Photos, Articles, & Research on the European Theater in World War II
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It is only by the indomitable spirit displayed by each of you and
a grim determination to lick the best of the Boche under any conditions
of terrain, weather, and other obstacles that we have succeeded. I
have often stated that I am proud, very proud of this Division, and
I feel deeply honored to have been its commander through all these
actions. To those of you who are old members, I express my grateful
appreciation -- to those who receive this pamphlet as new arrivals,
I welcome you to the Division. I trust that as you glance through
the pages of this booklet and learn more of our history, you will be
imbued with the spirit of this Division, a spirit which cannot be
downed and which is bound to carry us to victory on any field of
battle. A spirit to attack the enemy whenever and wherever found.
Paul
W. Baade Major General, Commanding
This is one of a series of G.I. Stories of the Ground, Air
and Service Forces in the European Theater of Operations, issued
by the Orientation Section, Information and Education Division,
ETOUSA... Major General Paul W. Baade, commanding the 35th
Infantry Division, lent his cooperation to the preparation of the
pamphlet and basic material was supplied to the editors by his staff.
Fresh from their classic crossing of the Blies River into
Germany's rich Saar region, the 35th's Santa Fe men
slipped into Luxembourg and Belgium during the Christmas
holidays. They crossed the Sure River Dec. 27,
1944, then hit hard into the thick Nazi bulge.
Four elite Nazi units composed the iron fist of the
German surprise blitz: The Fuehrer Brigade (Hitler's
bodyguard troops), 1st SS Panzer Div., 5th Paratroop
Div., 167th Volksgrenadier Div. The 35th met elements
of each, smashed them back, and secured the vulnerable
right flank of the Bastogne highway. Beaten back by
Yank courage and skill, the Nazi blitz faltered, sagged,
then collapsed entirely.
When the fighting men of the 35th turned von
Rundstedt's blitz into Nazi disaster, they symbolized the spirit
of all soldiers who have worn the Sante Fe patch.
Originated during the Indian Wars, the shoulder
patch is a white cross on a blue field to honor the men
who blazed the old Santa Fe Trail. In the last war,
the 35th distinguished itself on the same French soil
where Santa Fe troops now battled in World War II.
With a strong nucleus of Kansas, Nebraska and
Missouri National Guard, the division was mobilized Dec.
23, 1940, at Camp Robinson, Ark. A year later it became
California's adopted army when it was assigned
to defend the West Coast after the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor.
Officers and men of the 35th were thoroughly prepared
for war when they left the POE May 12, 1944. The
division had learned a lot in the tough Louisiana Maneuvers
of 1941 and the cold, wet Tennessee Maneuvers
of 1943. It had trained diligently at Camp San Luis
Obispo, Calif., Camp Rucker, Ala., and Camp Butner,
N.C., as well as at Camp Robinson. And it was a fresh,
eager outfit, representing every state in the union when
it landed in England two weeks later.
A month after the 35th arrived in southwest England
it was inspected by Gen. Eisenhower. The general
was impressed with its fighting potential. He transferred
the 35th from Third Army, sent it to France to
join Gen. Bradley's First Army in the fight for Normandy.
Anchored in the base of the narrow Cotentin Peninsula,
St. Lo was surrounded by the toughest offensive,
best defensive terrain. Here was the gateway to the
French interior.
To smash through the heavily defended thick hedgerows,
root Nazis from deeply-entrenched positions and
take the city was a mammoth task. Spearhead of the
Col. Butler B. Miltonberger's 134th Inf. Regt. was
first to attack. Second Bn. moved into front line foxholes
near St. Nicolas,
The division's first casualty was recorded that night.
While Co. H, 137th, was moving into position, a shell
killed Pvt. Owen J. McBride, an ammunition bearer.
Just before dawn July 11, more than 200 division
guns and supporting Corps artillery pounded Nazi
positions in a thunderous barrage. Then, at 0600,
infantrymen stormed "over the top" of hedgerows.
The 137th rushed along the area following Highway
3 where the Germans awaited the attack on a small road
leading from the highway to the Vire Canal. Dungeon-deep
foxholes, connected by underground tunnels and
heavily protected by mines, lined the road.
The regiment lunged forward with bayonet, grenade
and point-blank fire. Green troops fought like veterans
as they punched along the narrow road until reaching
La Meauffe. There they ran up against Germans barricaded
in houses and shops, where every building was
a converted pillbox. Yank artillery crashed in and levelled
the strongest points with deadly accurate salvos. Doughs
rushed other positions, driving Nazis from the town.
The 137th continued up the road to "Purple Heart
Corner," pushed the Germans from a solid stone chateau
used as Gestapo headquarters, then took the Chateau
of St. Gilles, key defense in the area. When Col. Layng
was wounded by machine gun fire during the battle,
Col. Robert Sears took command. Lt. Col. John N.
Wilson, 219th FA Bn. CO, was killed.
The 320th had been fighting from an
The 137th smashed through to the north bank of the
Vire July 18. Meanwhile, the 134th, with elements
of the 737th Tank Bn.; the 654th TD Bn.; Co A, 60th
Combat Engrs.; Co. A, 110th Medical Bn., launched
a drive north of St. Lo. Immediate objective was tall,
forbidding Hill 122, dominating the town.
The strength of the attack carried the 134th to Emilie
which was taken in a house-to-house fight. Here the
regiment was held up by extremely heavy German
resistance. Between July 15 and 17, Nazis counter-attacked
12 times, netting only 100 yards.
On July 18, the 134th, with 2nd Bn., 320th, attached,
coordinated an assault with air power and tanks on
Hill 122. While aircraft bombed and strafed, tank-infantry
teams destroyed machine gun nests, other
That evening, 134th's I&R platoon entered the city.
Under 1st Lt. John F. Tracy, Brooklyn, the platoon
consisted of Cpl. Joseph Stefansky, Cleveland; T/5
Charles Piercy, Elgin, Tenn.; Pfc Eutimio Espinoza,
Blanca, Col.; Pfc Arthur Peck, St. Louis; Pfc Robert Lee,
Newberg, Ore.; Pfc Elgin Wilkinson, Venice, Calif.;
Pvt. Edgar Hale, Little Rock, Ark. Maj. Dale Godwin,
North Platte, Nebr., also was in the scouting party.
Under constant mortar fire, the platoon reconnoitered
the center of town and returned. Next night, the
134th entered St. Lo in force. After 11 days of fierce,
exhausting combat, the first mission was completed.
Next morning, both 320th and 134th attacked southwest
of St. Lo, then pushed southeast along the main
highway. Task Force S was created with the 137th
as the basic infantry unit, under Brig.. Gen. Edmund B.
Sebree, Asst. Division Commander. The force included
the 219th FA Bn.; one platoon from the 35th Cav.
Recon Troop; a detachment from the 35th Signal Co.;
Co. B, 60th Combat Engrs.; Co. B, 110th Medical Bn.;
one company of the 654th TD Bn.; the 737th Tank Bn.
Santa Fe men no longer were green. Battle-wise
and tough, they had thinned enemy ranks, had taken
many prisoners. After 2nd and 3rd Bns., 320th, had
enveloped the strategic town of Torigni sur Vire, Maj.
Frank W. Waring's 1st Bn. buttoned up the town July 31.
Meanwhile Task Force S reached its first objective,
the high ground southeast of Brectouville.
The task force pushed cross-country Aug. 1, steam-rolled
Germans from Brectouville. The enemy now
defended a line from south of Mt. Hebert to the west
of Pituanay.
Running into heavy resistance, Gen. Sebree outmaneuvered
the Nazis, cut the Tessy-Torigni Road and smashed
through to Domjean in a vicious night attack.
Capt. William C. Miller, Athens, Tenn., Co. B CO,
137th, won the division's first Distinguished Service
Cross by wiping out two machine gun nests, coordinating
the attack of Cos. B and C, and turning an apparently
hopeless situation into victory for his battalion.
Task Force S pushed down the east bank of the Vire,
and reached the double bend in the river south of Le
Mesnil. German mortar and artillery west of the river
shelled troops fiercely, but the attack rolled on. By
Aug. 2, the task force had cleared the high ground north
of the Vire and crossed the river, contacting the
29th Division at La Touberie.
The 320th and 134th, operating on the left of the task
force, advanced and the entire 35th reached its objective.
The Cotentin Peninsula had been cleared.
In the word of the 35th's Chief of Staff, Col. Maddrey A.
Solomon, the Santa Fe was "literally flagged off the road"
to fight for Mortain. Combat teams were formed on
30 minutes' notice. Scouts reported Germans dug in
solidly at Barenton, Mortain and in the Mortain forest.
Combat Team 137th drove Nazis from Barenton after
a sharp clash, then moved toward the forest. The
division was attached to VII Corps Aug. 8 as both
134th and 320th teams aimed an attack to split the
Germans east of Mortain. The 30th's "lost battalion" had
to be rescued. Food and ammunition were running out.
While 2nd and 3rd Bns., 320th, pounded the crack
SS Das Reich Div. back toward Mortain from the west,
Maj. William G. Gillis' 1st Bn. rode 737th Bn's. tanks
in the now famous thrust from the south, cut through
the center of the Nazi pocket and joined 3rd Bn. in
taking the high rugged Hill 317 overlooking Mortain
from the east.
Capt. Homer W. Kurtz, Troy, Ill., led a five-man
patrol which located the lost battalion Aug. 12. Later,
320th doughs effected the rescue of the 30th Div. unit
which was too weak to continue fighting.
Cpl. Verlin D. Young, Lexington, Nebr., and T/5 Hans
Gehlsen, Gross, Nebr., 35th QM Co., loaded a truck
with supplies and water, headed for the surrounded
battalion position convoyed by three tanks. They
dodged enemy fire, raced down rutted roads to reach
the battalion with supplies intact. On the return trip,
20 seriously wounded men were evacuated.
The 137th, with 3rd Bn., 134th, attached, continued
its rapid encircling move, pushed Nazis from the high
ridge north of le Gil Bouillion, and forced a panicky
German withdrawal. American P-47s pounced on
fleeing Germans and strafed them with precise artistry
as the finishing touch to the 35th's destruction of Hitler's
last chance to balk the invasion.
When Third Army made its record run from the
Croton Peninsula across France, the 35th swept forward
with it, protecting Army's right flank.
Attached to XII Corps, Aug. 14, the division moved
east of Le Mans, formed combat teams.
Task Force S, teamed with Combat Command A of
the 4th Armd. Div., set out for Orleans Aug. 11.
Spearheaded by CC A's tanks, the task force raced down
the Le Mans-Orleans highway, overwhelmed Nazis,
drove them to rout. Unable to cope with the speed
of the advance or replace battered guns and tanks,
Germans fell back fast, left huge stores of equipment.
CT 320th, with the 35th Recon Troop, attacking
under heavy mortar and artillery fire, seized
Chateaudun and occupied Cloyes Aug. 17.
Orleans, where Jeanne d'Arc gave her life for liberty,
now was rid of Nazi shackles. The 35th aimed at
Sens, 60 miles southeast of Paris on the Yonne River.
To take this central supply point and vital communications
center required a 90 mile thrust without flank
protection.
The 137th, attached to the 4th Armd. Div., left Artenay
Aug. 21, sped from Orleans to Ingrannes, then wheeled
east through Chene Pointu Forest and raced to Villeroy.
It moved so slickly into Sens that Germans were
completely surprised. Not a single casualty was sustained
by the regiment as it captured the Nazi garrison and
a mountain of supplies. Sens was further east than
any other Allied troops yet reported.
The 134th and 320th struck sharply in other directions.
On Aug. 21, CT 320th grabbed Pithiviers then went on
to join CT 134th in taking Montargis. Both teams
mopped up the Cheroy-Bouchy-Montargis sector Aug.
25, netting 1134 prisoners. Backed by 35th doughs,
armored spearheads took Troyes and completed the sweep
around Paris. The heart of France now was liberated.
Setting its battle sights northeast to Nancy, ancient
stronghold and fifth largest city in France, the 35th
went into attack Sept. 10, synchronizing its assault with
Third Army's blow at Metz and the German border.
Capt. Joseph Giacobello, Mt. Union, Pa., and a small
group from Co. F, 137th, crossed the river next day
but were given up for lost when the remainder of the
battalion was forced to abandon a crossing. Although
elements Of 3rd Bn. forded the river further south, they
were pinned down until late afternoon. In a coordinated
attack by the entire regiment, 1st and 3rd Bns. each put
two companies across in assault boats manned by Co.
B, 60th Engr. Bn., near Lorey and St. Mard. The
attack developed in fury during the night but 1st Bn.
had cleared all Nazis from the Lofey area by morning.
Second Bn. crossed the river next afternoon, then worked
back along the east bank to be greeted by Capt.
Giacobello and his men.
Same day, 320th crossed the Moselle, attacking on
the right of the 137th. Tank-riding doughs took the
high ground between Saffais and Coyviller, cleared
Rosieres and the Boche belt between the Moselle and the
Meurthe. Frantic Germans reeled, fell back. By Sept.
16 most of the division's armor and infantry not only
had crossed the Meurthe but also the Le Sanon River and
the Rhine-Marne Canal. That evening CT 320th pushed
to Haraucourt and Buissoncourt. The task force chased
Nazis from Mazerulles next day, cutting the main supply
route and highway from the east and clearing the
approaches to Nancy by swinging into Azelot, Mononcourt
and St. Nicolas.
Task Force S, commanded by Gen. Sebree, with the
134th as the major unit, flowed down the Toul-Nancy
highway, its south flank covered by Task Force T,
under Lt. Col. Robert S. Thompson, 127th FA Bn. CO.
The rough spade work had been done; Nazis were too
groggy to put up a fight for Nancy. The task force
rolled into the city without opposition and was greeted
joyfully by grateful Frenchmen. The 134th then forced
a crossing of the Meurthe, capturing high ground to
the northeast.
In the thick Champenoux Forest south of the
Nancy-Saarbrucken highway were stubborn Nazi concentrations
which had to be erased. Second and 3rd Bns., 137th,
attacked across open ground Sept. 20. But the Germans
had an ideal defensive position, fought grimly and held.
Two days later, impatient with delay, doughs mounted
737th Bn's. tanks, rode to the edge of the woods, then
jumped off to annihilate Germans in a bloody hand-to-hand
fight. Nazis fled to Gremercey and the Chateau
Salins Forest, another stronghold. They reorganized,
counter-attacking Sept. 16 along the Chambrey-Pettoncourt
highway, and threatened to encircle 3rd Bn. with
tanks and infantry. For three days the fight see-sawed
viciously, but the Nazis were thrown back with heavy
losses. The 137th attacked with support from 6th
Armored, cleared the Bois de Chambrey and took
shell-battered Chambrey, Sept. 31.
During the next week, the division pushed and prodded
the Nazis without letup. It established a firm line from
Ajoncourt through Fossieux to the Foret de Gremercey
down to Chambrey. The 35th now prepared for the
next big push.
As the regiment seeped through the heavy woods,
the remainder of the division attacked north and
northeast. Coutures, Amelecourt, Oriocourt, Laneuville,
Spurrier shot the first three Nazis with his M-1. Then,
picking up BARs, Yank and German bazookas and
grenades wherever he found them, he systematically
began to clean out the town. He crumbled one stronghold
with bazooka shells, killed three more Nazis with
a BAR, captured a garrison commander, a lieutenant
and 14 men. Another defense point was silenced when
he killed its two occupants. Out of ammunition and
under fire from four Nazis, Spurrier hurled a Nazi
grenade into the house, killing the four Germans.
That night, the one-man army had charge of an
outpost. While checking security, he heard four Germans
talking in a barn. He set fire to a supply of oil and hay,
captured the four as they ran out. Later, he spotted a
Kraut crawling toward a sentry, killed him when there
was no reply to his challenge.
According to 25-year-old Lt. Col. Frederick Roecker,
his battalion CO, Spurrier killed 25 Germans, captured
20 others. In March, 1945, Sgt. Spurrier was awarded
the division's first Congressional Medal of Honor.
Nazis ferociously defended their garrison and supply
depot at Morhange. But the 134th closed in and squeezed
the Nazis from the city Nov. 16. Racrange fell the same
day. Completing its initial objective, the Santa Fe,
chalking up victories near Morhange and in the Chateau
Salins Forest, netted more than 1500 prisoners and
considerable enemy supplies. Morale was sky-high.
Two days later, the division renewed its attack, seizing
Harprich, Berig-Vintrange, Vallerange and capturing
Bermering, Bertring, Virming, Gros-Tenquin, Erstroff
and Francaltroff.
At Freybouse, Nazis twice attempted to burn out Lt.
Thomas R. Travis and 20 Co. K, 137th, doughs from their
shelters. The "Travis Twenty" had killed 15 Germans
and captured eight others in taking the first house in
town. Germans threw phosphorous grenades on the
roof of a second house to set it afire. When the roof
collapsed, the men moved downstairs and continued
to fight until the flames seared their window positions.
The group fought its way back to the first house,
prisoners in tow, and held out all night against
automatic and bazooka fire. Next morning, the Yanks were
told to surrender or be burned. Lt. Travis' reply was
"Go to Hell!" Enraged stormtroopers set fire to the
roof. The group was completely surrounded when
the lieutenant spotted a tank destroyer edging into
the outskirts of town.
"Watch my tracers!" he shouted. "Watch me!"
TD men spotted the SOS. Following tracers, they
knocked out four machine gun nests, forcing the other
machine gun and bazooka teams to pull out hurriedly.
The 35th continued its assault northeast, grabbing
nine more towns by Nov. 23. The 320th took Nelling,
Rening and Insming next day. To wrest the key town
of Uberkinger from the claws of German armor, Co. A
footsloggers acted as their own engineers and TDs.
Crossing on a hand bridge improvised during the pitch
black hours preceding the dawn assault, the company,
led by 21-year-old 1st Lt. Charles W. Bell, Valentine,
Tex., mauled armor with bazookas and Molotov cocktails.
Aided by artillery, doughs blasted tanks and half-tracks.
In the sector facing the swift, wide Saar River, the
35th was blocked not only by thick natural defenses,
but by mammoth concrete pillboxes of the Maginot
Line. Troops prepared for the new attack with realistic
training in pillbox assault and river crossing.
Cold and muddy, the division moved out against the
rough defenses in the dawn mist Dec. 4. Hoping to
catch Germans by surprise, artillery fire was withheld.
The ruse worked. The 134th swept into Puttelange without
a casualty, capturing 75 sleeping Nazis. The
320th met an enemy column which had just arrived.
After a sharp fight the regiment pushed on to take
Diderfing, Bettring, Helving, Richelling, Grundviller,
Ballering and Hambach by dark Dec. 5, exactly five
months after the 35th's first elements landed in France.
The anniversary was observed by Btry. B, 127th FA
Bn., firing the first Santa Fe shell into Germany near
Harweiler. Infantryman Col. Miltonberger pulled the
lanyard.
The same afternoon, Lt. Col. Botchin's 60th Engrs.
planned crossing sites. At Saareguemines, a railroad
bridge had been partially destroyed by retreating Nazis,
but the bridge-building veterans of Co. A under 2nd
Lt. John S. Parker made the necessary repairs. An
assault crossing was prepared at Zetting.
The attack began before dawn Dec. 8. First Bn.,
134th, ran top speed across the repaired railroad bridge,
soon was followed by the entire regiment. Meeting
strong opposition, the 134th was counter-attacked by
15 tanks carrying infantry. This tank attack was broken
in 15 minutes by what terrified Nazi prisoners described
as "automatic artillery." Second Bn., 320th, crossed
the river in assault boats, stormed a fortified hill and
grenaded Nazis from their trenches. In the middle of
the regimental sector, 1st Bn. made an assault crossing
and pushed east to take Didering.
Once a foothold had been established on the east
bank, engineers began to build supporting bridges. The
81st Chemical Smoke Generating Co. covered the Saar
River valley with thick smoke. Under this screen,
engineers put a treadway bridge over the canal at
Saaremensing and began construction of two Bailey Bridges.
Although engineers were constantly under fire by
SP guns, they worked 48 hours without let-up to complete
the bridges. Tanks, TDs, vehicles loaded with supplies
raced across the bridges; the bridgehead was
Gibraltar-strong.
Recalled from division reserve Dec. 10, Col. William E.
Murray's 137th crossed the railroad bridge. Second
Bn. was to seize Saareguemines on the east side of the
river and widen the bridgehead. Co. F overcame and
killed 43 SS troopers, captured 27 others after a rough
scrap in a porcelain factory. The last Nazi was ejected
from Saareguemines and considerable equipment captured
Dec. 11 as 3rd Bn. nabbed Nuenkirch. Nearly
a thousand U.S.S.R., Polish and anti-Fascist Italian
PWs were freed. Third Bn. captured the airfield and
town of Frauenberg. The 35th now had driven to the
edge of the swift, icy Blies River, the last barrier before
the Fatherland.
First to stay and fight was Co. C, 134th led by S/Sgt.
Thomas Wese, Beverly, W. Va., and seven men from the
60th Engrs., who captured 65 Nazis. The company
fought and beat off repeated counter-attacks throughout
the night. Opposing them was a picked Nazi guard
battalion, ordered to die before allowing Americans to
remain on German soil. Meanwhile, engineers had
assembled nearly 1000 feet of footbridge, the first built
near Blies Ebering. Next morning, Cos. B and C,
134th, crossed into Habkirchen, reinforced "Club 21"
and held it against attacks of tank-supported SS troops.
Both companies were hit hard, but Capt. William Denny
told the remaining men they were "the toehold of a
bridgehead." Tired doughs clung tenaciously.
Third Bn., 320th, spurted on to Bliesbruck, where it
encountered heavily mined areas and fierce German
tank and automatic fire. Cos. I and L, 134th, crossed
the river north of Habkirchen, then were pinned down.
After a week of constant attack the division was ordered
to hold and consolidate. Brave men had carved a
bridgehead in Germany. Completing 162 days of almost
constant front line action, the 35th was relieved by
the 87th and 44th Inf. Divs. Dec. 20-21.
At Metz, massive church bells tolled the peaceful
music of Christmas. Within the fortress city, 35th
soldiers rested briefly and enjoyed a turkey dinner.
Dec. 26, the division launched a deft, miracle-fast move
that ended 24 hours later with troops ready to attack
from front lines north of Arlon, Belgium. There,
tentacles of von Rundstedt's frenzied blitz had clawed as
far as the Sure River.
At 0800 Dec. 27, the 35th churned through knee-deep
snow and attacked boldly across the Sure into the
quivering belly of the Bulge. The 137th crossed to
a point southwest of Tintange, reached Surre and
captured the town after a hard struggle. The 320th doughs
invaded the opposite shore by wading waist-deep in the
bone-chilling water. The rushing tide of their attack
quickly engulfed Boulaide and Baschleiden.
For attacking soldiers, the freezing cold and snow
were foes as brutal as Nazis who had murdered
American prisoners. Many Germans wore American uniforms,
utilized captured vehicles and weapons, or
camouflaged themselves with white hoods and capes.
Third Bn., 137th, inched to a hill southwest of
Villers-la-Bonne-Eau Dec. 28, while the 320th occupied an
important road junction. Third Bn., 134th, came out
of reserve to relieve 1st Bn., 318th Inf., 90th Div.
Next day, 1st Bn., 134th, shot into Marvie, three
kilometers northeast of Bastogne. This was one of the
first units to break through the Nazi ring around
Bastogne and reach the 101st Airborne. Spearheading the
battalion were Cos. A and B, led by Lts. William C.
White, Millidgeville, Ga., and George Melochick, St.
Claire, Pa.
When the iron knuckles of the 35th fist pounded as
far as Villers, Lutrebois and Harlange, Germans punched
back viciously with armor and infantry. It was in this
action that the 310th captured an entire Nazi battalion.
Cos. K and L, 137th, which had slashed into Villers alone,
were cut off. Germans maneuvered SP guns near houses
where the men were holding out, blew holes in the walls
and turned on flame-throwers. More than 200 men
missing from the regiment Dec. 31 either had been killed
or captured.
The pulse of battle beat violently for three weeks but
after a 13-day assault, the 137th avenged the men lost
at Villers by crushing all resistance in the town.
Lutrebois was captured after a fierce five-day fight and
Lutremange was taken Jan. 11, the day after Villers fell.
By Jan. 17 the Nazi threat to the Bastogne highway
was neutralized. Santa Fe doughs drove to the high
wooded ground north of Harlange and gripped important
ridges commanding the road net. The 320th captured
the road center of Oubourcy, grabbed 215 prisoners,
including a Nazi battalion CO and five staff officers
who were surprised at a breakfast conference.
The division rounded up 1034 prisoners between
Dec. 27 and Jan. 17, captured much equipment, wiped
out enough Nazis to wither the salient in that sector.
Mission completed, the 35th moved back to Metz Jan. 18.
Left behind were the 134th, 161st FA Bn., one company
of the 654 TD Bn., and a 448th AAA Bn. battery, all
attached to the 6th Armd. Div. to clean out remaining Nazi
pockets in the dwindling Bulge.
Stop-over at Metz again was brief. Nazis were
attacking in Seventh Army's sector to the south and the
35th sped to Alsace Jan. 23 to tighten snowbound
defense lines. Attached to the XV Corps, the division
planted itself in the Domaniale Forest. A week later,
the 35th made one of the longest infantry shifts of
the war. From Alsace it traveled north, picked up the
134th and other elements and continued non-stop to
Maastricht, Holland, near the German border. The
leap covered nearly 300 miles.
The 35th was assigned to XVI Corps of Ninth Army
which was under Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson, who
commanded the Santa Fe from Oct. 1941 to spring of 1942.
The 320th kicked off and moved 1500 yards in three
hours to the west bank of the Roer, achieving its first
objective. The 134th sent strong patrols into Hilfarth
across the river. Then it stormed the town in force
with a sharp night attack, mopping up next morning.
The 137th plus TDs and tanks pushed across the river
on the right flank of the 134th.
The regiments knocked out a great many pillboxes
of the Siegfried Line and braved heavy artillery, mortar
and small arms fire to reach all objectives. Roads
and fields were loaded with mines, causing casualties
among engineers bridging the river as well as doughs
who crossed the bridges to fight against fiercely defended
enemy strongholds.
Div Arty supported the attack continuously, firing
particularly heavy night missions and blinding enemy
OPs with smoke shells. Preceding the jump-off, the
big guns threw a tremendous sustained barrage across
the Roer.
Crossing the Roer was made easier by capture intact
of a strong bridge at Hilfarth, which had been mined but
not blown. Steady artillery mortar and small arms
fire denied the use of the bridge to the Germans, only
partially damaged it, and allowed 35th troops to cross
swiftly.
As the 134th cleared towns in its zone, Task Force
Murray stabbed into Rheinberg, pushed up "88 Alley"
into Ossenberg and drove the Nazis from the Solvay
Works in a battle which cost Germans many dead and
wounded, two tanks, an SP gun and 63 prisoners.
Reduction of Ossenberg allowed adjacent units to cut
off Nazi escape routes across the Rhine.
Within touching distance of the Rhine, the 35th now
converged on Drupt and a crossroads north of the town
which was the roadnet center of the remaining Nazi
bridgehead in the Ninth Army sector. Troops encountered
the heaviest artillery and mortar fire they had yet
experienced. Nazis resorted to every conceivable trick
used in the Ardennes offensive. Some clothed themselves
in American uniforms and fired on unsuspecting Yanks.
Every house and building in the path of the 35th was
a fort. By March 11, the 35th had completed the reduction
of the Wesel sector and stood before the battered,
once magnificent Wesel bridge and the Rhine.
Division officers and men had won approximately
3000 awards including the Medal of Honor, Distinguished
Service Cross, Silver Star, Bronze Star and
Legion of Merit, and had shed blood for many Purple
Hearts. Approximately 100 enlisted men had received
battlefield commissions.
The fighting men of the 35th looked across the Rhine.
Beyond lay the fat Ruhr region, industrial plasma for
the bloody German war machine. And, as always, the
35th would not be long awaiting the familiar
signal -- ATTACK!
Printed
by: Desfosses-Neogravure, Paris
Photos: U.S. Signal Corps
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