HomeMy WebLinkAboutVE Day Battlefield Tour
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Ie Overall situation in September 1944
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By the Fall of 1944, Hitler found
himself with his back against the wall. The
Allies were approaching the borders of the
Third Reich from all directions and the
situation was a disaster. On the east front,
the defection of Romania had cost the
Heeresgruppe Sud (Army Group South) 18 of
its divisions and the Soviet steamroller had
crushed the Heeresgruppe Mitte (Army Group
Centre) and was slowly pushing the Germans
out of USSR. In the south, Allied successes
in North Africa, Sicily and southern Italy,
had forced the Germans to retreat constantly
and they finally stabilized the front with great
difficulty in northern Italy. The western Allies
had opened a second theatre of operation in
June 1944 with the successful D Day
landing in Normandy. One month later, the
American Third Army breached the front at
Avranches and spread throughout France.
Despite bitter counterattacks the western
front collapsed and by the end of August had
totally disappeared, the Germans were
massively defeated.
German POW's, France, Summer 1944.
The idea of a powerful counter attack
was Hitler's brain child as early as August of
1944. German cities and vital industries .
were systematically leveled to~the ground by
the Allied Air Force. Manpow~:r. was
exhausted, economy was dying and supplies
were badly needed. The situation was
desperate and Hitler was absolutely
convinced that time has arrived for al.-major
counter offensive. pealing first with the idea
~f mounting it on the East front, he was of
the opinion that a counter attack on a so
large front would lead to the best to the
destruction of twenty Russian divisions,
limited territorial gains and very little effect
on the overall situation in the East. The
Italian front was declared unsuitable for
such a large scale attack. Thus the question
was to know whether or not the western front
would provide the needed guaranties of
success.
Mter the breakthrough in Avranches,
the Allies have liberated France and almost
totally Belgium with a minimum of troops
involved. They have a total superiority in the
air, a fantastic degree of mechanization and a
constant flow of supplies. On the other hand,
the Germans are still holding important
positions in the Atlantic and Channel ports,
forcing the Allied to truck most of their
supplies from artificial ports in Normandy. In
Belgium, the port of Antwerp on the Schelde
estuary is firmly blocked by the Germans.
Patton's third Army had come almost to a
stop because of the lack of supplies caused
by the very long distances from the ports.
Hitler knew that such a counter offensive
entailed enormous risks but if he could
regain the initiative, it would have a
significant impact on the German population,
on the troops but also on his leadership
abilities. The attack formations could only be
formed by weakening the different fronts,
new Volksgrenadier units in formation would
be added but re-equiping new and old units
as well as the reconstruction 9f destroyed
Panzer units will absorb a large part of the
war production. It was a daring gamble but
he had no other, option.
As a perceptive politician, Hitler felt
that both members of the British-American
coalition had different aims and priorities
and he knew his best chance lay in exploiting
his suspicion that the Western Allies
coalition would crumble if placed under
pressure.
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II. The plan
Hitler's plan was to. launch three
Armies from the Ardennes and drive west to
the Meuse river and continue on ,to Antwe~
The attack would ~:Rlit t~ British and
American Armies in two/and isolate
Montgomery's forces in the n~He knew
that the Allies had declared a policy of
unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany
and he was convinced, if he was successful,
to force the coalition to sue for a separate
peace. With the western front stabilized, he
could then concentrate his forces ag~nst the
Soviets.
On September 16, 1944, at a routine
situation conference held at the
Filhrerhauptquartier (Hitler's HQ) in East
Prussia, Hitler informed the key leaders of
the O.K.W. (supreme HQ of the army) of his
decision. Several conferences will be held in
September and October where Senior
Officers of the 0 KW will try, to scale down
Hitler's ambitions but this was a waste of
time.
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Three Armies, the 5th Panz~LA:a:ny,
the 6th Panzer Army and ffie 7lh Army would
be rebuilt and reequipped to breach the-"'"
American lines in the Ardennes on an 80
mile front, The iii; Army in the south,
through Luxemburg, to protect the left flank
of the counter attack. The 5th Panzer Army in
the centre and the main thrust was given to
the 6th Panzer Army- in the north. Hitler had
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sc,!!e.dul~d his attack for late.-N.ovember ~r
.:.-arly..lle,g:mber, when the weather is at its
worst. Snow, fog and mist, characteristic of
{fiat period of the year in the Ardennes,
would shield his forces from the Allied Air
Force and if the Panzers could exploit the
breakthrough, Hitler believed his success
was certain. Despite his assurance in the
victory, his Senior Officers left the conference
quite.skeptical:-Even SS Oberstgruppenfi1hrer
Sepp Dietrich, Commanding General of the
6th Panzer Army arid one of Hitler.!smost
trusted officers vi~ed t11ePfan with
suspicion.
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III. The North shoulder
In November of 1944, the Allies of the West
had to admit that the defeat of Ger.many
would- be a lot more difficult than previously
expected. Over extended lines of
communication and supply had forced them
to slow down their triumphant drive through
France, Belgium and Luxemburg..The defeat
encountered in Holland with operation
"Market Garden" and the bloody nightmare of
the Hiirtgen forest forced them to halt since
the rugged terra1n of the Ardennes, especially
during the winter was unfavorable for_troop
movements. Despite the fact that tWO
German offensives had be~n launched
tflrough this..area earlier in the century, the
US Army considered the ~dennes ~~iet
sector where depleted veteran units.fo.unda
n~etleQi-es!.. a:rt:I wliere greenJJniis~could;gElin
expen~nce... Tile ferrain was rugged and
unsmtable for a German attack and thus the
lines were thin and over extended. A perfect
place to dig comfortable dugouts and spend
the winter.
Heavily forested in some areas and
sparse in others, the Ardennes forms a large
triangle extending north to Monschau,
Germany, south to northern Luxemburg and
west to the Meuse river valley. The Ardennes
forest is magnificent, serene and enigmatic.
Beautiful scenery, spring water health spas,
gently rolling hills in the south have made of
this area a prized tourist attraction. The
Ardennes are cut by numerous streams and
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rivers who have cut deep ravines at some
locations. This topography of course makes
the task easier for defenders since bridges
and roads are key poinis easy to protect. On
the other hand it's a lot more difficult for the
attackers, mechanized movements are only
possible on the roads and the deep forest
channels troops and armored units on
narrow accesses. The road net in this sector,
though in poor condition, passes through
several major junctions like Monschau,
Losheimergraben, Eupen or Malmedy. There
is also a natural gap in the forest, known- as
the Losheim Gap. The gap is named for the
towiltrrat marked its northern limit,
Losheim, a small hamlet in Gernlany, just
across from the Belgian border. The gap was
famous for two previous German_offensives.
The first at the beginning ofWWI, in 1914,
when the armies of the Kaiser went through
the pass and straight to the Meuse and the
second at the beginning of WWII, in 1940,
when Hitler started his Blitzkrieg to the west.
November came and went without
Hitler's needed weather conditions. The start
date was postponed until mid December"
when german meteorologists predicted a
long period of fog and haze. When Hitler set
the final date for Saturday 16 December, he
could ,not have known how ~uccessful he had
been in duping the Allied Intelligence and
how his counteroffensive would be a
complete tactical and strategic surprise.
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German map showing the different objectives of the 6. Panzer Annee and the I.SS Panzerkorps
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IV. The 6th Panzer Army
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55 OberslgruppenfDhrer Dietrich
6. Panzer Armee
~XVII
LXVII Armeekorps
Generalleutnant HitzfekJ
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I. SS Panzerkorps
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II. S5 Panzerkorps
ss Obergruppentuhrer Bittr1ch
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Obersl WlebIg Generalmajor Engel
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Oberst KasclYler
. 5S OberlOhrer Mahnke
The main effort of the entire German
counter offensive rested firmly on the
shoulders of SS Oberstgruppenfi1hrer Sepp
Dietrich, the commander of the 6th Panzer
'Army.
Sepp Dietrich (left) with Generalfe1dmarschall von
Runstedt early 1944. Dietrich was then commander
of the I.SS Panzerkorps. By December he had been
promoted SS Oberstgruppenffihrer and was in
command of the 6.Panzer Armee
Sepp Dietrich proved to be a
successful commander throughout the war.
He served as one of Hitler's bodyguard in
the 1920's during the early days of the Nazi
movement. Later, h~commanded the famous
"Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler'(LAH), Hitler's
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personal bodyguard. Though most of the
Army officers consid~red him as ignorant and
doubted of his military abilities, Hitler always
trusted him. At the beginning or' WWII,
Dietrich was~afthe lead of the regiment sized
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Generalmajor Wadehn
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SS Bngaderhr Lanvnerdlng S5 Oberfhr St;rtdler
58 Standartenffihrer Krass
"LAH" and met a large successes during the
war in Poland and the French campaign. The
"LAH" later grew up to a full size Armored
Division and was often used on the East
Front in hot sectors and earned prestigious
successes. Dietrich was highly regarded and
respected by his~IIien and a large majority of
his officers nursed ar1" uildying'l~alty\to...bi!P-.
Dietrich was a capable division commander
but rather limited as Korps or Army
commander. For "Wacht am Rhein" (code
name of the German offensive), Senior
Officers of the OKW made certain that a
capable and intelligent chief of staff would
assist Dietrich. /'
His force would strike in the north through
the thick forest with 4 SS armored divisions
and 5 regular army infantry divisions
organized in 3 Korps, the LXVII Korps,
the I. SS Panzerkorps and the IC SS
Panzerkorps. (
LXVII Korus
This Corps was created in September
1942, under the name LXVII. Reservekorps
and was in charge of all the Reserve divisions
in the west. It became LXVII. Armeekorps on
January 20, 1944. Commanded by
Generalleutnant Hitzfeld, its mission was to
attack on either side of Monschau and open
roads leading to the east, roughly in the
direction of Eupen. General Hitzfeld had two
Volksgrenadier divisions, the 272.
Volksgrenadier Division and the 326.
V olksgrenadier Division.
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I.SS Panzerkorus
The Headquarters were formed on
July 23, 1943 in Berlin and served on the
East front until the end of the year. It's then
transferred to the west and took over the 1.
and 12- SS-Ranzer Division. It is almost
annihilated during the Normandy campaign
and the retreat. The 1. SS Panzerkorps is
reequipped for the Battle of ,the Bulge and SS
Gruppenfi1hrer (SS Lieutenant General)
Hermann Priess became the new
commander. For the Battle of the Bulge, the
1. SS Panzerkorps is given the main effort
and is ,reinforced by 2 Volksgrenadier
divisions, the 12th and the 277th, and a
division of paratroopers, the 3rd
Fallschirmjiiger Division. At H Hour, on
December 16, 1944, after an extremely heavy
concentration of artillery, the infantry
divisions would breach through the American
lines and open pre established routes for the
armored column\~/ \,,.-(
To reach his first objectives, bridges
across the Meuse river, Dietrich selected
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___~or routes of penetration, named
Rollbahn, through the American lines. Those
routes were labeled A through E.
Rollbahn A and B : will be open by the 277th
Volksgrenadier Division for armored battle
groups o.f the 12th SS Panzer Division.
Rollbahn C : will be open by the 12th
V olksgrenadier Division for a third armored
battle group of the 12th SS Panzer Division.
Rollbahn D : attributed to the last Regular
Army unit, the 3rd Fallschirmjiiger Division, to
allow the breakthrough of a large armored
combat group of the 1st SS Panzer Division.
Rollbahn E: The last penetration route, will
be used by the bulk of the 1 st SS Panzer
Division.
The I.SS Panzerkorps did have a timetable.
One day for the breakthrough, one day to get
the armored battle group on the high ground,
one day to reach the Meuse river and
crossings secured the 4th day.
PLANNED ATTACK ROUTES
of the
I. SS-PANZER-KORPS
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hattleul.ap carried b,., a l'1'lC'tnbt:T of (.jn~:nadicr Rl"gin~n' 984 wbu Yw-Uh
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WILLIAM C. WARNOCKfWlLL1AM NEFF
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II. SS PanzerkorDs
Activated in 1942 as SS Panzer
Generalkommando , it became II. SS
Panzerkorps the year after and served on the
East front, specifically in Karkhow and
Koursk. After a short period in Italy, it came
back to the East front, in Tarnopol, mid
1944. After the D Day landing, it is hastily
sent to Normandy where it took part in the
last combats and the retreat.
Hold in reserve, the II. SS Panzerkorps
led by SS Obergruppenfilhrer Wilhelm Bittrich
should be committed into action when the
crossovers on the Meuse river would be
secured. This Panzerkorps is constituted of
the 2nd SS and 9th SS Panzer Division.
Apart the organic artillery of its
divisions, the 6. Panzer Annee had been .
attached three corps of artillery, three
brigades of rocket launchers, four heavy
mortar batteries and one battery of heavy
artillery. This made 685 guns, 180 of them
had a caliber of 150mm o(over, 340 rocket'
launchers of 150mm, 210 mID ~d 300mm.
With the 211 tanks and SP guns of the L SS
Panzerkorps and the 280 tanks and SP guns
of the II. SS Panzerkorps this represented a
fantastic force ready to run over the weakly
defended American front.
I.SS PanzerkorDs in detail
272. Volksf!renadier Division
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The 272. Infanterie Division had been
badly mauled in Normandy and the
remaining elements were sent to Doberitz
where they were added to the newly formed
575th VG Division. In September 1944 that
new division took the name of 272.
Volksgrenadier Division. In November, it was
sent to defensive positions in the West Wall
near Monschau and was in constant contact
with the US 5th Army Corps until the
beginning of the Battle of the Bulge.
326. Volksf!renadier Division
The 326. Infanterie Division
disappeared in the Normandy campaign and
its number was attributed to the new 579.
Volksgrenadier Division who was in formation
and basic training near Kaposvar, Hungary.
The division became 326. Volksgrenadier
Division and moved to Gerolstein, Germany
to join his Army Corps on the west front. Due
to the lack of horses and equipment, it is
transferred to an other Corps, the LXVII, who
was much closer. The division reached its
assembly area early December 1944.
SDecial ODe rations
To facilitate the advance of the 6.
Panzer Annee, two special operations were
prepared. One, codenamed ((Stosser", called
for paratroopers to be dropped in the early
hours of the first day on the high ground
behind the American lines. The German
paratroopers were supposed to capture and
secure a road junction at Baraque Michel, on
the Hohes Venn (High Marshes), and either
open the road for the oncoming armored
battle groups of the 12 SS Panzer Division or
block the roads coming from Eupen and
Verviers and thus prevent any American
reinforcement to reach the front. Oberst
(Colonel) Friedrich von der Heydte, a much
decorated veteran of the airborne forces was
chosen to lead the operation. Because of bad
weather conditions, inexperienced pilots and
jumpmasters, the operation turned out to be
a disaster. Of the 800 paratroopers that took
off, 450 jumped on the Hohes Venn area but
only a hundred came down on the drop zone.
With a combat group so depleted, Oberst von
der Heydte was forced to change his
objectives. Mter several days of guerilla like
actions, he was forced to pull back towards
the German lines. Exhausted, with a broken
arm and frozen feet, von der Heydte was
captured by US troops in Monschau.
The second special operation,
codenamed "Greif', involved a two battalion
size brigade - Panzerbrigade 150 - partly
equipped with captured American vehicles.
This brigade had formed American speaking
commandos whose mission was to penetrate
the American line dressed in American
uniforms and driving jeeps. They would
disorganize supply lines by changing road
signs, occupy vital crossroads or bridges.
Their commander, SS Major Skorzeny, was
one of Hitler's favorite and famous for leading
commando operations. Though the operation
"Greif' was not a real success, it was
certainly a psychological victory. Rumors of
Germans in American uniforms spread on
the entire front and generated a great state of
confusion.
12. Volksf!renadier Division
The 12. Infanterie Division has fought
brilliantly since the beginning of WWII. It was
involved in the Poland and French
campaigns and then transferred to the East
front. In September 1944, the division was
moved to the west and was engaged in the
defense of Aachen. Its name is simply
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changed into 12. Volksgrenadier Division in
October. It was removed from the front early
December and sent to its assembly area were
it was refitted. When the division reached its
jump off positions, it was at 80% of its
strength. The 12. Volksgrenadier Division is a
veteran division, well equipped, well trained
and led by officers and NCO's with combat
experience. This is the best infantry division
in the 6th Panzer Army.
27th Volksf!renadier Division
The 277. Infantene Division Was cut to
pieces in Normandy and what is left of it is
sent to Hungary to be incorporated in the
new 574. Volksgrenadier Division in basic
training near Budapest. On September 9,
1944, the division's name is changed into
277. Volksgrenadier Division. Early
November, the division reached the West
front and takes over a portion of the West
Wall defenses near Losheim. The division met
some troubles two days prior the attack
when it was relieved. One of its battalion
wasn't relieved in time and the attack was
made without it. The 277th VG Division is at
80% strength .
3. Fallschirmiiif!er Division
Activated in France in October 1943,
the 3. Fallschinnjiiger Division fought fiercely
in Normandy and its loss are severe. In
October 1944, the division is in Holland'
where it is reequipped. Replacements are
most of the time ground troops of the
Luftwaffe (air forces) with no combat
experience. Moreover, when the division
reached its jump off positions the day before
the attack, one of its regiment was missing.
The next morning the 3. Fallschirmjiiger
Division started the offensive with only 2
regiments instead of 3.
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l.SS Panzer Division (Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler)
The unit was activated as a motorized
infantry division in 1941 with troops of
Hitler's personal body guard. It fought on the
East front where it became a Panzer
(Armoured) division in 1942. In the Spring of
1944, the division is in Belgium for re-
equipment and reinforcement. It is engaged
in Normandy where it fought fiercely and
suffer important losses. In November, the
division is back in Germany, again for re-
equipment and training of new recruits.
When the division reached its assembly area
near Stadtkyll, it is at 90% strength. Its tank
regiment has 71 tanks in its 1 st battalion and
its missing 2nd battalion is replaced by the
schwere SS Panzer Abteilung 501 (501st SS
heavy tank battalion) equipped 30 King Tiger
tanks. The division's tank destroyer battalion
totaled 10 TD's.
12. SS Panzer Division (Hitler JuaendJ
Originally formed as a
Panzergrenadier Division (armored infantry
division) it became Panzer Division in October
1943. The division, also know as 'Hitler
Youth' division, was engaged for the first time
on June 7, 1944 in the Caen sector in
Normandy. Badly mauled, the division kept
fighting and was part of the rear guard that
kept the 'Falaise pocket' open. It suffered a
lot in Normandy and during the retreat
through France and Belgium. Its famous and
fearless commander, SS Oberfi1hrer Kurt
Meyer, was captured in September during
the retreat and was replaced by SS
Standartenfi1hrer Hugo Kraas. When the
division reached its assembly area in
December, it was at 90% strength and 80%
of equipment. Its tank regiment counted 76
tanks in its 1 st battalion and the missing 2nd
battalion had been replaced by the schwere
Panzer Abteilung 560 (560th regular army
heavy tank battalion) equipped with 25 TD's
(Jagdpanther type). The division's TD
battalion totaled 21 TD's.
2. SS Panzer Division {Das Reich}
Formed in 1940 as an motorized infantry
division, the unit has its roots in one of the
most known SS unit, the 'Das Reich'
regiment. The division fought in Russia and
became armored division in 1943. After
severe losses on the East front, it is send.in
France for re-equipment and replacement in
1944. It was involved in the Normandy
campaign and escaped through the Falaise
pocket. Reformed near Paderborn , the
division totaled 118 tanks at the start of the
Battle of the Bulge.
9. SS Panzer Division {Hohenstaufen}
Mter basic training in France in 1943, the
division fought in Russia in the Tarnopol
area. It was hastly deployed in Normandy
after the D Day landing and took part in the
last combats. Mter the retreat through
France and Holland its strength dropped
down to 20% when it was caught in the allied
airborne operation in Arnhem. Despite its low
strength it played a key role in the allied ,
defeat. It was reorganized near Miinstereifel,
Germany and was at 75% strength at the
start of the Battle of the Bulge.
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Equioment and tactics
III trained, ill equipped and skeletal at the
end of the 1930's, the US Army was
now the best fed, best clothed, best equipped
and best paid army compared to the other
nations involved in WWII. '
Infantrv weapons:
American and German usual infantry
weapons were similar in quality and
performances. The standard US infantry rifle
- the Ml Garand - was a semi automatic
cal.30 rifle, fed by an 8 round clip. It was
superior to the German boltOCtThn 7.92 mm
and semi automatic G43. The German
machine pistol MP40, called ~P.JW~, was
superior to the Cal.45 Thomps nand M3
Grease Gun. c: )
The usual American grenade, a
fragmentation grenade, was powerful and
deadly. It looked like a pineapple and could
be thrown up to 40 yards but the f:u;ginents
were ~p to ~O ~ards. On the other=
hand the German and grenade, known as
"potato masher", was an offensive grenade
onlyaangerous By concussiolrand-Iethal at
only short distance. >'
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The standard German machine gun was the
MG42, a 7.92 mm air cooled weapon with an
extremely high rate of fire. The MG 42 was-
very superior to the American BAR (Browning
Automatic Rifle), a relic of WWI and the
Browning cal.30.
Both armies had mortars as close fire
support. Both used 81mm mortars at
battalion level. At company level, the .
Americaninfantry used 60mm mortars and
Germans 50mm mortars. They all had
similar performances.
One important point of comparison was the
amount of ammunition available on both
sides. The American soldier had almost as
much as he needed. The dying German
economy and industry were severely
restricting the amount of ammunition
available on the front and forced the army to
use a large variety of weapons captured from
the enemy.
Artillerv
The American artillery was available in large
number in organic units or in separate
battalions. The logistic and-the high degree of
mechanization of the US Army made
ammunition available in large amounts and
artillery was used lavishly. As for the infantry
weapons, the German artillery was excellent
but due to the lack of ammunition, it has to
be used with parsimony. Both armies used
105mm howitzers as mepium artillery for
direct support, usually one artillery battalion
in support of one infantry regiment. Both.
also used 155mm howitzers (150mm for the
Germans) for general support. The Germans
substituted a part of)their artillery with
Nebelwerfers, multi'barreled rocket
launchers nicknamed "Screem~/Meemies"
because of their deafening ~nd frightening
noise. At this stage of the war, the shortage
in transportation and prime movers was
important and most of the German artillery
was horse drawn.
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Tariks - Tink destroyers - SP Guns
During the Battle of the Bulge, the
6.Panzer Annee used three types of tanks.
The Panzer W, workhorse of the German
armored units throughout the war. This 25
ton tank was armed with a 75mm gun.
Panzer IV during the Normandy retreat
The Panther (pz V), probably the best
tank ever made during WWII. It had a thick
frontal armor and was armed with a high
velocity 75mm.
Panther in action during the Normandy campaign
The Konigstiger (pz VI) - King Tiger.
This is the most famous German tank. With
its 69 tons and the deadly 88mm gun, this
tank was extremely difficult to destroy. Both
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the Panther and the King Tiger were superior
to the American Sherman.
69 tons King Tiger
German tank destroyers available in the 6.
Panzer Annee units were the Jagdpanzer
W /70 (TD version of the Panzer W, equipped
with the same gun, a 75mm) and the
Jagdpanther (TD version of the Panther but
with the 88mm gun of the King Tiger.
mechanically reliable. One of his major defect
was a tendency to catch fire when hit.
Sherman crew used to nickname their
vehicle 'Ronson tank'. Ronson being lighter
well known for its easiness to lit under any
condition.
Sherman tanks drive through France.
At this stage of the war, the American
tank destroyer units were in evolution. The
towed 3 in. gun, though effective, was slow to
set up in position, and since the middle of
1943 it was replaced by the new full tracked
Stunngeschutz III were used as Self MI0. Other tank destroyers, such as the
propelled guns (SP) and provided close Ml~.!!~llcat and the M36 Jackson, also
artillery support for the infantry. They were eutered in service in mid 1944 but no units
equipped with a 75mm gun. ~quipped with the latest were involved in the
_~4., ....- north shoulder of the Battle of the Bulge.
Sturmgeschutz III taking position, Germany Fall 1944.
The American Sherman had a short
barreled 75mm and was inferior to many
German tanks. On the other hand, it was
available in large number, was easy to
maintain in combat condition and was
M 10 tank destroyers - Aachen Germany Fall 1944
-9-
Brief history of the West Wall
In March 1936, when German troops
marched into the west side of the Rhine,
demilitarized under the Treaty of Versailles,
plans were immediately drawn up for a
defensive wall. These plans led to the
building of the first defensive structure along
Germany's western border. Following Hitler's
order of May 28, 1938, the building of the
'West Wall' began.
Some 138 small concrete bunkers were
erected along the border, ~ crossroa~
important firebreaks or hills and the main
fighting line was established to the rear. This
was supposed to be reinforced with
individual pillboxes, machine gun nests,
mine fields and hundreds of miles of barbed
wire. Hitler ordered then the enlargement of
the main fighting line to a proper line of
pillboxes. Within about 4 months, almost
12.000 pillboxes were constructed between
the Dutch border, in the north, and the
Swiss border, in the south.
r-
The construction of the western fortifications
exacted. enormous sacrifices from the
German population, which at the time was
going through an identity crisis with regard
to National Socialism, and had to be
justified. Besides, Hitler needed for his policy
of strong hand, which at the time was just
beginning to steer a dangerous course
towards war, an mechanism which he could
manipulate according to circumstances, i.e.
he could either deter potential enemies from
attacking the expanding German Empire or,
however, with the same intention, he could
feign peaceable desire for defense and thus
play the role of the wolf in sheep clothing.
Following the end of the hostilities in the
west in 1940, the 'Westwall' had served its
function. Everything that was not clinched or
riveted was removed from the pillboxes. It
was even largely disarmed because -wrongly-
it was expected that it would never be needed
again. However it retained its reputation,
mainly as a result of the extensive
propaganda which continued to accompany
it. A large part of the installations fell into a
slumber lasting about 4 years. After the
successful landing of the Allies in Normandy
on June 6, 1944, the German high command
considered defending the 'Westwall' and
reinforced it by the building'of'oorriers,
especially anti tank ditches and obstacles.
While the Canadians, British and Americans
advanced towards Germany's western border
during the second half of 1944, they had full
respect for the '.&:ggfdpd Line' as they called
it. On September 12, 1944, the first
American troops reached and penetrated into
the 'Westwall'south of Aachen. From then
on until March 1945, the Germans held the
American advance in many locations and
sometimes with unexpected success.
Strongpoints named Aachen, Hurtgen Forest,
Wahiersheid or Udenbreth in the Ardennes
Forest will soon appear on Campaign
Ribbons of many American units.
Most of the concrete pillboxes were destroyed
after the war and many trenches filled by
farmers. Today, the last visible structures of
Hitler's West Wall are the anti tank
obstacles, also known as the 'Dragon's teeth'.
They appear as being laid on the ground, one---\
at the time, with no logical layout. Each one
is in fact part of a large underground
concrete structure of about 150 by 60 feet.
Each structure supports a good hundred of
Dragon's teeth.
-10-
The 99th Infantry Division
Lieutenant General Courtney Hodges'
1 st US Army occupied a defensive sector
stretching from Aachen to the southern
fringes of Luxemburg. Like the rest of the
Allies, his Army fell victim of an extended
supply line. The "Red Ball Express", a series
of continuous truck convoys originating from
Normandy ports, brought supplies to rebuilt
the offensive power of the Army.
The 1 st US Army was a strong and.
capable force. Many of its divisions were
seasoned and the defensive positions on the
"ghost front", named because of the area's
inactivity, allowed less experienced unit to
take over. The philosophy was for units to
gain combat experience by active patrolling
on the front and acquainting them with the
sounds and sights of the battlefield. One of
those green units was the 99th Inf~
Division.
,-.
./
Activated at Camp Van Doorn,
Mississippi in November 1942, the division
moved to Camp Maxey, Paris, Texas in
September 1943 where it completed its
training before being deployed overseas. The
average soldier in the ranks was of extremely
high quality. Many came from the ASTP
(Army Specialized Training Program), which
trained and educated men with a high
academic aptitude. The young recruits
chosen for the program would attend some
form of civilian education and then proceed
to the OCS (Officer Candidate
School).Unfortunately, because of human
need on the front lines, the program was
disbanded and the young recruits became
replacements in combat units fighting
overseas, most going as basic infantrymen.
In September of 1944, the division staged at
Camp Miles Standish, Massachusetts, in
preparation for movement overseas. The 99th
Division left Boston on September 30~, 1944
and arrived in England on ~)Cto ber 1 q, 1944. /
r-
In a matter of weeks the convoy landed men,
vehicles and equipment in France and by 10
November the first elements of the division
were relieving the 9th Infantry Division on the
front lines, in the Ardennes. The 99th
Division was w.ell trained and green only in
combat experience.
The 99th Division was commanded by
Major General Walter M Lauer of Brooklyn,
New York. MG Lauer deployed his three
Infantry Regimertts:'on line from north to
south. In the north. the 395th Infantry
Regiment was1'Olk;'wed by the 393rd Infantry
in the center and the 394th in the south. In
addition, the 394th prOVided one15aftalibfi for
the division reserve. The 99th actual front ran
from Monschau in the north to Lanzerath in
the south. This sector, a 20 mile front, was
greatly overextended ana was a s~ of
concern, especially in the south. At the
extreme left flank of the division was the
famed Losheim Gap, notorious because of
two Getman invasions. The gap had just a
few units covering it. A Task Force of the 14th
Cavalry Group, not equipped for defensive
actions, was manning observation posts and
did reconnaissance. This obvious weak spot
worried MG Lauer so much that he located
his ~4th reserve battalion there, just behind
. (
the 394th Infantry. He also Instructed Col
Riley, commander of the 394th Infantry, to
place an outpost in the village of Lanzerath
to watch the gap from an elevated position,
just in case. The relief went smoothly,
veterans of the seasoned 9th Division
explained the enemy situation and the
disposition of pre dug defensive positions.
The month to come was valuable for the
(. -
three Regiments. Men experienced. great
success in their patrols, artil1ery~ fired a
number of effective missions. ana all units
were close to full strength; making the
divisi~:m a powerful force to be reckoned with.
/
-11-
On line - Pfe Harry Arnold, Co E, 393rd Infantry.
". . . We unloaded from the trucks at Krinkelt ... the
atmosphere of the place was somber and subdued --and we knew
we weren't far from our destination. It was November 10, 1944.
We marched f!om Krinkelt up snow concelilea roads through
fields and7itio woods. The forest, heavy with fresh snow was a
childhood dream of a-limd of Christmas::. 1st Squad was halted
after awhile, and in the usual Army fashion we stood awaiting
the next development. A 9th Division Sgt told me, Jupko and
Johnson to follow him. J upko was our BAR man and Johnson
his assistant gunner. The Sgt carried us to an opening in the
forest which was about 60 feet across and extended indefinitely
in either direction. There, by two open holes in the ground we
stopped. 'How far are we from the front line?' I asked. 'The
line is back there where we just left from' He said. 'This is your
OP, that's the border betw.een Belgium and Germany. You just stay in those holes and keep your
eyes peeled and stay qli.let. You' llbe relieved in a few hours by an other crew. Not much
happening here, you seldom see a Jerry, but he's over there. If you go into the woods over there
watch out for mines and booby traps. The path we came up was cleared of mines but not the
sides. That's about it'...
r-
Aggressive patrolling
Pfc Byron A Whitmarsh Co C, 395th Infantry
".. . our platoon went out to two road blocks made from piles of
trees several times. On November 19 patrol we were told to bring
some prisoners because S-2 people wanted to have someone to
interrogate. We were concerned we would be in for a very rough
day but the weather was so bad it made the job easy. We came all
the way to the second roadblock and around it without arousing
the,G~rmans.They were six German soldiers in foxholes close to
the road block and all of them had their heads down with a
poncho over them to try to stay dry. Two of them farthest from us
ran through the woods. We took four and started back to our
lines. On November 23, Thanksgiving day, our mission was to
./ '
clear out Germans fr~m around a road(blockWe had part of the
weapons platoon and an artillery observer who had/radio contact with his battery. As we
approached the roadblock, some Germans to the fight and back of the roadblock fired automatic
weapons, hitting no one. We took cover and one Iof our mortar men try to hit the Germans. This
was impossible because of the dense growth ofthe1trees made visibiliry almost zero and anyway
the rounds detonated high in the trees. Th~ artillery obserVer' called his battery. This didn't work
either for the_same reason as before. After each blast the Germans would let go a burst of fire to
let us know they were still there. Our platoon leader then directed us to fix bayonets and form a
skirmish line to sweep the woods. I thought this was the craziest thing I had ever heard of
because it seeme'(Fmany of us would be shot. However when we advanced through the woods,
most of the Germans took off, except three or four that we captured. We started back to our line
[ollowing the road, as we were going around an oth~1:-7f!Jlblock,~e man'tl[rf!:ont of me, Bob
V ose, set off a mine along the shoulder of the road:-There was a big blast and~ V ose was killed
instantly. The blast knocked me down and I was temporarily blinded and could not ,hear for a
time ... "
'-,
-12-
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-13-
TABLES OF ORGANIZATION
1 st Platoon
(Rifle)
1
4
12
12
12
INFANTRY RIFLE COMPANY
TIO & E 7-17
26 February 1944
12
12
12
2
33
Company Strength: 6 officers. 187 enlisled men
Weapons
Platoon
I
I Platoon 11
Hq. 5
12
I
SD-mm Mortar
Section
I
Light MG
Section
3rd Platoon
(Rifle)
~12
~
WEAPONS (WPNS PL T):
(2) .30'cal. LMG
(3) 60-mm mortar
12
5
5
5
5
5
INFANTRY HEAVY WEAPONS COMPANY
TIO & E 7-18
26 February 1944
1 st Heavy MG
Platoon
,
1 sl HMG
Section
2nd HMG
Section
2nd Heavy MG
Platoon
2
32
1 st HMG
Section
-14-
Company Strength: 8 oHicers, 158 enlisted men
I
1st Mortar
Section
81-mm Mortar
Platoon
~'
Hq. 5
2nd Mortar
Section
I
3rd Mortar
Section
7 7 7 7 8 8 8
7 7 7 7 8 8 8
"\
VEHICLES: HEAVY WEAPONS:
(14) Trailer.1I4-lon (8) .30-cal. HMG
(19) Truck.1I4-lon (6) 81-mm mortar
(1 ) Truck. 314-lon we (1) .50-cal. MG
'\.
TABLES OF ORGANIZATION
FIELD ARTILLERY BATTERY, 105-mm HOWITZER
TRUCK-DRAWN
TIO & E 6-27
27 Seplember 1944
j B.",,,, S...""." 5 ."..~
Forward
Observation 1
Section 2
Firing
Battery
Hq.
1
2
MAIN WEAPON:
(4) M2A1 Howitzer, 105-mm
1
8
10
10
VEHICLES:
(2) Trailer, ammunition, M10
(3) Trailer. 1/4-lon
(1) Trailer, Hon
(4) Truck, 1/4-ton
(4) Truck, 314-ton, WC
(1) Truck, 2 112-lon~ cargo
(6) Truck,2 112-ton, SWB
10
FIELD'ARTILLERY BATTERY, 155-mm HOWITZER
TRACTOR-DRAWN
TIO & E 6-37
27 Seplember 1944
1
25
MAIN WEAPON:
(4) M1A1 Howitzer, 155-mm
1
7
Battery Slrength: 4 officers, 102 enlisted men
'- --- ---'"
10
1
9
VEHICLES:
(2) Trailer, ammunition, Ml0
(2) Trailer, 1/4-lon
(1) Trailer, Hon
(3) Truck, 1/4-to,;
(1) Truck, 3/4-lon, command
(3) Truck, 3/4-ton, we
(1) Truck, 2 112-lon, cargo
(1) Truck,2 112-ton, SWB
(5) Tractor, HS, 13-too, M5
. -15-
1
25
The 2nd Division attacks Wahlerscheid
Early December 1944, the 2nd
Infantry Division, who was in position along
the West Wall east of StVith, was removed
from the lines. The Division was trucked
north to an assembly area near Camp
Elsenborn, just behind the 99th Division.
The 2nd Infantry Division was a seasoned
unit who landed in Normandy at D+ 1 and
fought fiercely in Brittany.
Vth Corps had planned an offensive
whose goal was the capture of important
dams located on the Roer river, just a few
miles into the West Wall. General Gerow's
Vth Corps, with a 25 mile front which
extended from H urtgen in the north to
Lanzerath in the south was in an excellent
position to launch direct attacks toward the
dams from the north, west and southwest.
However Gerow decided on an enveloping
attack with the 78th Infantry Division
striking from the north wing. The 2nd
Division attacking from the south wing
would push northeast to the Wahlerscheid
crossroad and from there strike the dams
from the south. General Gerow was
particul~rly concerned by the exposed right
flank of the 2nd Division so he ordered'the
99th Division to provide a flank protection.
What the Americans didn't know was that
the entire German defense of the area soon
to be under attack was in complete status
of flux. The 272. Volksgrenadier Division
holding the area to be attacked by the US
78th Division was slated to regroup as the
northernmost unit of the 6.Panzerarmee
during the Ardennes attack. The 277.
Volksgrenadier Division, defending the
Hofen-Wahlerscheid sector, was slated to
move south and form the central attack
force of the 6.Panzerarmee. These top
secrecy moves were successful, intelligence
of both sides was unaware of the new
positioning. As a consequence, these secret
troop exchanges by both American and
German, directly affected the outcome of
fighting in the North Shoulder of the Battle
of the Bulge.
On December 10, 1944, Col
Alexander G. McKenzie, CO of the 395th
Infantry was informed that his regiment
would participate in a V Corps attack aimed
at capturing a series of dams on the Roer
River. The 2nd Infantry Division would
spearhead the attack and capture an
important strongpoint in the Westwall, the
Wahlerscheid crossroads. Col McKenzie's
395th Infantry Regiment had only two of its
three infantry battalions, the 1 st and the
2nd. The 3rd Battalion had been dispatched
in early November to Hofen and was not
available. Col McKenzie was attached the
2nd Battalion of the 393rd Infantry as
reinforcement, as well as supporting
artillery and chemical mortars. His orders
were to move forward with his combat team
and protect the right flank of the 2nd
Division. He also had to capture a group of
enemy fortifications a few miles southeast
of Wahlerscheid crossroads. D Day was set
on December 13, 1944. Weather was bad
that morning. Snow had fallen the last two
days and the fog limited the visibility to
about 150 yards. At 0830, the 395th RCT
jumped off toward its objectives following a
small forest path named 'Hasselpath'. In the
meantime, the 9th Infantry Regiment, the
striking force of the 2nd Division, started its
move toward Wahlerscheid. What they did
not realize was they were attacking a small
fortress. The road coming from Belgium was
the only approach way in the entire area.
That specific strongpoint of the West Wall
was made of a dozen of pillboxes and
concrete bunkers. They were grouped
around the Wahlerscheid road junction and
sited to provide interlocking fire. These
fields of fire were completely clear of trees
and underbrush and the entire clearing was
encircled by booby trapped barbed wire.
The snow hid a network of antipersonnel
mines, mortars and artillery were zeroed in
on the crossroad. On the route of march,
the lead elements had received sporadic
mortar fire since the dense forest concealed
the size of the movement. The Germans
fired only on what they believed to be the
usual heavy patrols in the area. By the end
of the afternoon, the lead battalions, 1 st
Battalion west of the road and 2nd Battalion
east, have reached the edge of the clearing.
Now the element of surprise was gone and
heavy artillery concentrations began to rain.
Because of their exposed nature the
position was untenable and attacking
elements of the 1 st Battalion continued the
move toward the crossroad. They soon ran
into AP mines and heavy small arms fire.
Caught in the open, they were forced to
withdraw several hundred yards back into
the forest. The situation was identical east
of the road with the 2nd battalion. Repeated
attempts to breach the defenses the next
day ended in failure despite the use of the
3rd Battalion. Finally in the late evening
hours of December 15, a group of pillboxes
was surrounded and captured. The next
morning, December 16, the mop up was
completed. Five days of combat had cost the
9th Infantry Regiment 826 men, half of them
victims of the terrible winter conditions.
-16-
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13th - 16th Dec. 44 ~
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-17-
The 395th R.C.T.
On the night of December 12, the 395th
Regimental Combat Team (RCT) bivouacked
in its assembly area. Barrack bags,
blankets and personal belongings were
stacked there in order to carry extra loads
of ammunition. Officers and NCO's were
briefed and everyone tried to prepare
themselves for a push through deep snow
and over rough terrain against stiff
resistance from the world's most strongly
fortified area. The chaplain saw extra duty
that night.
As the 2nd Division was marching towards
its objectives, Col McKenzie's 395th
RegImental Combat Team (RCT) proceeded
as scheduled on the right flank. They
followed a muddy forest path known as
Hasselpath, which paralleled the route of
march of the 2nd Division. In this sector too,
the snow and the fog slowed down the
progression. The end of the Hasselpath
comes out onto a deep valley, which forms
the border between Belgium and Germany.
The German side of this valley is in turn
separated in two by a gorge at the base of
which runs a creek. The two German valley
tops appear on maps as Hill 621 and Hill
627 which were the objectives of the L~t
Battalion, 395th RCT. A half mile to the
south-east, an other group of pillboxes
known as Daubenscheid was the objective
of the 2nd Battalion, 393rd Infantry. The
German defenses of the West Wall are
firmly rooted above the valley with
strongpoints on both hills.
At about 1430, on December 13,
1944, the lead elements of the 1st Battalion,
395th Infantry dropped down the
Hasselpath and Co B attacked its first
objective, the base of Hill 621. They
immediately came under mortar and small
arms fire. A number of men, including the
company commander, Capt Hugh M.
Gettys, were killed and more than a dozen
were wounded or captured. As darkness
fell, the Regiment organized its positions
and prepared to continue the attack the
next morning. No one slept that night since
blankets and warm clothes had not been
brought from the assembly area and the
thoughts of what happened to Company B
also added to the misery. The next morning,
after a 15 minute artillery preparation
Company A and C attacked down the deep
ravine of the creek and scrambled up the
precipitous wooded hillside of Hill 627.
Rapid advance was made across small trees
and brush in spite of constant small arms
fire. In the mid afternoon, Company Chad
reached the top of the hill and had formed a
perimeter of defense around the first
captured pillboxes. The squads were told to
that one man in each foxhole had to be
awake all night. This order was useless
because without blankets, and in many
cases, without overcoat, very few slept that
night. On Hill 621 the 2nd Battalion, 395th
Infantry had also taken most of the
objectives, as did the 2nd Battalion 393rd
Infantry at Daubenscheid. The next two
days, December 15 and 16, the last
objectives were taken on both hills and the
positions were improved. German artillery
and mortar fire remained constant and
heavy, causing numerous casualties.
Among the blizzard of incoming shells were
"88" rounds. These were the high-velocity
projectiles of the legendary 8.8cm gun. If
any weapon in the German arsenal can be
said to have most impressed the American
soldier, it was the "88". To the GIs who
occupied Hill 627, the "88" turned their
surroundings into the epicenter of Hell on
earth. They dubbed the place "88 Hill." Hill
621 was later dubbed "Purple Heart Hill".
Withdrawal
The first evidence of the German
massive counter attack of December 16 was
not apparent to the 395th RCT. They were
still waiting further development with the
2nd Division at Wahlerscheid and focused on
their own objectives. Early on December 17,
Col McKenzie was informed of the all-out
German attack and the critical situation. He
was ordered to withdraw his RCT as soon
as possible toward the north of the twin
villages of Krinkelt- Rocherath, where they
had assembled 5 days before, and protect
the withdrawal of the 2nd Division. This was
to be done rapidly to avoid to be cut off from
the rear. At 1100 on December 17, the
395th RCT began its withdrawal, leaving
behind equipment and weapons not
considered as vital in a rapid retreat. For
those unfortunates carrying mortars,
BAR's, machine guns, the journey was
almost impossible. At the end of the
afternoon the 395th RCT had reached its
former assembly area. The 1st and 2nd
Battalion of the 395th Infantry prepared
defensive position facing north and the 2nd
Battalion 393rd Infantry established a
defensive line facing east to stop the first
German patrols trying to enter Krinkelt-
Rocherath.
At about 2000, the 395th RCT was in
position north and east of the Rocherath-
Wahlerscheid road. The 9th and 38th
Infantry Regiments of the 2d Division,
which had captured 18 pillboxes around
Wahlerscheid the day before, withdrew
through the newly established defenses.
This withdrawal was completed by about
-18-
2100 on 17 December. The position was
held in spite of constant German small-
arms fire and intermittent artillery fire until
the afternoon of the next day, December
18th, when a withdrawal order was issued.
The entire 395th RCT, with the 2nd
Battalion, 393rd Infantry still attached,
pulled back cross-country toward
Elsenborn. Upon reaching Elsenborn, the
retreating column was stopped and ordered
to return to the position from whence it
came. A radio message had apparently been
misinterpreted and no withdrawal order
had been issued. When the 2nd Battalion,
393rd reached its original positions, at dawn
on December 19th, they discovered the
Germans had been slow in taking
advantage of the situation. Some Germans
were in the positions, but they were quickly
routed. On the morning of the 19th, very
early, the battalion was hit with a barrage
from what appeared to be friendly tank
destroyers. It caused casualties in E, G and
H companies, with the fIring lasting half an
hour. The barrage was finally called off.
r-
~~~~~~~~~~
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However, it had been a costly action, the
battalion suffered 7 killed and 17 wounded.
This made the treatment and evacuation of
the wounded very difficult. It also caused a
great state of confusion. The enemy started to
press in more closely during the morning,
hitting the 395th RCT from the flank with
large patrols. It remained under German fire
throughout the day. The actual withdrawal
order to the Elsen born Ridge was finally
released in the evening and the men were told
that they might have to fight their way out, as
the Germans were known to be in Rocherath-
Krinkelt by the time. There had been
confused fighting there the night before.
Under cover of the darkness, however, the
395th RCT moved back without troubles. The
night however was broken many times with
flares from both sides and the sounds of
battle were all around them. They reached a
point east of ElsenborI,1 and closed in at
about 0100 on the December 20.
~~~~~~~~~~
88 Hill - Pvt Vemon E Swanson, Co C, 395th Infantry
"...1 can still remember climbing up the almost vertical
slope of the hill and thinking '- This is stupid, we're all
going to get killed before we get to the top'. 1 still marvel
that we possessed the guts and stamina to make that
climb..." "... 1 shared a foxhole atop "88 Hill." with Jack
Beckwith. At dawn on December 16, 1944, Beckwith
was at the battalion aid station seeking medical
attention. Along with many others, he had "trench foot".
1 expected he would be evacuated but there was nobody
to replace him. Beckwith explained that only five guys
were evacuated. The rest had to go back. As 1 listened,
there was a burst of flame, the blast blew Beckwith 15
to 20 feet. He had been ripped apart bu shell fraaments.
His left foot was severed and his left leg smashed. Blood oozed from smoking holes
in his abdomen and head. 1 shouted for the medics, 1 saw warm air rising from his
mouth. He appeared to be breathing. Finally, somebody grabbed me and said,
'He's dead.' 1 can't remember what 1 did after that point..." "... Our retreat started
down the precarious side of the hill. 1 was carrying my BAR ... 1 remember
stumbling along a narrow path and suddenly staring up at steep and slippery
upward trail. My initial reaction was '-Do 1 want to collapse here or just prolong the
agony'. Suddenly a medic came up to me and said '-Give me your gun and I'll meet
you at the top of the hill', I'll never forget that guy.
-19-
39Sth R.C.T.
17th - 19th Dee 1944
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Hofen - 3rd Battalion. 395th Infantrv
As soon as the 395th Infantry went
on line early November 1944, LtCol Butler's
third battalion was detached to the German
village of Hafen, Germany. His men relieved
elements of the 102nd Cavalry Group and
took up defensive positions overlooking the
charming town of Monschau. Monschau
itself had no strategic importance, it lay in
the bottom of a narrow valley surrounded
by sharp cliffs. However, the road leaving
the town to the west was a direct access to
the Belgian town of Eupen, important rear
base of the 1 st US Army and the US Vth
Corps. Hafen was not more strategic, except
th~t it was sitting on a major route leading
to Elsenborn, Malmedy, Spa and Liege, the
heart of the 1st US Army.
At 0530, on the morning of
December 16, a tremendous German
artillery and Nebelwerfer rocket barrage
rolled over the battalion lines and left to the
west. The fire was continuous until 0545,
when it abruptly ceased. The shelling
produced an enormous amount of damage
within the town of Hafen. Fires raged
everywhere and the streets were chocked
with debris of smashed buildings and fallen
telephone poles. All wire lines to
subordinate, adjacent and higher echelon
were severed.
Wire crews were still frantically
working to restore communications when
the fIrst assault companies of the 326.
Volksgrenadier Division appeared.. Accurate
mortar and small arms fire caught them in
the open and stopped them dead. Those
who survived long enough to reach the
American forward lines were cut down at
very close range. At about 0830, the attack
was over and communications had been
restored. Sporadic American artillery
concentrations were fired throughout the
morning and the battlefield remained quiet
until noon when a second attack developed.
This one was stopped dead in the open field
by heavy artillery concentrations. Col
Butler's battalion was in a static position
since its arrival, early November 1944, and
the supporting artillery units, including the
battalion's mortars, were perfectly zeroed in
and many targets were accurately mapped
to offer protection in any situation. When
dusk fell on Hafen, dozens of German
bodies were piled in front of the battalion's
positions
Decem ber 17th was spent almost
without contact with the Germans, except
for sporadic artillery and mortar fires. On
the 18th, having failed to breach north of
Monschau, the Germans focused their
attention on Hafen again. In the early hours
of the morning, an infiltrating force
succeeded in penetrating the northern edge
of the village in Company I sector. Despite
murderous small arms fire from the
battalion, the Germans infiltrated deep
enough to reach the Battalion CP area. The
battle was extremely confuse but at
daylight, after considerable close quarter
fighting, Co I was able to restore the lines.
At about 0900, after a heavy concentration
of German artillery, the Germans renewed
their assault, this time in Co K sector.
Despite heavy casualties inflicted by the
battalion's mortars and heavy machine
guns, the Germans succeeded in effecting a
penetration. American artillery
concentrations were called on the
penetrated area and the Germans withdrew
in disorder. The entire battalion front had
been cleared by 0930, but only for a short
time. At 1000, a battalion size force
attacked the center of Co I and drove a
penetration of about 400y wide and 100y
deep. Approximately 100 Germans
infantrymen who had moved into 4 large
stone buildings in the penetrated area were
firing from windows and doorways. Mortar
and artillery fire was placed on those
houses but with negligible results. Two anti
tank guns in position near the penetrated
area were moved closer and fIred point
blank at the buildings, methodically
shattering the stone walls. The fire of those
guns proved effective, but the Germans did
not surrender until riflemen attacked with
phosphorous grenade and forced the
Germans out.
This was the final attempt to take
Hafen. From 19 to 24 December 1944, the
Germans maintained constant pressure on
Col Butler's battalion with raiding patrols.
Those were usually beaten off by mortar
and artillery fire. The battalion prepared to
repulse an other attack on December 25
but none developed.
For its superb defense in Hofen, the
3rd Battalion, 395th Infantry earned itself
the Presidential Unit Citation and two men
were awarded the Distinguished Service
Cross, the Nation's second highest award.
They were Sgt Thornton E. Piersall and Pvt
Richard Mills, both members of Company I.
-21-
Richard D Mills, Hofen, November 1944.
Mills' citation reads: "Private First Class
Richard D. Mills, 38553332, Company 1, 395th
Infantry Regiment, 99th Infantry Division. For
extraordinary heroism in action against the
enemy on December 18, 1944 in Germany. When
the enemy launched a filrious attack against his
unit's positions and penetrated the main line of
resistance, Private First Class Mills opened fire
with his automatic rifle, killing many of the
enemy and wounding others. Time and again he turned back their repeated
fanatic attempts to pass his position. On the final attack, PFC Mills' weapon
jammed. With utter disregard for his personal safety, he left his foxhole and
standing in the open, hurled grenades, dispersing the hostile attack. By his
superb personal courage and unhesitating action, PFC Mills contributed
materially to the stemming of the German drive and the protection of his
battalion's communication lines.
Lt Col McClernand Butler
C.O. 3rd Battalion, 395th Infantry
-22-
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-23-
393n1 Infantry Re2iment.
With its 2nd Battalion detached to the 395th
RCT, Colonel Jean D. Scott's 393rd Infantry
Regiment had only 2 battalions on line, the
3rd Battalion under LtCol Allen and the 1 st
Battalion under Major Legler. These
. battalions were dug in at the edge of the
forest along a large road nicknamed
"International Highway". The road, forming
the border between Belgium and Germany
runs north - south, along most of front of
the 99th Division. Directly south of the 395th
Infantry was LtCol Jack Allen's 3rd
Battalion, 393rd Infantry. Col Allen had
deployed his 3 infantry companies on line
in .order to cover the majority of the uneasy
terrain. L company was far in the forest
covering the battalion's left flank, I
company in the center and K company on
the right flank across a small forest path
and linked by cross fires with Major Legler's
1 st battalion. The forest path running
through K company led to the village of
Krinkelt, some 3 miles to the rear. It also
offered an ideal MSR (Main Supply. road) for
the battalion. Unknown to Col Allen and the
boys of company K, that path appeared on
the German plan as 'Rollbahn A', the first of
the five attack routes.
16 - 17 Dec. 44 - 3n1 Battalion sector.
At 0530, the Germans laid on the entire
front a tremendous artillery barrage that
lasted more than an hour. Just as the
barrage lifted, the first assault troops of the
277. Volksgrenadier Division. hit K company
on both flanks. The entire Grenadier
Regiment 989 hit one platoon of K company
dug in astride Rollbahn A and at the same
time, the Grenadier Regiment 990 breached
on the right flank. Both German regiments
were supposed to make a flank attacks and
join as soon as possible in a draw just
behind K Company's positions. From there,
they would push through the forest
alongside the MSR and open the way for the
waiting tanks of the 12. SS Panzer Division.
At about 0900, the Germans had reached
the draw and had nearly annihilated Co K.
Captain Stephen K. Plume, CO of Co K had
lost 65% of his men within the first two
hours of combat. The gap was almost
opened but not totally. Company I, a few
hundred yards north had seen only little
action and L Co farther north in the forest
only heard the rumble of the battle. Facing
this critical situation, Col Allen had no
other solution than ordering a general
withdrawal. It has to be done quick because
the Germans were nearly behind Co I & L.
Those two companies fought their way back
to the Battalion CP area. At the end of the
afternoon both companies and the
-24-
remnants of Co K had joined the CP area
and formed a new perimeter of defense. The
heavy mortars of Company M had expanded
all their ammunition - 1265 rounds. The
situation was extremely critical and Col
Allen radioed Regiment and asked for
reinforcement. The only available force was
a company of the 394th Infantry hold as
Division reserve. The company arrived
during the night. Though virtually
surrounded and unaware of the size of the
German attack, Col Allen prepared to
counter attack the next morning and re
establish the original line of defense. The
night was spent in a high tension, the
Germans were all around sending patrols
and trying to find a weak spot. The next
morning, Rollbahn A was still not opened,
the Germans committed the tanks of the
12.SS Panzer Division to action. This was a
seasoned SS outfit and the pressure on
Allen's battalion became unbearable. As the
German tanks slowly crushed the thin
defensive lines, firing point blank into the
foxholes, Col Allen, requested permission to
withdraw and it was accepted. Still in
contact with the Germans, the companies
began to withdraw, one after another. One
, of the last unit in contact with the Germans
was Sgt Vernon McGarity's squad of
Company L. His squad still continued to cut
down SS Grenadiers accompanying the
tanks with heavy small arms fire. This
forced the tanks to stop for awhile. Taking
advantage of the situation he ran back to
an ammunition hole and re supplied his
men. He single handedly destroyed a MG
position firing on his position and directed
fire on a Flakwagen (Anti aircraft light
canon mounted on a half track). His squad
finally ran out of ammunition and they were
all captured. For his gallantry in action, Sgt
McGarity received the Nation's highest
award, the 99th Division's only
Congressional Medal of Honor. In the
meantime the men began to destroy papers,
radios and all sorts of equipment in the CP
area, . At 1500, the withdrawal was
completed and the last defenders left the
hill. The battalion suffered many casualties
throughout the 16th and 17th December.
Capt Frederick J McIntyre, the Battalion
surgeon, and his aid men, volunteered to
stay behind with the wounded who could
not be evacuated. They were all captured at
the end of the afternoon.
We attack!
Unterofflzier Karl Heinz Franke
3. Kompanie, Grenadier Regiment 991
At 0530 the silence was suddenly broken by fire of heavy and light
artillery. The eastern horizon became a bright wall of fire. .
Countless anti aircraft searchlights shone on the enemy positions.
Along with that came the sinister screeching and howling of our
Nebelwerfers. Without pause whistling shells hammered the
trenches and approaches to the enemy lines... Squads in white
suits hurried past me through the minefield passage. .. very near
to us, to our front, lay the US positions. .. I hurried to my squad,
with machine pistols and assault rifles at the ready we stepped
crouched down through the snow toward the invisible enemy. The
road. .. hand grenades... explosions, we broke screaming into the
first American positions. We fired our assault rifles from the hip.
We hastened past the first American dead and encountered others who resisted fiercely but our
firepower mowed them down. The survivors raised their hands, the first position was in our
hands... There was a short whining and heavy shells crashed among us. To run was senseless
since shrapnels whined all around... Then quiet... sudden quiet is always suspicious, brown
clad figures were hustling toward us. I raised my assault rifle, burst, burst, shot, shot... cease
fire. I glanced at my squad, Muller to my right moaned and attempted to find a better cover, his
right ann was smashed. He raised a little to high, was hit in the chest and collapsed. My
company commander, Hauptmann Hagedorn, was several meter behind me, I saw him yelling
orders and waving his ann as he was hit and collapsed. A medic crawled fonuard and raised the
Hauptmann's head. He was dead. At the end of the day wefound out that our battalion was
reduced to 45 men.
Medal of Honor citation TjSgt Vernon McGarity
"TjSgt Vernon McGarity, a squad leader with Co L, 393rd
Infantry Regiment, 99th Division, was painfully wounded in an
artillery barrage that preceded the powerfull counteroffensive
launched by the Germans near Krinkelt, Belgium, on December
16, 1944. He made his way to an aid station, received
treatment, and then refused to be evacuated, choosing to return
to his hard pressed men instead. The fury of the enemy's great
Western Front offensive swirled about the position held by Sgt
McGarity's small force, but so tenaciously did these men fight
on orders to stand firm at all costs that they could not be
dislodged despite murderous enemy fire and the breakdown of
their communication. During the day, the heroic squad leader
rescued one of his friends who had been wounded in a forward
position, and throughout the night he exhorted his comrades to
repulse the enemy's attempts at infiltration. When the morning
came and the Germans attacked with tanks and infantry, he
braved heavy frre to run to an advantageous position where he immobilized the enemy's lead
tank with a round from a rocket launcher. Fire from his squad drove the attacking infantry
back and three supporting tanks withdrew. He rescued, under heavy frre, another wounded
and then directed devastating fire on a light cannon which had been brought up by the hostile
troops to clear resistance from the area. When ammunition began to run low, Sgt McGarity,
remembering an old ammunition hole about 100 yards distant in the general direction of the
enemy, braved a concentration of hostile fire to replenish his unit's supply. By circuitous route
the enemy managed to emplace a machine gun to the rear and flank of the squad's position,
cutting off the only escape route. Unhesitatingly, the gallant soldier took it upon himself to
destroy this menace single-handedly. He left cover and while under steady fire from the enemy,
killed or wounded all the hostile gunners with deadly accurate rifle fire and prevented all
attempts to reman the gun. Only when the squad's last round had been fired was the enemy
able to advance and capture the intrepid leader and his men. The extraordinary bravery and
extreme devotion to duty of Sgt McGarity supported a remarkable delaying action,which
provided the time necessary for assembling reserves and forming a line against which the
German striking power was shattered."
-25-
3ni Batt. 23rd Infantry - Rescue
With two of its three Regiments involved in
the attack of Wahlerscheid, General
Robertson, CG of the 2nd Infantry Division,
had kept his remaining Regiment, the 23rd
Infantry, as reserve. The extremely serious
situation on the entire front forced him to
deploy a part of his reserve. He detached
his 3rd Battalion of the 23rd Infantry, under
LtCol Paul V Tuttle, behind Col Allen's and
Major Legler's Battalions. Col Tuttle had to
deploy his men around the Ruppenvenn
crossroad, where Rollbahn A and B join.
Should either Col Allen's battalion or Major
Legler's collapse, or both, sooner or later
the .Germans would reach Ruppenvenn
crossroad. It was already dark in that late
aftemoon of the 16th December when Col
Tuttle's battalion reached Ruppenvenn. His
men detrucked and disappeared into the
forest toward their respective positions.
Company I, under Capt Charles B
McDonald (who became later a noted
military historian and writer) dug in astride
Rollbahn A, some 1000 yards east of the
crossroad, Company L astride Rollbahn B
some 500 yards south of the crossroad,
Company K was deployed between. The
night was pitch black and sporadic small
arms fire could be heard far to the east,
where Col Allen's Battalion and Major
Legler's were trying to survive. Tuttle's men
began to dig positions in the frozen ground
and prepared for the worst. Late that
evening of the 16th December, an extra
supply of ammunition arrived. Given the
magnitude of the German attack, the
battalion had to hold at all cost. However,
no anti tank mines and bazookas rockets
were available. Col Tuttle was then
informed that a support in the form of a
platoon of Sherman tanks of the 741 st Tank
Battalion would arrive in the morning.
With the fIrst lights of the 17thDecember,
heavy small arms fIre and loud bangs of
German tank guns echoed in the forest. The
12. SS Panzer Division was breaching
through Col Allen's battalion. Shortly before
noon Col Tuttle was informed than the
remnants of Col Allen's battalion would
withdraw through his position, closely
followed by SS Grenadiers and SS tanks. In
the mid afternoon, soon after the last
elements of Col Allen's battalion had pulled
back, the fIrst German tanks started
coming down the ridge in front of Co I,
chinking and groaning along the narrow
forest path. This was the leading elements
of Kampfgruppe Milller, a combined
infantry-tanks combat team led by SS
Major Siegfried Miiller. Artillery fIre was
requested and tanks began to scatter but
almost immediately, Co I was attacked by
swarms of SS Grenadiers. Heavy machine
guns of the company cut down this first
attack and forced the enemy infantry to
seek cover in the ravine. The fight died
down briefly, the battlefield is now covered
with dozen of German bodies. They can be
heard screaming and crying. After a brief
lull, grindings and squealing of motors and
tracks grew closer_and the first tanks
appeared. SS infantry have come out of
their hiding places and follow the tanks.
The situation is critical, Co I has only a few
bazooka rounds, German tanks are
methodically pumping shells into the
foxholes and the line is about to collapse.
SS infantry is however pined down by
intense machine gun and rifle fire but
ammunition is now getting low. By 1600,
the defense is cracking into bits,
individuals, groups, entire squads began to
withdraw to the West. Co I is disintegrated,
Co K and L still barely hold. The machine
guns of the two Sherman tanks of the 741 st
Tank Battalion are beating the woods with
with devastation. As the day wears on, Col
Tuttle is pleading for tanks, artillery,
ammunition, reinforcement but the answer
is "Hold at all costs".
Lt Victor Miller, the officer in
command of the Shermans, moved two of
his tanks, including his, to the edge of the
forest in order to cover the approach of the
German tank column. He is fearful of what
may happen, he knows how deadly the
German high velocity guns are. Indeed they
are. The two Shermans engaged the leading
German tanks whose returning fire blew
holes in their armor, killing most of the
crew, including Lt Miller.
The night is slowly falling on the
forest and it is obvious that the situation is
now hopeless for Col Tuttle. German tanks
have breached his defense, German infantry
has infiltrated everywhere and in many
places his men have been overwhelmed and
had been forced to pull back. Two isolated
nests of resistance, in the form of two
machine gunners, were still holding. Those
determined soldiers were frantically blasting
away, controlling the belt with one hand
and firing with the other. The heroes were
Pvt Jose Lopez and Pvt Richard Cowan,
both were awarded the Medal of Honor,
Cowan posthumously. Lopez, firing from the
edge of the forest, was finally knocked flat
by the concussion of a shell but unharmed,
he put his heavy gun on his shoulder and
moved away. Enemy men and machines
were now streaming out of the forest to the
west. The woods East of Krinkelt held for 36
hours by the 99th and 2nd Divisions allowed
friendly troops to organize and put the
Germans largely beyond schedule.
-26-
Lausdell- nie:ht of the 17th-18th
In the mid afternoon of the 17th, the
9th Infantry Regiment, in full retreat from
the Wahlerscheid area (see chapter
Wahlerscheid), was stopped north of
Krinkelt-Rocherath by General Robertson.
He knew that the situation was critical in
the forest west of the twin villages. He
directed the 1st Battalion, 9th Infantry (1/9),
to a place known as Lausdell, a cross road
in the middle of nowhere. Lausdell stands
in open ground and offers direct access to
the twin villages. The 1/9 is hastily
deployed in the path of Kampfgruppe Milller.
~'.
Commanded by LtCol William D McKinley,
a nephew of President McKinley, the 1st
Battalion had suffered high rate of
casualties in the 4 day battle around
Wahlerscheid. Its men, though veterans of
the Normandy campaign, were exhausted,
cold and hungry. They did not know what
to expect but their orders are extremely
simple : "stand against any enemy coming
at them". To complicate the matter, .
scattered groups of friendly troops were still
coming from the forest. McKinley's men
began to scratch the frozen ground to make
shallow foxholes, deployed anti tank mines
and set up a number of machine gun nests.
I t's dark by the time and a thick fog now
covers the entire area.
At about 2000, the ominous sound
of squealing bogies and turning tracks are
heard. The first German tank appeared in
the fog, rolls over a mine and bogs down on
the road forcing the others to disperse
across the fields. Bazooka teams leave their
holes and go hunting the steel monsters.
The accompanying SS Grenadiers deploy in
the fields and begin to return fire. The night
is now filled with explosions, shouts and
heavy small arms fire. Tracers arching from
all directions and burning Panther tanks
lighten the scene with a frightening wan
light. To add to the chaos, American artil-
lery is raining but given the poor visibility,
corrections are impossible. Some of the
shells fall short, exploding among
McKinley's men, others go wild. In this
inferno, the fact that the artillery performed
such a great support given the circum-
stances is a miracle. By 2200, that evening
of the December 17, the battlefield became
quiet, the Germans had momentarily pulled
back. The blood of McKinley's men is
buying time to allow friendly troops to
organize the defense of the twin villages.
At about midnight, more Panthers
emerge from the woods east of Lausdell,
they are accompanied by walking and riding
Grenadiers. The artillery officer, Lt John C
Granville, screams over the radio that all
available shellfire must be laid immediately
on the fields between Lausdell and the
forest. The radio remained silent. After an
endless minute, the whistle of in coming
artillery filled the sky and the entire area
erupted with hundreds of explosions.
German men and machines scattered in
every direction to escape flying steel and the
crushing force of the explosions. After
fifteen minutes, when the shelling lifted,
silent descended on the freezing and foggy
scene where so many young Americans and
Germans have just died in pain and terror.
Dawn of December 18th, came with
the air still fIlled with smoke smoldering
from the burnt vehicles. The rifle companies
of McKinley still stand despite extremely
high losses. Around 0700, German artillery
began to rain on the crossroad, obviously
preparing on other assault. Soon after,
Panther tanks emerged from the morning
fog. The first two are destroyed by bazooka
teams but the others broke through and
disappeared toward Krinkelt-Rocherath. SS
troopers accompanying the tanks reach the
line of foxholes and the battle became a
fierce killing with hand to hand and
grenade fighting. This is too much to handle
and McKinley's battalion is falling apart.
More Panthers and Grenadiers join the
carnage. This is the end.
When the withdrawal order is
received, the battalion is annihilated.
McKinley is now trying to extricate the
survivors. The Battalion CP is finally
abandoned, the last one to leave being
McKinley himself. About 10% of the rifle
soldiers have survived the engagement at
Lausdell. Out of a total of 600 men on
December 14, 196 esc'aped the slaughter.
For the defense of Lausdell, McKinley
battalion was awarded the Presidential Unit
Citation and an infantryman received the
Medal of Honor. This was the 4th MOH
awarded in the path of the 12. SS Panzer
Division.
-27-
16 Dec. 44 - lat Batt. 393rd Inf.
Just south of Col Allen's battalion was
Major Legler's 1 st Battalion. He had a
smaller front to cover but the terrain was
more complicated. He only deployed two
companies on line, Band C companies, and
kept A company as battalion reserve. B Co
was on the battalion's left flank, still on the
west side of International highway but C
Co, on the right flank, had one platoon west
of the road and two platoons east of it. In
this sector also, a dirt road went east-west
through the forest. It provide a nice MSR for
Major Legler's battalion but it was also a
direct access to Krinkelt for the Germans.
That dirt road known as Weisserstein
appeared on the German plan as the
second penetration route, Rollbahn B.
1-
Major Legler's 1 st Battalion was also
hit hard that morning. Mter the early
morning shelling lifted, Grenadier Regiment
991 broke through on Company B's left
flank and in the meantime, the Grenadier
Regiment 990 attacked Company C. '
Company B stood fast and inflicted serious
casualties to the attacking Grenadiers. In
Company C's sector, the situation was more
critical. Their fighting positions were
extremely precarious. They were dug in on
both sides of the main road in a densely
forested sector, they were blocking the
entrance of Rollbahn B and their positions
offered a very limited field of fire. By 1030,
the two platoons east of the main road had
been wiped out and the survivors had
pulled back to the west side. The only
battalion reserve, Company A had already
been used with no result. It soon became
obvious that Major Legler's battalion could
no longer resist and he asked Regiment for
help. The only one help available was the
Mine Platoon of the Regiment's Anti Tank
Company. This platoon, under lLt Harry
Parker, was quickly detached. Upon
reaching Company C's CP, Lt Parker came
across German grenadiers who already had
crossed the highway. He ordered those of
his men with bayonets to fIx them and
formed what infantrymen call a "skirmish
line". They charged the Germans
grenadiers, shooting as fiercely as they
could. Much to their relief, the Germans
broke contact at this sudden and
unexpected charge and withdrew. Some
fled, others tried to stand fast and were
killed or captured. At the end of the
afternoon, Major Legler had lost nearly a
half of his battalion, Company D's heavy
mortars had expanded all its ammunition,
radio contact with his companies and the
regiment were sporadic and he was not
aware of the situation on his flanks. He
requested permission to withdraw the
remains of his battalion and formed an all
around defense in his CP area. As in the 3rd
battalion sector, the night was stressful.
Though the fight had died down, German
patrols were trying to infiltrate the
perimeter. Throughout the night, small
arms fires echoed through the forest,
revealing in the flashes Germans as close as
50 yards. Nobody knew exactly where 'the
enemy was.
As the darkness of the forest gave
way to the daylight of the cold morning of
December 17, the frozen remnants of Major
Legler's battalion were still holding. At
about 1100, he, like Allen further north,
also received a withdrawal order and was
told to move his shadow force to the north
west and to link up with the 2nd Division
unit positioned at Ruppenvenn crossroad
(Col Tuttle's 3rd Batt, 23rd Inf - see
preceding chapter). Major Legler's contacts
with regiment were so fragmentary that he
could barely keep track of what was going
on at his flanks. Surprisingly, the German
pressure is not as intense as the preceding
day. They had apparently decided to by
pass Legler's battalion and keep moving
west. This was obviously facilitated by large
gaps that existed now between Legler's
battalion and the 2nd Battalion of the 394th
Infantry. Toward the end of the afternoon,
leading elements Legler's retreating column
made contact with Col Tuttle's battalion at
Ruppenvenn only to find them fiercely
fighting back tanks and infantry of
Kampfgruppe Milller. When he got word that
the defense around Ruppenvenn had been
torn apart, Legler decided to save what was
left of his battalion by moving west cross-
country. To complicate the situation, Legler
was notified that a patrol of the 2nd
Battalion, 394th Infantry, originally in
position south of his battalion (see chapter
2nd Battalion, 394th Infantry) has made
contact. Moving such a large group in the
dark through the forest was impossible,
Legler decided to stay an other night in the
forest and move out the next morning. SS
troopers emerged now from all the
directions and a new perimeter of defense
was established. Weary, frozen and fearful
infantrymen prepare to spend an other
frightening night in the middle of the forest.
In the pre dawn hours of December 18th,
Legler orders everyone to get out the best
they can and regroup at the southwestern
edge of the forest. They will join the column
of the 2nd Battalion 394th Infantry and
escape to the village of Miirringen, known
as still being in American hands. In less
than 48 hours, Legler had lost nearly 80%
of his battalion and the survivors are
exhausted.
-28-
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-29-
394th InC. Relrt - 16 December
The 394th Infantry was also part of
the defensive line of the 99th Division
running North - South alongside the
International Highway. Its 2nd Battalion was
in position just south of Major Legler's 1 st
Battalion, 393rd Infantry. Its companies
were deployed east of the International
Highway and its Battalion Headquarters
west of it. Company E's positions were
overlooking the village of Udenbreth, the
other companies were positioned in a
heavily forested area. The battalion had no
major road either to protect or defend. The
only trail leading to the battalion was a log
road built by the engineers and dubbed
'Corduroy road'.
Like all the American units dug in
along the international highway, the 2nd
Battalion had endured the pre dawn
artillery barrage of the 16 December. When
the barrage lifted, surprisingly no attack
developed. The Germans had focused their
assaults north and south of the battalion to
open their vital Rollbahn and since none
were located in the battalion sector, the
German command did not invest troops to
push them aside. Nevertheless, a small
attacking force, in the form of a the -
Filsiliers Kompany of the 277. VG Division,
showed up that morning. They came from
the village of Udenbreth. After the artillery
cut loose on them, the attack force pulled
back to the village. They tried again later
this time accompanied by three '
Sturmgeschutz (tracked self propelled 75
mm gun). Big 155mm shells frred by the
American artillery quickly scatterred the SP
guns but despite leaving many dead and
wounded some Filsiliers got in among
riflemen of Company E. Well protected in
their log covered dugouts, the Americans
requested the battalion's heavy mortars to
bring their shells down, right on top of all.
Completely naked to the rain of steel and
tree bursts, the Filsiliers withdrew in
disorder. The 2/394 Executive Officer, Capt
Ben W. Legare, is now leading the battalion.
The early morning artillery barrage has left
the original commander, LtCol Philip
Wertheimer, in a such state of terror that
he is no longer able to perform his duty.
Mter much hesitation, Capt Legare finally
took over. He was of course as ignorant as
were his counterparts along the front about
what is going on. Mter the second Filsiliers
attack was repulsed, Capt Legare sent a
patrol to fmd out what was happening on
the Battalion's northern flank. There was no
trace of Major Legler's 1 st Battalion of the
393rd Infantry to be found. What was to be
found are hundreds of
-30-
Grenadiers moving west along forest trails.
Second Battalion radioed the situation to
the 394th Regimental Headquarters located
in Hunningen, 4 miles to the southwest. As
in other sectors, communications are
fragmentary and confused but the 2nd
Battalion nevertheless fares well compared
to the other battalions of the 99th Division
engaged on the forested borderland
alongside 'International Highway'. Company
E let blood but not as copiously as their
attacking Filsiliers. The other two rifle
companies, the heavy weapons company
and the Battalion HQ were intact. Capt
Legare and his company commanders are
however sorely worried. Why has the sister
battalion to the north (Legler) vanished to
be replaced by the enemy? What is going on
to the south where International Highway
branches at Losheimergraben with an
excellent paved road leading to the west and
to American rear bases? Unknown to
Legare, Losheimergraben and the paved
road are the L SS Panzerkorps' main
objective, Rollbahn C.
This confuse situation continued
throughout the day into the night, when,
again on the left flank, there was a
considerable amount of small arms fire
which lasted all night. The next day, the
17th, although there were indications that
the Germans were beginning to get behind
the positions Capt Legare remained in
place. At 1405, conditions had grown so
bad on the whole regimental front that they
were ordered to withdraw to Murringen.
This order came down by runner very late,
since it stated the withdrawal would begin
at 1500. Legare called hastily the Company
Commanders and issued their own march
orders by about 1430, leaving them Y:z hour
to get moving. This was just another
evidence of the state of confusion then
existing, and the Battalion was late in
moving out. The plan was to move out
motor vehicles and heavy equipment first,
leaving a skeletal force to cover the
withdrawal. The vehicles were sent back
and Legare took the lead of the foot column.
Things were in bad shape. There was little
contact with anyone and a patrol was sent
out to make contact with Major Legler's unit
on the left flank. At 1630 Legare had still
radio contact with the patrol and was
informed about Legler's withdrawal. At
about midnight they picked up word from
Regiment that they were going to withdraw
all troops to Krinkelt and from there work
them to Elsenborn Ridge. Moving his
Battalion through the forest in the dark was
extremely perilous so Capt Legare decided
to assemble his men at the edge of the
forest north east of Murringen and move
ou t the next morning.
Miirrine:en - 2/394
When the last troops of the 394th left
Murringen on the evening of the 17th, they
left about a thousand Americans out to the
east. They are the survivors of Major
Legler's battalion and large groups of the
2/394 trying to make their way to the west
through the dense and snowy forest. During
the night both units have joined forces and
decided to escape to the west the next
morning. At daybreak, on the cold and
foggy morning of December 18, the column
emerged from the forest. Beyond, the fields
go up hill to a group of farms and barns,
the village of Miirringen. Using his field
glasses, the officer leading the column
stared at the village one mile across the
valley. Though the view is obscured by the
morning fog, no enemy activity is detected.
r--
Tactic in combat zones always
requires patrols to move forward to 'feel'the
terrain. For whatever reason, the officer
orders to form a skirmish line and move
toward Murringen. Co E is deployed on the
right (north) flank and G Co on the left
(south) flank. Co E marches a half mile over
the open fields and, for some unknown
reason, stops. Not aware of this halt, Co G
keeps going and soon reaches the first
buildings of Murringen. There is an
intersection and a road coming from their
left. The lead platoon prepares to cross. All
is quiet and silent. The first three squads
have already crossed when a lone German
walked out one of the buildings, he is shot
dead by the lead scout. The loud bang of
the M 1 rifle draws the attention of the
Germans occupying the village. German
Grenadiers had placed a machine gun in a
loft of a barn overlooking the place where G
Co's leading platoon had crossed minutes
before. The German gunner, quickly
recovering from the surprise, is now
blasting straight across the street. He cuts
loose in the American infantrymen caught
in the open, preventing them from
withdrawing and the rest of G Co from
approaching. At such a close distance, the
wounds inflicted by the machine gun are
terrifying. Since there is no way for the
Americans to pull back, the only way to
escape the slaughter is to move forward or
enter one of the buildings. Other Grenadiers
soon join and begin to fire from doors and
windows. For the bulk of G Co, pinned
down at the crossroad, all they can do is to
return fire with the hope that their
companions caught in the exposed position
could escape the trap. The result is very
discouraging and the trap closes tighter
each minute. Co E who should have been to
their right, could have wiped those
,--
r-
-31-
Germans easily with an enveloping move,
but Co E is nowhere to be seen. Resist
would only mean death and the survivors
flnally surrender. At the end of the
afternoon, a ragged column of G Co soldiers
pulled back to the edge of the forest, leaving
23 men behind them. A cold and black
night is coming down once again and join
with the fog rising from the draws and
stream. This makes command and control
nearly impossible and to add to their
misery, there are wounded among them.
The plan now is to move to the west
following a creek running east-west between
Krinkelt and Murringen and then to
Wirtzfeld, which leaders believe to be still in
American hands. The valley is a mile long
and is an easy walk on a sunny summer
day but certainly not on a dark winter
night. Small groups begin to move on,
sloshing through the mud and water,
sliding and falling down, grabbing brushes
and small trees.
To the north, the sky over the twin
villages is lit by a fiery glow, adding an
other dimension to the scene. Artillery fire
and machine guns stutters can be heard
distinctly. The 12.SS Panzer Division has
broken through (See Lausdell chapter) and
is now engaged in fierce and bloody street
fightings with the 2nd Division in Krinkelt.
The head of the column has now reached a
few buildings at the end of the valley, an old
saw mill. Distant booms are suddenly heard
and the black night whistles and vomits a
stream of heavy artillery. Those are 155mm
shells fired by an American guns, mistaking
the column as being German soldiers. The
men are caught in the open, no place to
hide or seek cover. The valley is shaken for
long minutes by big explosions, tearing,
decapitating, cutting human flesh
unmercifully. As medics bandage the
wounded and deliver morphine to the dying,
others are fleeing away from the creek. The
shelling has split the column in a number
of small groups, each trying now to escape
the slaughter. A 2nd Division outpost is
finally reached and a message is sent to the
artillerymen, the shelling abruptly stops.
Dazed and shocked the survivors slowly
emerge from the valley and continue to the
west.
Each battalion._ started with about
800 men on December 16. When they
reached the Elsenborn heights, 72 hours
later, Major Legler's 1st Battalion, 393rd
Infantry had less than 250 men left. Capt
Legare's 2nd Battalion 394th Infantry was in
a better shape with about 550 men and
officers. Mter a brief rest in Elsenborn, they
will be deployed on the Elsenborn Ridge
until late January 1945.
Miirringen - Sgt Harold F. Schaefer - Co G, 394th Infantry.
...we picked up another logging trail that ran along
the side of a draw until we broke out of the forest.
Beyond the stream were open fields, cut by
hedgerows, extending up a steep then gentle rise all
the way through Milrringen... I've often wondered
what was going in the minds of our co's and staff as
we looked at that peaceful scene ... a recon patrol
could have found out what we needed to know,
instead we advanced on Milrringen in the same
formation used in the draw. As we advanced, we
restock our packs with rations found in abandoned
foxholes, we must have been nuts to think Regiment
was still in the village. I was about 100 meters from
the first house when the first Jerry was spotted.. .
somebody fired at him and woke up the whole damn
Gennan Army. ... Jerry is now fully awake and had set up a MG in a loft of a
bam and is firing down the road. The MG is on E Co's side of the road and has to
be knocked out. A part of the squad is sent across to contact E Co. I followed the
hedgerow approximately 100 yards when I saw a human form squatting down
on the other side of the hedge. I walked up, squatted down and said "hello", I
was looking in the blue eyes of a Jerry soldier... my Ml is faster than the
German rifle and he got to die for his country. Being an ASTP boy, I was bright
enough to know that E Co was not in Gennan uniforms and headed back to
infonn my squad leader... our retreat from Milrringen took us on a path 400
meters infront of where E Co was.
r-
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Major Matthew L.Legler
C.O. 1st Battalion, 393rd Infantry
-32-
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-33-
Losheimerl!raben - 16 December
Losheimergraben is a little custom
post in the forest where four main roads
join together. There are a few buildings for
the custom guards and clerks and some two
hundred yards to the south, there are three
brick houses for their families. All have
evacuated in September and the buildings
now serves the Americans.
r-
Col Douglas' 1 st Battalion, 394th
Infantry, was deployed in a large arc east to
southeast of Losheimergraben crossroad.
The left flank was occupied by Co C, in the
center, B Co's had its squads and machine
guns spread widely in the forest and mainly
covering shallow depressions, little ravines
or fire breaks. It was not a continuous line
of resistance like in other sectors, the forest
was too dense and the front to defend too
wide. Most of the gaps were covered by
mines and booby traps. A Co was deployed
the same manner south of the Losheimer -
graben-Losheim road. During the day, B
and A Co's occupied OP's (observation post)
with artillery observers at the edge of the
forest and watched the German town of
Losheim. The battalion's heavy mortars
were dug in just south of the crossroad in a
small clearing. Col Douglas was worried,
there was a railroad track embedded in a
deep ravine, this was a natural obstacle but
ran on his front and right (south) flank and
went deep into the American lines. The road
coming from Losheim was not only a direct
access to the heart of his battalion but to
the west it went straight to American rear
bases. Fortunately the bridge over the
railroad track had been blown by the
Germans in September and the road was
cut. His battalion however covered a front
much too wide and his companies were
spread in the dense forest with a very
limited field of fire. He also had three
57mm anti tank guns covering the three
most vulnerable approaches. Douglas'
worry was well-founded. The road coming
from Losheim had been used by the
Germans to invade Belgium in 1914 and in
1940. Unknown to him, that road and the
vital crossroad had been selected by the
German planners as the main objective of
the L SS Panzerkorps and the road labelled
"Rollbahn en. To attack and size the
crossroad, the Germans selected the best
equipped of their infantry divisions, the 12.
Volksgrenadier Division. On their time table,
the objective should be captured within
three or four hours.
Though well dug in, the men of the
1 st Battalion were living in miserable
conditions. Visibility was extremely poor
because of the darkness in the forest. The
fog, the melting snow and a thin rain lead
the men to nickname the place "creepy
corner". The night preceding the German
attack, outposts of B Co had reported more
activity than usual in Losheim, mainly
sounds of motors and'spots of lights moving
around but apparently not enough to
attract attention.
The 12. VG Division was mainly
staffed by seasoned cadre who had, for
some of the officers and NCO's, several
years of combat experience in Russia. Most
of the battalion and regiment commanders
were holders the famous Knight Cross, the
equivalent of the American Medal of Honor.
Col Osterhold, commanding officer of the
Grenadier Regiment 48, was one of those
highly decorated officers. The division
commander had prepared two flank attacks
to capture the crossroad. Osterhold's
Grenadier Regiment 48 would attack on the
right, to the north through the forest and
then switch to the west toward the
crossroad. On the other flank, two
battalions of Col Lemm's Fusilier Regiment
27 would progress west along a railroad
track embedded in a deep ravine and switch
to the north. Osterhold and Lemm were
long time friends and shared a 4 year
combat experience in Russia, they know
how to carry out an attack.
Osterhold had not been able to
prepare correctly his attack. He had been
allowed very limited patrolling and he
doesn't know exactly where the Americans
are. He knew however than the edge of the
forest was not occupied during the night.
He would take advantage of this. On
December 16, before the artillery opens its
barrage, he moved his leading elements to
the forest, as close as possible to the
American lines, in order to take advantage
of the surprise when the barrage would lift.
At the head of his men, Osterhold moved
through the forest. Trip wires were difficult
to locate and abattis across forest paths
slowed down the progression. Shortly before
H Hour, Osterhold contacted his artillery to
let them know they had already penetrated
the forest. Nobody answered. The line was
broken somewhere. Before they could re-
establish contact, a rain of shells and
rockets fell on his leading battalion. His
men were smashed to pieces. As the giant
hammer rolled over to the west, Osterhold
realized that the losses were very important,
2/3 of his L Battalion had been wiped out.
He immediately moved up his reserve
battalion as the new spearhead.
-34-
On the left flank, the situation was
much better. Col Lemm's Fusiliers were
progressing without opposition along the
rail road tracks. As scheduled, the I
Battalion, commanded by Major Breger,
soon tumed north toward Losheimergraben
and the III Battalion kept moving along the
tracks (see Buchholz station). Major Breger
was also an experienced officer and he
moved his men swiftly behind Co A with
very few losses. They reached a point where
the dense forest begins to thin out. There,
across the clearing, in the distance, the first
buildings of Losheimergraben can be seen.
,...-
Well dug in the Clearing, the six
heavy mortars of Co D had fired throughout
the morning on the entire battalion front.
The situation was obscure but the
mortarmen knew that Co B was in difficulty
and that Co A was also fighting Germans
back. Little did they know that about two
hundred Germans were heading toward
their half acre clearing.
r-
When the Germans appeared in the
clearing, it was a surprise, neither side
knew the other was there. The American
reaction was swift and precise. Small arms
fire deflected a large group of Fusiliers back
into the forest and right into Co A's ~.
positions. Quickly recovering from the
surprise, Major Breger re-organized his men
and attacked the mortar position. American
routine was to call the artillery to saturate
the area but the enemy was too close. The
Germans were now in the position and the
combat turned into a wild melee and hand
to hand. A mortar section leader then
ordered to turn the tubes around and
elevate them at 890. As they dropped shell
after shell into their tubes, mortarmen
crouched low in their position to escape
their own bombs coming down a few yards
away. The effect was devastating. The
German attack was broken and the
survivors fled back into the forest. About 20
torn Germans bodies laid on the scene, one
of them was a Major.
In the meantime on the other flank,
Osterhold's men were still tangled in the
forest. They moved as fast as they could
using ravines and gullies to keep out of
sight but isolated groups of Co B fiercely
resisted throughout the morning and the
early afternoon. The Germans were closing
in to the road net but not as easy as they
thought. The defense is about to crack and
Col Douglas ordered his companies to
withdraw as best as they can to the
crossroad. As dusk falls on the cross road,
the Americans were crowd together in the
custom houses. This was a mixed bag of
riflemen, mortarmen, anti tank gunners,
-35-
clerks trying to turn their buildings into a
fortress. The night was quite calm, each
side liking its own wounds and trying to get
its forces together.
Losheimere:raben - 17 December
At day break, Osterhold had
gathered his forces and was ready for an
other assault. He was supported by three
Stunngechiitz. Clanking and grinding the
armor appeared down the road. Pumping
shells into the custom houses, they slowly
approacheed the crossroad. As the first
tank appeared at the edge of the first house,
it was destroyed by a well aimed bazooka
shot. The defenders were firing from the
basement windows and still prevented
Osterhold's Grenadiers to leave the forest
and follow the SP guns. An other one is set
aflame by one of the 57mm AT gun, the
third withdrew. As the afternoon of
December 17 drained away, the situation
had gone from bad to desperate. The
Americans still barely held in the rubbles of
two custom houses and the crossroad was
completely surrounded. The situation was
hopeless and they decided to surrender.
Osterhold was moving all the time with his
point men and was next to the first house
when a white flag appeared from one of the
basement windows. Osterhold stood forth
boldly and moved toward the building,
small arms fire stopped abruptly. Osterhold
spoke English fluently and explained the
situation, if they did not surrender, they
would be blown with the houses. The
sermon was not necessary, everybody
started to strip down the weapons and one
after an other they emerged from the
rubbles. The entire Losheimergraben
defensive line collapsed at the crossroad,
Those who had been lucky enough to slip
out the houses converged to the Battalion
CPo The night had come and the battle was
over. Co!. Douglas regrouped what was left
of his depleted battalion and ordered a
move to the west. Without contact with the
higher echelon since the morning, Col
Douglas hoped that the village of
Miirringen, rear base of the 394th Infantry
still held. 260 men out of about 800 will
fmally reach the Elsenborn ridge. Co B had
taken the brunt of the combat. From 186
men that started to fight the Germans, only
21 were in combat condition three days
later. For its outstanding.performance, the
1 st Battalion, 394th Infantry was awarded
the Presidential Unit Citation.
When Col Osterhold finally cleared
the crossroad, in the night of December 17,
his regiment was completely depleted. The
early loss of his I Battalion had affected all
the action and he was 36 hours behind
schedule.
Losheimergraben
SjSgt George Ballinger - Co B, 394th Infantry
... I was SI Sgt and was the machine gun
section leader of the weapons platoon of Co B.
We were on the extreme leftflank of the
company and were facing a shallow ravine,
that flank was called ((creepy comer". On Dee
16, the German artillery began falling at
about 0530 and lasted until daylight. Our
platoon leader was killed and others
wounded by a direct hit. A few minutes after
the shelling stopped, the Germans began
yelling very loudly and in unison, probably to
cause us to think there were more of them
than they really were. It was a cold, damp,
misty morning with snow on the ground, there was absolute silence and we
waited for the attack to come. There came six Germans, walking in the exact
center of our field of fire. George Boggs was the gunner and he wanted to begin
fire but I could see others coming. I told him to wait. ... The Germans put a tripod
on the ground, then a machine gun on it, I told Boggs to fire. He fired a long burst
and they all fell. That seemed to be the signal for everyone in the area to fire, it
was deafening. ... I was told that the Germans had broken through on our right
and were now behind us. It seemed that all their fire power was concentrated on
our position. Our hole was covered with logs and they were being disintegrated
by machine gun and rifle fire, it was impossible to return fire. We decided it
would be best for us to surrender.
r-
~~
Oberst Heinz Georg Lemm
Fusilier Regiment 27
Oberst Wilhelm Osterhold
Grenadier Regiment 48
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Buchholz Station - 3M Bn. 394th Inf.
r-
The 3rd Battalion, 394th Infantry
was on the front defending the cross road of
Losheimergraben. On December 6. They
changed place with the 1 st Battalion and
went a mile to the west to occupy a rear
reserve position. A few days later, Col
Moore, the Commanding Officer of the 3rd
Battalion, was ordered to move one of his
companies, Co I, to support the 395th RCT
in its drive to the Roer River dams. The
battalion was in reserve but the front line
was only one mile to the east. There was a
large gap southwest of Losheimergraben
and a railroad track ran east-west through
that gap and lead directly into Col Moore's
reserve position. Acting as gate keeper of
his regiment's right flank, he deployed his
two remaining infantry companies around
Buchholz station. L Co occupied the
railroad station and K Co deployed in the
forest directly north of the station. One and
a half mile northwest of Buchholz station is
the village of Honsfeld. Honsfeld was a R&R
(rest and recreation center) for the 99th
Division and nearby units and was
considered as a safe place.
r-
On the morning of the Decemb~r 16,
like all along the front defended by the 99th
Division, a tremendous artillery barrage fell
on Buchholz station, tearing tree tops and
spreading hot metal and tree bursts over
the forest floor. As the barrage moved to the
west, Col Moore's men emerged from their
holes in the still black morning, lit here and
there by smoldering fires. Nobody
understood why should they be the target of
such a powerful shelling, they were in a
reserve sector. There was nothing to do,
except to keep the weapons ready in case
of. The men in Co L prepared for breakfast
and formed a chow line. They stood around
stomping their feet in the slushy snow as
the first lights of the icy cold morning came.
Fog and the feeble light prevent good vision
but the men saw a column of marching
soldiers down the railroad track. As the
column drew closer to the station building,
the marching men were suddenly identified
as Germans and everybody started
shooting. The Germans were the lead
elements of the 3rd Battalion of the Fusiliers
Regiment 27.
The Fusiliers were caught in the
open and had only few places to hide and
shoot from. Some used box cars to escape
the heavy small arms fire but well aimed
bazooka rounds and 57mm anti tank gun
fire smashed the freight cars and its
occupants. Small groups of pinned down
enemy gave up and those who tried to
'-37-
escape were shot dead. The fight slowly died
down and the Fusiliers were forced to back
off. Just before noon, mortar fIre began to
rain on the station, apparently the Germans
were regrouping and preparing an other
attack. Several more companies of Fusiliers
were now moving up the railroad tracks and
through the forest. The fight again reached
a peak and tumed into a wild melee. Col
Moore's battalion was now down to about 5
platoons, Co L had lost nearly 30 men and
Co K still held. By mid afternoon Moore
repositioned his men, brought clerks,
cooks, HQ personnel into the battle. His
right flank was open and two platoons of K
Co were hastily deployed along the road
south of the station. The German attack
began to weaken and as the grey winter
twilight arrived, the enemy withdraw,
leaving more than two hundred killed,
wounded and prisoners behind.
From sporadic contacts with the 1st
Battalion engaged around Losheimer -
graben, Col Moore knew that the situation
was even more critical there. It soon
became obvious that the Germans were
trying to capture the crossroad and the vital
N32 leading west towards Biillingen. During
the night, he ordered the battered Co L to
move to the north to establish a defensive
line across N32 just behind the 1st
Battalion. Ammunition was low and barely
sufficient for a short fight, his battalion
strength was dangerously low and he only
left a skeletal force of 2 platoons of K Co to
defend Buchholz station.
In the pre dawn hours of December
17, Buchholz station was captured ( see
chapter Honsfeld-Biillingen) and at day
break, Germans who had by passed
Losheimergraben through Buchholz station
were infiltrating Moore's perimeter. He
realized that his position was extremely
precarious. He established contacts with
the 1 st Battalion in Losheimergraben but he
can't really help with a Battalion reduced to
5 platoons. With his S3 (Operation Officer),
Moore also established physical contact
with the 2nd Battalion further up to the
north. When he arrived, in the late
afternoon, the 2nd Battalion had already
begun its withdrawal. With
Losheimergraben now surrounded and
about to collapse, Col Moore was physically
isolated from his battalion. Shortly before
dark, he ordered his staff by radio to
withdraw what was left of the battalion and
move to Elsenborn via Miirringen and
Krinkelt, which at the time were still in
American hands. Colonel Moore and his
S-3 joined the 2nd Battalion motor column
and moved out with them to Elsenborn.
Speder 2004
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,J
Lanzerath and the I&R platoon
The I&R platoon (Information and
Reconnaissance) of the 394th Infantry was
commanded by a twenty year old
Lieutenant, Lyle J. Bouck, Jr. They were
equipped to travel light and move fast,
observe and report enemy activity and gain
/ intelligence. They were the ears and eyes of
the Regiment. The I&R 394 was in position
on the extreme right (south) flank of the
99th Division, on a wooded knoll northwest
of Lanzerath. They observed a large open
area known as "the Losheim Gap". Off to
the east, the gap opens into Germany and
the defenses of the Siegfried line and to the
south, the scene is a series of rolling hills
extending to a high plateau known as the
Schnee Eifel. The latter was occupied by the
106th Division but the 4 mile wide Losheim
Gap was only occupied by a Cavalry Group.
Lightly equipped, the cavalrymen mostly
patrolled the open ground and key points
were defended by AT guns of the 820th TD
Battalion. Lanzerath was not really
defended, it was occupied. Two AT guns
were in position on the south-eastern edge
of the village and a four man observation
detail of the 371 st Field Artillery Battalion
was watching the eastern approach.
Expecting no more war after the German
retreat of mid September, many locals had
returned and shared their house with the
cavalrymen and the tank destroyers.
r-
At 0530, the morning of December
16, the eastern horizon became a bright
wall of light and the silence was suddenly
broken by hundreds of shells and rockets.
Like all their 99th Division companions
further up to the north, the Americans in
Lanzerath were awakened by a tremendous
artillery barrage. Destruction in Lanzerath
was minimal and the barrage soon moved to
the west. Bouck was puzzled, he knew that
the Germans would not waste so much
artillery to terrorise them. He called the TD
crew in the village since 'they had a better
view in the valley, but the line was dead.
There was something going on, but what?
Though little and insignificant, Lanzerath
was vital for the planners of the L SS
Panzerkorps. The road going through the
village branched at the northern edge with a
road going to Honsfeld and Biillingen,
Rollbahn D on the German plan.
As the fog saturated morning light
arrived, Bouck and his men saw the tank
destroyers hitching their guns to their half
tracks and hightail to the west. The right
flank was now wide open and there were no
friendly troops within a mile. Bouck was
bothered, he jumped in his jeep and went
down into the village to join the artillery
observers, from there he would be able to
see more and report to Regiment. As they
looked out the window to the southeast,
German paratroopers in march formation
appeared in the gloom and foggy morning.
They were the lead elements of the 3.
FaUschinnjaeger Division. The observers
called for artillery, but none was available
because the howitzers had been hit by the
enemy shelling and were moving to an other
position. Bouck raced back to the hill,
closely followed by the observers. Soon
after, a vanguard of about 100 paratroopers
moved into the village. There was a break in
the column, then a small group, probably
officers, then an other break and finally the
bulk of what appeared to be a battalion size
unit. In the village, some civilians were out,
talking and wondering. Among them, 13
year old Tina Scholzen. Intrigued by all this
unexpected activities, she was on her front
walk. She had seen the American tank
destroyers living in a hurry toward
Buchholz station and there was now a large
group of Germans approaching.
Most humans have a tendency to
make a good story better or a bad story
worse. Several noted authors have repeated
a story whose origin is unknown and
moreover false. That story says that a little
blond German refugee with red ribbons in
her pigtails ran from one of the houses and
pointed to Bouck's positions. Betrayed, the
Americans opened fire and the fight for
Lanzerath started. Following is the real
story .
On his front walk, brown haired
Tina Scholzen was watching the large group
of German paratroopers passing by. At the
end of the group was a couple of officers.
They stopped and one of them walked over
to Tina Scholzen, asking her where the
Americans were. Tina replied that they left
that morning toward Buchholz station and
pointed the direction. From his well
camouflaged position, Lt Bouck observed
the scene through his binoculars. His mind
was churning since he had been ordered to
hold at all costs but he can not obtain
artillery support. A unit of at least a
battalion size, was approaching his 20 man
platoon and he did not want to engage such
a large enemy force. The head of the
German column had passed the last
houses of Lanzerath and approached the
fork. If the Germans turned northwest to
Buchholz station, this will put them on his
left flank, with the bulk of the paratroopers
still in village. He could not wait any longer
and gave the order to open fIre. The German
column instantly deconstructed and
paratroopers jumped in the ditches or
sought cover behind the buildings.
-39-
r-
Mter quickly recoveiing, the
Germans formed an assault platoon and
charged blindly uphill toward Bouck's
position. Well protected in their log covered
dugouts, Bouck's men sent a swarm of
bullets down the slope at them. At this
stage of the war, German paratroopers have
nothing in common with the battle smart
and well trained paratroopers who fought in
Crete, Mrica or Normandy. They were
mostly composed of ground forces of the
Luftwaffe (German Air Force) and had very
little combat experience. Having nothing
learned from the initial attack, they
launched an other frontal assault, still
without preparation. They were wiped out
by heavy small arms fire. The artillery
observers who had joined Bouck were still
trying to obtain artillery support but none
was available because of the worsening
situation of the 99th Division artillery. From
time to time a couple of American shells
were coming but with no result. In the early
afternoon, Bouck's isolation was complete
when a mortar fragment killed his radio. He
knew it was just a matter of time, his
ammunition was very low and the Germans
now had an idea of size of his unit. His only
hope was to stand until dusk and then slip
away through the forest. Unfortunately for
him, German paratroopers had suddenly
become smart and a large group penetrated
Bouck's right flank. From there they moved
behind the firing line, tossing grenades in
the holes and firing automatic rifles. Bouck
and his platoon were captured. It was 1630
and a cold winter dusk was coming down.
Several of his men, including him, were
. .
wounded. One of the artillery observers had
been killed. They were marched into
Lanzerath and assembled in a large cafe.
Cafe Scholzen was apparently the CP of the
paratroopers. There were many wounded, a
few civilians and the place was busy. Bouck
and his men were interrogated and then
assembled in a room. From where he was,
Bouck could see the feverish activity in the
CP of the 3. FaUschinnjiiger Division,
responsible of opening Rollbahn D for
Kampfgruppe Peiper, a powerful armoured
combat team of the 1. SS Panzer Division.
SS Colonel Peiper was a 29 year old
battle hardened officer, commanding one of
the most famous unit of the SS, the SS
Panzer Regiment 1. Bright, smart and
fearless, he was very popular among his
men. His mission, though simple, was very
tough. He had to lead 150 tanks and half
tracks and 6000 men as quickly as possible
through the American lines and capture
several strategically vital bridges on the
Meuse river. The objectives had to be
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reached and crossings secured the 4th day,
December 20th.
Lyle Bouck glanced to his watch, it
was midnight, his 21st birthday. Grindings
and squealing of motors and tracks grew
louder outside. The door of Cafe Scholzen
suddenly flung open and a short officer clad
in a black leather uniform appeared. This
was Bouck's first contact with SS Colonel
Peiper. Peiper was furious, his lead
elements had been caught in a giant traffic
jam on its way to the front and he was 12
hours beyond schedule. Moreover, the
paratroopers were supposed to be much
farther west instead of waiting in the village.
The angry tone used by Peiper as he talked
to the other officers was understood by all.
He ordered everybody to move west, the
paratroopers will guide his tanks in the
pitch black night. He was completely
beyond schedule and had to keep moving to
catch up with his time table. Shortly before
0100 on the 17 December, the column
moved off toward Buchholz station.
Lt Bouck and his platoon were marched
into captivity. For its superb stand in
Lanzerath, the I&R platoon was awarded
the Presidential Unit Citation and his men
decorated in 1981 (!)
Lyle J Bouck, Jr
Camp Robinson, Little Rock, AI(
March 1941
/'-'
Honsfeld December 17.
It was about 0130 this December 17,
when the sound of clanking and groaning,
coming up the road from Lanzerath,
reached the skeletal force left behind by Col
Moore to defend Buchholz station. (see
chapter Buchholz station) Was this an other
retreating group of American vehicles, like
those they saw the day before or Germans?
They soon experienced the awful fire power
of Peiper's Panther tanks. After a brief
exchange of fire, accompanying
paratroopers slipped in the dark through
the thin American line of resistance and
captured the two unfortunate platoons of K
Company. The road to Honsfeld was open.
Prior to December 16, Honsfeld was
a R&R center (Rest and Recreation) for the
99th Division and also for a number of small
units in position in the area. There, the men
can take a shower, change clothes, buy
goodies in the PX, watch a movie and, what
a luxury for infantrymen, sleep in a bed.
Honsfeld was considered as a safe place,
way behind the front. On top of all, Marlene
Dietrich, darling of the mud soldier and
international movie star, was scheduled to
arrive at Honsfeld on December 16 for a pre
Christmas show. Unfortunate'ty the early
moming German shelling on December 16
cancelled the performance to the utmost
disappointment of hundreds of soldiers.
At about 0330, December 17, a
retreating column of American light tanks
and half tracks of a cavalry unit was slowly
making its way through the town. Nobody
noticed steel monsters lurking in the night
and ready to pounce. Peiper had a long
experience gained on the Russian front, he
knew that in the night men and machines
of one side looked like those of the other
side. The road was crowded and Peiper had
no reason to open fire. Rather than engage
the Americans, he slipped his tanks and SS
Panzergrenadiers in the traffic. Peiper's
Trojan horse tactic put his tanks and half
track in the center of Honsfeld before the
Americans realized they were under attack.
Small points of resistance were quickly
destroyed and within a half hours Honsfeld
was captured. Most of the Americans were
caught in bed and pulled in the streets,
those who did not move quick enough were
executed. About 25 disarmed Americans
were murdered in and around Honsfeld.
They were the first of a long and bloody trail
left by Kampfgruppe Peiper.
Peiper gathered his officers and
immediately prepared the next move.
Rollbahn D was now open and the next
objective was the town of Biillingen, two
miles north of Honsfeld.
The town of Biillingen was no sleepy
village like Honsfeld, it was one of the
largest town in the area and a supply base
for many units. A variety of troops occupied
the town including two artillery service
batteries of the 99th Division (units that
keep howitzers and crews supplied),
engineers, quartermasters, signal corps and
a fuel dump. There was also a small air
strip that hosted two dozen of small Piper
Cubs (single engine aircraft used as artillery
spotters). Peiper knew about the dump and
his machines were thirsty. At about 0530,
he started his point vehicles up the road to
Biillingen. Half way to Biillingen, they came
across a road block hastily established by a
company of engineers. It will take about 40
minutes before the SS Panzergrenadiers
fmally broke through the road block. In
Biillingen, the garrison had no unified
command that can muster the defenders.
Capt Jim Cobb, commander of the Hq
Battery, 924th Field Artillery Battalion knew
that danger was prowling to the south. He
formed several teams and sent them up the
road to Honsfeld in order to establish road
blocks. As dawn gave way to a foggy
morning, one of the teams led by Sgt Grant
Yager proceeded to the edge of the town,
carrying a bazooka. The noise of heavy
motors grew louder and suddenly a Panther
emerged from the fog. The three men sought
cover in the brushes and loaded the
bazooka. Aiming the bazooka, Yager noticed
that the sight was broken. The fIrst tank
was gone and he fired at the second aiming
as best as he could. The rocket hit the track
and stopped the tank. SS Grenadiers
dismounted quickly, swept the brushes and
captured Yager and his men. The other
teams had no less luck, they were also
captured. A severely wounded was executed
and the others were piled on the hood of the
half tracks to serve as a shield to enter
Biillingen. Peiper moved his men and
machines rapidly to the center of the town
and began to search for the fuel supply. It
was 0900 and most of the American supply
had already been evacuated, many Piper
Cubs had escaped and only a limited
supply of gas was captured. By 1000,
Peiper had gathered 30 tanks and about the
same number of half tracks. Part of his
machines were refuelled and ready to push
west, Rollbahn D was now completely open.
-41-
Elsenborn Ride:e
Anchored to east Belgium's High Marches
and reaching an altitude of two thousand
feet, the Elsenborn heights opens to the
east over a large panorama of hilly fields
and patches of woods. The slope descends
eastward to a distant valley arid the dense
forest of the Belgian-German border. From
Kalterherberg, Germany, on the north side,
the heights extends eight miles southward
to the village of Biillingen, Belgium.
Between these two towns is the village of
Elsenborn and a natural military obstacle,
the lake of Biitgenbach. The Elsenborn high
plateau, known as Elsenborn ridge for
military historians, acts as a natural
rampart guarding the way west to Verviers
and Liege.
The tactical threat of the Elsenborn ridge as
a place where the Americans may take a
defensive stand against the L SS
Panzerkorps seemed not to have been
considered by the German planners. Mter
four days of stubborn resistance in the
forest along the border, large numbers of
American troops had retreated west and
had taken new positions on the ridge. The
sacrifice of the 2nd and 99th Divisions
fighting in the forest had bought enough
time for the 1 st US Army to prepare the
fortification of the high ground. Two battle '
hardened American divisions, the 1 st and
9th Infantry Divisions, were hastily engaged
to complete the defense. The 9th Division
was deployed on the northern portion of the
ridge, in the Kalterherberg forest and next
in line, south of the 9th Division, in the open
terrain, were the remains of the 99th and 2nd
Divisions. The 1 st Division closed the
southern corner of the Elsenborn ridge. By
December 20, all the American units had
retreated to the new positions. Though the
99th and 2nd Divisions were largely under
strength, the defensive line on the entire
ridge was supported by sixteen divisional
artillery battalions, six artillery battalions
assigned by the Vth Corps and 1 st US Army
plus twelve regimental cannon companies
and a battalion of 4.2 inch mortars. General
Hinds, artillery commander of the 2nd
Division, was in charge of coordinating all
these guns to deliver death and destruction
anywhere on the ridge's front. As a
rehearsal the American artillery fired a TOT
(Time On Target) on Krinkelt-Rocherath on
December 19. Time on Target is an artillery
term meaning that a number of batteries
are firing on different times, calculated to
have all the projectiles impacting on the
same spot at the same time. The
demonstration of December 19 laid 3300
rounds in twenty minutes on the twin
villages, they were levelled to the ground.
-42-
All night long, December 19-20, the 99th
was frantically digging in the hilly fields in
the center of the defense. The
394thRegiment was in position on the left
flank (north), the center was occupied by
the 324th Engineers Combat Battalion and
the depleted 393rd Regiment was on the
right flank (south). The 395th Regiment was
dug in just behind its sister regiments.
The frrst German probe occurred at dusk
December 19, when 3. Panzergrenadier
Division, newly arrived attacked on the
road Wirtzfeld Elsenborn with SP guns and
infantry. The 99th Division artillery
saturated the fields with high explosives
and phosphorous shells. The attack was
broken in a torrent of flames and hot metal.
Throughout the night American front
soldiers listened to the cries and screams of
the German wounded. Another attack
developed the next moming, December 20,
with the same ending. Before day's end, the
3.Panzergrenadier Division, made a second
attempt to fight their way to Elsenborn.
This time Panzergrenadiers attacked in the
seam between the 393rd Infantry and the
324th Engineers. The powerful attack
involved Grenadiers and Sturmgeschiltze
(SP guns). American mortar and machine
gun fire pinned the infantry down but the
SP guns were dangerously close. Once
again the artillery forced the Germans to
halt. A storm of steel and smoke, shattering
flesh and bones and machines, raked the
snowy fields and drove the Germans back.
From that day, no other major attack
developed in the 99th Division sector.
Germans only conducted harassing combat
patrols. Probes and heavy attacks hit the
9th Division near Kalterherberg and on the
south flank, the 1 st Division ruined the
ambitions of the 12.SS Panzer Division.
Throughout the end of December, the front
became stable, replacements came in and
the major concern became the terrible
winter conditions. Masses of snow and an
ice cold wind was now whipping the
Elsenborn ridge. On both sides the life was
miserable and after the guns, the cold
began taking its toll. Despite discouraging
conditions, the 99th Division continued to
harass the German with raiding patrols
throughout the month of January. Vth
Corps drew plan to recapture the ground
lost in December. The offensive began on
January 30. The Germans offered little
resistance, pulled back and found refuge in
the fortification of the Siegfried line. The
99th Division was finally relieved on
February 12, 1945 for a much needed rest
and re-supply. The defense of the Elsenborn
ridge will remain in history book as "the
Little Round Top" of the Battle of the Bulge.
CAMP ELSENBORN
Camp Elsenborn is one of the
biggest Belgian Army camp. It is the only
training ground which permits the fire of
live artillery. Beside artillery, the camp also
allow the use of standard infantry weapons
such as rifles, MG and grenades as well as
anti tank weapons, either tracked or air
mounted. The target types are stationery,
remote controlled or moving and a
combination of different stands makes it
possible to conduct battle runs. The camp
is run by 180 officers, NCO's and men.
Their task is to take care of the firing range,
do the needed repairs, keep the barracks in
good condition for the troops in training. At
full capacity the camp can handle a
maximum of 4500 men. Among the
personnel of the camp there is also an EOD
section, which is part of the Explosive
Ordnance Disposal Service, their task is to
destroy unexplosed ammunition. EOD
teams of the Belgium Army have an
excellent reputation throughout the world
and they often work outside Belgium, i.e. in
Laos, Yugoslavia where their knowledge is
deeply appreciated. Belgium has been a
battlefield for long periods during WWI and
WWII, consequently EOD sections remove
and destroy about 250 tons of ammunition
each year since the end of WWI.
Camp Elsenborn was born at the
end of the 19th Century, in 1894. General
Yon Loe, commanding the VIII Prussian
Army Corps, had found that area very
realistic for training his troops and bought
that land for the Prussian Army. His wish
was to buy the village of Elsenborn, right
next to the actual camp, but the price was
too expensive. Thus, General Yon Loe
decided to plant tents a few hundreds yards
west of the village, along the main road
Sourbrodt - Elsenborn. That tent camp
was later moved to the west near a junction
with another road going north, in the
direction of Kalterherberg. Once there, the
construction of many corrugated iron
barracks, wooden stables as well as
concrete buildings began. In 1901, the
camp was a huge one, with a full capacity of
nearly 5.000 men as well as stables for
1.500 horses. A local railway going from
the camp to Sourbodt railway station was
also built. After the German defeat in
November 1918, the Treaty of
Versailles gave that part of Germany to the
Belgium government. People living there,
Germans one day woke up as Belgians the
following day! The fIrst allied troops who
occupied Camp Elsenborn were British.
They came in late 1918 and hold the camp
until 1920, when the Belgian army finally
-43-
took over .At the start ofWWII, on May 10,
1940, the German army invaded Belgium
again, and after 18 days of desperate
resistance, the Belgian army surrendered.
Soon after, the camp was reoccupied by the
German Army. During this new
occupation, the camp was hold by the
Luftwaffe (German Air Corps) and was
specifically a Flak training camp. Flak is
the German term for anti aircraft artillery.
The camp also hosted Russian and Pole
POW's. They were used as stonebreakers.
Many of these prisoners would never see
their country again. They were buried in a
special plot in the cemetery of the Nidrum.
The US Army Air Forces bombed the
camp on August 9th, 1944. Over a
hundred bombers coming from the east
dropped their bombs but missed a large
part of the ground installations. Some 200
German soldiers and Russian prisoners
were killed during that bombing. Finally,
On Sept. 14th, 1944, troops of the 9th
Infantry Division captured the camp and
liberated the area. The US troops
proceeded north and east, and finally
reached the German border as well as the
first defenses of the Siegfried Line. For the
next three months, there was no further
move in that sector, only switching of units.
Two days after the beginning of the Battle of
the Bulge, the 2nd and 99th Infantry
Divisions fighting east of the camp,
regrouped near Elsenborn. The 99th
Infantry Division located in the training
camp area and the 2nd Infantry Division in
the fields south of it. They were joined a
day later by the 9th Infantry Division who
mled the gap north of the 99th ID and the
1st Infantry Division sited south of the 2nd
Infantry Division. Those four Infantry
Divisions with their attached units held
together and out of their valiant stand came
the name of the Elsenborn Ridge, the Little
Round Top of the Battle of the Bulge.
After the war, the Belgian army
came back, rebuilt the destroyed barracks,
built new ones and the camp became one of
the most active camps in the Belgian Army.
Today the camp also hosts foreign armies of
the NATO, who have here all the needed
installations to prepare their future
missions all over the world.
~
Sources and recommanded readin2s
. "The Shock of WaT" VoL I & II - J. C. Doherty.
. "Dauntless, a history of the 99th Division" - W. C. C. Cavanagh.
. "A Time for Trumpets" - Charles B. McDonald.
. "Company Commander" - Charles B. McDonald.
. "Up Front with Charlie Company" - Vemon E. Swanson.
. "Easy Memories" - Harry Arnold (unpublished memoir).
. "The Key to the Bulge" - Stephen M. Rusiecki.
. After Action Reports and Unit Joumals - National Archives.
. Author's collection and personal research.
No part of this guide may be reproduced in any form without written
permission from the author. Copyright 2005.
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