On a parallel route to the north, CC R was lancing
through Florenville, Tintigny and Flabay la Neuve into central Luxembourg at Useldange. Supporting
fighter planes viciously attacked the enemy, sometimes as close as 100 yards in front
of CC R forces. Planes left 40 German vehicles burning near Illy.
CC A met stubborn resistance that day from Germans
concentrated in Luxembourg for a last delaying defense before the Siegfried Line. Near
Virton, CC A troops overtook a German supply train, destroyed 10 trucks, 25 horse
carts and many horses. At Athus they overran a German bicycle force, nabbed 50 prisoners. Just
inside Luxembourg they pushed through a hail of small arms fire from behind a railroad train
and from houses along the road.
On another main road just north of CC A's route, an
enemy armored column entering the City of Luxembourg lost two tanks and 30 vehicles to CC A's
artillery and air support. Elsewhere fighter planes destroyed 10 Kraut tanks
and 40 vehicles.
On the open country just west of the city, CC A was
halted by a strong force of German tanks and anti-tank guns that opened fire from well-protected
positions. TDs, artillery and planes slowly forced the German armor into the open and destroyed
five Panther tanks. The enemy withdrew into Luxembourg. CC A regrouped in front of the
city, preparing to enter the next morning.
During the fighting march through Belgium and Luxembourg
that day, Prince Felix of Luxembourg accompanied the division, most of the time up front
with the fighting elements of CC A's column. Having been an exile for four years and
four months with the reigning Grand Duchess Charlotte, the Prince was seeing his realm for the
first time since the Nazi occupation. In his British brigadier's field uniform, he passed
through Luxembourg in a peep and was given a rousing welcome home by villagers near the
division CP.
The city was entered with little opposition on Sept. 10.
Maj. Foote commanded the advance guard, which included Cos. A and D, 34th, and a platoon
each of TDs and engineers. Teller mines had been laid at the big highway bridge over the railroad
at the city's entrance but were tossed aside by Lt. Leonard Hamer, a 22nd Armd. Engr. Bn.
officer, and Lt. Thomas Grose, aide to Gen. Regnier.
Liberation of all Luxembourg was completed the next two days
as 5th Armored tankers, infantry and supporting artillery cleaned out German rear guards and fanned
out along the border just across the river from the Siegfried Line. CC A drove east from
the capital through heavy resistance. An artillery concentration cleared the eastern heights
of enemy troops, but as they withdrew they replied with a few shells aimed at towers of
the city. The celebrating populace scurried to shelter.
A second concentration from guns of the 47th and
400th FA Bns. cleared the woods north of Hamm as CC A continued east. At Neudorf Airport, the
leading task force took a hard blow from the enemy. Well concealed anti-tank guns knocked out
the first four tanks of Co. A, 34th, advance guard and a Tiger tank opened fire on
dismounted infantry.
Gen. Regnier, Maj. Foote and Lt. Grose, who had been with
the lead tank, and two infantry squads under Lt. Donald H. Coulter were cut off from the
column. While their own forces strafed, bombed and shelled the area, they found shelter in nearby
buildings.
Lt. Coulter, Sgt. Alfred M. Maffei and Pvt. Arthur H. Gibble
advanced, routing the German tanks with a bazooka. Gen. Regnier's column reformed and stopped
for the night while artillery continued to blast the enemy.
On Sept. 11 and 12, CC A pushed east in two columns
to Hemstal, 10 miles from the border. On the left a combat team of the 28th Div. came
up behind Task Force Burton and the latter dashed up to Junglister to capture the powerful
five-towered Radio Luxembourg transmitter by night on the 11th.
Undefended by retreating Germans, the station was taken
intact. T/Sgt. Mitchell S. Janowicz of the 46th was the first to enter the station, second
only to Radio Moscow among the most powerful European stations.
CC A now embarked on the mission of defending the
Grand Duchy on a wide front from Bollendorf on the Saur River south along the Saur and
Moselle Rivers. Strong German forces maintained bridgeheads on the west bank. To counter
infiltrating enemy patrols, CC A outposted and patrolled the area, later was joined by
two battalions of the 28th's Combat Team 112 and by the 85th Recon. Sqdn.
Meanwhile, CC R and CC B had advanced against lighter
resistance through central and northern Luxembourg to the German border along the
Our River. CC B shot to the north of Diekirch and sent patrols to the border
Sept. 10.
At Mersch, midway between the capital and Diekirch, the
47th Inf. of CC R pursued a fleeing German force. A patrol arrived at the Mersch bridge
over the Alzette just as it was blown, but forced back the Germans before they could demolish
the nearby railroad bridge. It was there that Capt. Charles Perlman and his engineers
removed two truckloads of explosives under enemy fire, then laid planking across the tracks
so the force could continue its smashing drive to the border. At about the same time
the "married" Cos. C crossed the Alzette at Pettingen, north of Mersch, and overtook
a large German column just after an attack by fighter planes. Eighty-seven German vehicles
were captured or destroyed in a hour.
The Victory Division's hard-hitting forces had overrun
the entire Grand Duchy in short order. Facing them now was the pillbox-studded Siegfried Line
on steep heights just across Luxembourg's river boundaries.
Germany and the Siegfried Line
THE "OUR" IS A RIVER TO CROSS
Although the line of pillboxes was not penetrated by these
patrols, they learned the defenses were manned by light forces, armed only with machine guns and
small caliber anti-tank weapons. Strong German counter patrols put up fight and the enemy began building
his strength in mortar and light artillery fire. Steep hills, mud and defiles hampered medium tanks.
CC R reassembled opposite Wallendorf, prepared to force a crossing
and plough through the Siegfried Line toward Bitburg and Trier. This would be more than a test of the
enemy's strength; it was planned as a large-scale diversion aimed at drawing a big German force
into the fight while the main penetration was made near Aachen.
In the two days preceding CC R's assault on Sept. 14,
practically all artillery of the division, including the 628th TD and 387th AA Bns., fired
across the river into pillboxes. At 1400 hours Sept. 12 a concentration of direct fire was delivered
by tanks of the 10th Tank Bn. and assault guns of the 47th Inf. No fire was returned from Germany.
At 1100 on the 14th, CC R, strengthened by the 400th and
95th FA Bns., started crossing the Our at Wallendorf. Picked 155mm. gun crews of the 987th FA fired
in direct support against opposing pillboxes and enemy forces.
Engineer-infantry assault teams forded the Saur River at Reisdorf
and advanced to the Our junction at Wallendorf. Small arms fire pinned them down before they
could seize the high ground above the village. CC R tanks forded the river, sheltering the
infantry and spraying the village with machine gun fire.
At noon Sept. 14 the two CC R task forces lashed out toward
the heights beyond the Siegfried Line; 28 hours later they stood on Hill 407, the last of the
pillboxes behind them. Increasing artillery and aggressive tank resistance from the German defenders
had barely slowed CC R tanks and infantry.
Assault teams worked up the hill, cleaning out heavy concrete
pillboxes to make way for oncoming tanks. Although glare from the burning village below dangerously
illuminated CC R's exposed position, that first night Col. Anderson's men captured 250 Germans and
killed many others in their advance.
Krauts were blasted out of fortifications, but the pillboxes withstood
the heaviest fire from CC R's guns. Until engineers could demolish the "boxes" with 400-pound explosive
charges, Germans frequently infiltrated back into them and had to be routed out by renewed assaults.
Lt. Col. Boyer's battalion staff bedded down briefly near a pillbox, only to find at daybreak that
Germans had drifted back to the pillbox and the immediate area. Thirty Germans were taken.
At the Niedersgegen ford, Lt. Col. Boyer's troops turned deadly fire
on a force of German armor, dispersing it after destroying two Mark IV tanks, a half-track and
an anti-tank gun. Only one of his tanks was hit and its crew was untouched.
Down at Wallendorf on the night of the 14th, Co. C engineers
started laying a 72-foot treadway bridge under heavy enemy fire. Completed the next day, the bridge
remained under fire during the entire operation.
Hill 407, the objective near Mettendorf, soon was dubbed "Purple Heart Hill"
by GIs. The day after they gained it they had their hands full. Artillery fell on all sides, patrols constantly
filtered to the rear to cut supply lines. To safeguard the supply line the next three days meant continuous
mopping up in their own rear. The enemy, meanwhile, built up strength in front. One wood had to be
cleared by tanks three times in a day.
Lt. Col. Hamburg's forces, now including a battalion of
the 112th Inf., also had dashed through German tanks and heavy artillery fire to attain Hill 407 and
the high ground beyond. Defensive positions were established around the all but deserted villages of
Halsdorf, Stocken and Wettlingen. By dark on the 16th, three strong counterattacks were thrown back
by the 112th at Wettlingen. Heavy artillery fell throughout the night. After an hour-long artillery
barrage in early morning, four Mark IV tanks opened fire at long range, knocking out two of
Co. D's tanks, but nearby Co. C destroyed all four attacking tanks. Now the tables were
turned and the "married" A's counterattacked the German armor from the left, eliminating five more
tanks and a 20mm. self-propelled gun.
Sept. 19 brought two heavily armored counterattacks, both of them
smashed by heavy fire from CC R's tanks, TDs and artillery. Ten Panther and Tiger tanks and
four vehicles were burned before the enemy fled. Tank destroyers bagged four other tanks nearby. Ten
German tanks were destroyed at Nusbam.
Despite heavy losses, troops and armor were poured in, threatening
to cut off CC R's forces. Artillery fell incessantly.
CC R was ordered to recross the Our, passing through CC B forces
which had entered Germany Sept. 16 and occupied the Wallendorf area as CC R pushed on. CC R's
crossing was accomplished without a loss during darkness on the 19th.
Intensified enemy activity continued next day. A CC B task force commanded by Lt. Col. Gilson
was withdrawn across the Our successfully. Task Force Anderson and Col. Cole's headquarters, remaining
on German soil, dug in on Hill 375, between Niedersgegen and Ammeldingen, prepared a tight defensive
ring under heavy artillery and mortar fire. No Heinies appeared that night for an anticipated
assault, but next morning they attacked through heavy fog. Prepared to shoot anything in sight, GIs
blasted away, killing 40 and breaking the attack.
The engineer bridge at Wallendorf, captured by the Germans and
then regained on the 19th by Lt. Col. Elmer I. Kennedy's 387th AA Bn., fell into German hands again
before it was destroyed on the 21st.
As enemy forces kept closing in, CC B sent out tank-infantry
patrols to clear a few hundred yards around the tightly-ringed defenses. So close was the enemy that
an 81st medical aid man searching for wounded walked into German headquarters in a concealed pillbox
on the very hill CC B was occupying—a three-minute walk from Col. Cole's CP.
On the 21st, Task Force Boyer infiltrated back into Germany to help
cover CC B's withdrawal that night. Before dark, a tank patrol cleared a corridor from Hill 375
to the Wallendorf ford and by darkness the forces withdrew in order under small arms and artillery fire.
Col. Cole, standing knee deep in the ford guiding the entire command
across, was the last man to cross. For his leadership he was decorated with the Silver Star by Gen. Oliver.
This last hazardous operation was not without a touch of humor. As
Col. Cole, unrecognizable in the dark, waved on the vehicles, one tanker came to a halt. Previously warned
of a deep spot in the ford, he called out: "Say, buddy, where's that hole?" "Don't know," the Colonel called
back. "Well, you're a hell of a road guide," retorted the tanker as he started his tank across.
The Story's End Is Victory
"V" BITES INTO THE HURTGEN
They had drawn into their sector and contained German forces
greatly outnumbering them—forces powerful and mobile enough that they might otherwise have
resisted the main assault by other First Army divisions at Aachen.
German forces opposing CC B and CC R included, a
GAF infantry division, a separate infantry regiment a machine gun battalion, several medium and
heavy artillery battalions, a Panzer Brigade, and elements of a Panzer Lehr Division, and the
less effective border defense troops first encountered.
Nearly 100 German tanks were committed to action. Of
these 44 were destroyed by the division and 19 others knocked out by supporting fighter
planes. In addition, pilots reported 14 tanks hit but not definitely destroyed.
The enemy suffered extremely heavy casualties and
his prepared defenses in the sector were permanently weakened with the demolition of 103
pillboxes by Cos. B and C of the 22nd Armd. Engrs.
The action in Germany brought to a climax 50 days
of almost continuous action during which the 5th Armd. Div. captured 7243 Germans, killed
4637, destroyed 250 tanks, 808 other vehicles, 218 artillery pieces and 180 anti-tank
and infantry guns.
In the battle of Hurtgen Forest, CC R took
the fanatically held towns of Kleinhau, Brandenburg and Bergstein, killing and wounding
1200 German infantrymen, taking 400 prisoners, destroying 20 tanks and anti-tank guns.
The assault on Kufferath by CC A was termed by
observers as one of the most perfectly executed tank and infantry attacks. One tank company
was used in the initial assault and was stopped just short of the town by anti-tank
fire. A second company immediately was thrown through the gap created and drove into
the town before surprised defenders could reorganize. Infantry quickly followed the
tanks and mopped up.
Dangerous pockets of resistance to the First Army
front were wiped out by CC B with a pile-driving armored thrust around the towns
of Untermaubach and Overmaubach, clearing a salient to the Roer.
Many of the soldiers who fought in Germany with
the 5th were decorated for individual achievement and gallant acts. Both combat
commanders, Col. Anderson and Col. Cole, were awarded the Bronze Star for inspiring
leadership and their full accomplishment of the mission on German soil.
Losses were heavier than in previous battles, and gains
were not all of a direct nature. Fighting in Germany left an added stamp of experience on
already battle-tested soldiers. Out of Germany came a new fighting spirit for
the 5th Armd. Div.
This spirit, infused into the whole division, might well be described in the words
of two battalion commanders as set down in official reports of the action:
"It was proven that even in an adverse situation
the battalion could overcome fanatical resistance. The unit is now a well-disciplined,
experienced and confident fighting force." (Lt. Col. Anderson, commanding 81st Tank Bn.)
"The heavy action has welded together our organization and has given the officers and
men confidence in their ability to stand up under severe strain when necessary, while
continuing their mission." (Lt. Col. John R. McLean, commanding 400th FA Bn.)
This sign has been more than a good-luck greeting to
the 5th Armored; it has been a challenge and a spur to a division with a name to fulfill.
The name "Victory Division" was adopted upon the division's formation three years ago, at a
time when the only defiance of Hitler's occupation in western Europe was that V-symbol of hope
among conquered peoples. Since the significant V was also the Roman numeral for the division's
number, the division became known as the Victory Division.
The division has borne its name with honor. It closed
the Falaise trap that meant victory over the German Seventh Army in Normandy. Then, after
pursuing and hammering the Wehrmacht across half a continent, it forced an entry into
Hitler's Reich.
But the final victory is still to come, and now, more
than ever before, the 5th Armd. Div. rallies to the victory sign, confident that in whatever
battles lie ahead it will live up to its name—the Victory Division.
Printed by Desfossés-Néogravure, Paris. Photos: U.S. Signal Corps.
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