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HomeMy WebLinkAbout761st Tank Battalion KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR'S father, F. L. "AI" Alcindor, in uniform in the 16th Battalion, Field Artillery Replacement Center, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. (AUTHOR'S COLLECTION) KAREEM'S PARENTS. 1943. Al Alcindor always said that meeting Cora was the high point of his time in the army. (AUTHOR'S COLLECTION) l <'I' LEDNARD "SMITTY" SMITH, wearing the uniform and insignia of the 761 st Battalion. (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) 2nd LIEUTENANT IOHN Roosevelt "Jackie" Robinson, while serving in the 9th Cavalry, the famed "Buffalo Soldiers," before his transfer to the 761 st. (COURTESY RACHEL ROBINSON) LEONARD SMITH AND comrad (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) r ! LEONARD SMITH AND comrades in the 761st training in the U.S. (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) HEADQUARTERS COMPANY, 761 sl Tank Battalion, Camp Claiborne, 1943. (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) LEONARD SMITH AND comrades in the 761st training in the U.S (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) HEADQUARTERS COMPANY, 761 sl Tank Battalion. Camp Claiborne, 1943. G t I '.' t i:'i'1I ......... ... Ii . 10 H N Roosevelt while 1 h......UJuJUn SMITH and Battalion (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) LEONARD TTY" wearing the uniform insignia of the 761 st "SM 1IIl;11'~ ...- ~ r;... DOG COMPANY, 76151 Tank Battalion, checking equipment before leaving England to go into combat. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNOX, KY) 76151 FIELD OFFICERS (from left to Headquarters Company commandi McHenry, Charlie Company comrr Lieutenant James Lightfoot, the 81 (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATIO TANK COMMANDER Harvey Woodard assessing terrain, Nancy, France, November 1944. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNox, KY) II I, 76151 FIELD OFFICERS (from left to right) Captain Ivan Harrison, Headquarters Company commanding officer; Captain Irvin McHenry, Charlie Company commanding officer; and 2nd Lieutenant James Lightfoot, the 81 MM Mortar Platoon Leader. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNox, KY) A TANK FROM Able Company of the 761st Tank Battalion, crossing the Seille River on November 9, 1944. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, , FORT KNox, KY) THE REMAINS OF four German Panzers and two 761st Sherman tanks after fierce fighting on November 19, 1944, in an open field between Guebling and Bourgaltroff. (COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES) CAPTAIN GARLAND ~DOC~ Adamson, M.D. (COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES) PRIVATE EUGENE HAMILTON guarding the tank park of the 761 st Battalion following the war, January 1946. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNOX, KY) GENERAL GEORGE PATTON awarding a Silver Star to Private Ernest A. Jenkins. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNox, KY) << _,. _.,/ IiIII t~-~'-. ."e PRIVATE EUGENE HAMILTON guarding the tank park of the 761 st Battalion following the war, January 1946. (U.S. ARMY PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PATTON MUSEUM, FORT KNox, KY) THE LEONARD SMITH. TODAY. (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH) ,..., Charlie Company moved two Forest with elements of the 328tb outskirts of Munster. The 761st's. shell the town. The infantry and ( encountering a range of concea tions. The tanks spread out to p positions in the town as the infa Smith's "Cool Stud" tank and M the rest. As they passed throl strafed the tanks with abandon. abled, unable to move. The Aml ing insupportably high casualtie By nightfall the Americam Germans controlled the area 1 tanks were immobilized just in~ of the crewmen would make a fire. The men-including, for ( ened to sleep. The only reason cannons were still working and run up within range and toss a standoff. But the tankers \\ Panzerfaust and antitank gur Sherman tanks was a prioril) could come at any moment, \\ could do about it. To keep thl Sherman crews talked throughout battle. Though ~ that would reveal their objec be listening, tank units dev selves through the day with slang from the streets of Ne GI profanity, a frequent use LEONARD SMITH AT a cemetery in the Netherlands, visiting the grave site of a fallen comrade. (COURTESY LEONARD SMITH)