If You Survive (18 page)

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Authors: George Wilson

BOOK: If You Survive
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That was enough for me, so I went looking for Lieutenant Caldwell. He was able to call in a few 105mm artillery rounds but refused to try a barrage because we were so close to the target. These shells, plus a few near misses with rifle grenades, finally gave the German machine gun crew the right idea, and they withdrew.

At this point I was beginning to realize the full gravity of our situation, and I decided to inform Colonel Kenan. I spoke very carefully on the radio as I explained to him that
all my officers were gone, that we were getting loaded down with wounded needing evacuation, that our ammunition was almost gone. I said I didn’t see how we could continue in this condition against such a formidable enemy defense. It seemed to me I was completely objective, simply listing the plain facts, and that my assessment was correct.

Colonel Kenan then taught me a powerful lesson in positive thinking, one I’ve never forgotten. In a calm, matter-of-fact voice, he said; “Wilson, ammo is on the way over now. I know what you’re up against, and I know
you can and will
continue to advance and take that line of defense.”

Without another word, he broke the connection.

I was furious. The guy back in his CP was asking the impossible. It was crazy.

Then the bearers arrived with bandoliers of ammunition, and somehow we took on new life. Lieutenant Caldwell laid down some more artillery ahead of us, and we moved out again. Just before dark we knocked out the last German breastwork and cleaned out that defensive line.

The surviving enemy pulled back a few hundred yards into the woods where the pines were very close together, leaving us in a relatively open area of scattered hardwoods.

Darkness came quickly in the forest, and we had to stop and dig in for the night while we could still see what we were doing. Because of the German artillery and mortar fire we had to get below ground and also get a log roof over our heads. The Germans, of course, did the same thing, and whenever their abandoned shelters fit into our line we used them gratefully. Most of us weren’t so lucky, and so, after an exhausting day, we had to start digging. Such is life in the infantry.

Our advance for the day had been about five hundred yards, and E Company on our left had gained about the
same. It was extremely costly yardage, possibly the most expensive real estate in the world, and we never could have gone the other 1,500 yards to our original objective.

During the night we received a few riflemen and three officers as replacements. One officer had some experience, another was a former sergeant who had earned a battlefield commission, and the third was a very big, rough recruit; Second Lieutenant Smith.

Young Smith kept me awake quite a while that night. He had probably heard plenty of the truth about our losses, and he was so nervous he couldn’t stop talking. Rather than try to turn him off, I let him wind down. There was plenty of shelling to keep me awake anyway.

At daybreak I got up and made my way along our lines, checking every man. Mortar shells continued to drop in our area, most of them bursting overhead in the treetops as I made my rounds. It occurred to me that this business of being up and around checking on the men and showing them that you were still there was one of the reasons casualties were so high among officers.

I came upon one man lying face down, dead, in the bottom of his foxhole. I didn’t know who he was, so I reached down inside his shirt for his dog tags, and my hand came upon a gruesome mess of cold blood. He was one of the replacements who had arrived after dark. He had died even before he had a chance to fight. Many never made it up to the front lines due to the heavy shelling that hit in the rear areas. This was the Hürtgen.

By now our supply lines were in a terrible mess. The jeep trails were mined or so muddy as to be impassable. All our food and ammunition had to be carried, and this meant that the recruits joining us after dark were loaded down with boxes of supplies.

Our medical staff also had taken a severe beating, with
most of them killed or wounded. The few remaining stretcher bearers were ready to drop from exhaustion.

The German mortars continued to drop in relentlessly. Some became deadly tree bursts, and some made it to the ground; since they were coming straight down and faster than sound, there was no warning. By the time you heard the explosion you were already hit or else had escaped.

During one of my rounds I was caught in the middle of a barrage, with one shell exploding in a large oak directly overhead. My right arm stung, and I looked down. A sliver of shrapnel was sticking out of my right forearm. It was about a quarter inch thick, and a half inch protruded. When I pulled it out I found that about an inch had been buried below the surface. The medic sprinkled sulfa powder on the wound, then bandaged it up. At the time it didn’t particularly bother me; that came later. I must have been pretty stupid, because it simply never occurred to me to go back to the aid station, about five hundred yards to the rear.

One of the new men asked if he could try out his rifle. He hadn’t had a chance to zero it in, and he asked if there were some Germans he could get a shot at. I assured him there were indeed Germans in the woods ahead and told him if he went to our outpost fifty yards in front he might well get a shot.

A short time later he returned excitedly and bragged that he thought he’d gotten a couple of Germans. That would have been over two hundred yards through thick woods, so I rather doubted it.

Later that morning we were ordered to continue the attack eastward toward the far edge of the woods, our original objective. Companies E and F were still to lead the way.

I called my new officers together and explained that we
would attack in column of platoons. I emphasized the importance of speed, because we had to move in close to the Germans to get out of the shelling. I thought we could knock a quick penetration through the German defenses and continue to drive hard for the edge of the woods. This would undoubtedly make the Germans slip off to our sides, particularly our open right, and also to our rear, and I strongly warned against a possible German counterattack from any quarter.

To guard against probable enemy reactions, I assigned defensive positions for each platoon in our new area at the edge of the woods. I didn’t think we would have time to mill around, so I told each platoon leader in advance exactly where he should have his men dig in and clear out fields of fire to his front; they were to cut off tree limbs that might obscure or obstruct their view of the enemy to their front and flanks. Then I repeated everything, particularly about the Germans’ custom of counterattacking. By then I seemed to be respected as a veteran.

Both companies jumped off on schedule, and the shelling picked us up at once. As the artillery screamed into the treetops above us I pushed my company right out to the front. Evidently the Krauts were caught off balance by our rush, and they took for the rear with only a few shots at us. I knew the dangers of staying in place too long, so I whipped my men ahead even though I could tell by the sounds of firing that E Company was falling behind. They were probably being pinned down by heavy artillery barrages.

They were being shelled from the front, just as I had expected. If they had moved out fast, the way we had, they probably would have escaped most of the shelling.

We didn’t dare wait for E, so we pushed on rapidly and reached our objective, the edge of the woods, in about a
half hour. We were about a half mile ahead of everyone and exposed on all sides.

The three rifle platoons immediately began to dig in as arranged, and I assigned the weapons platoon and the headquarters section the rear of our lines. I also designated what would be the inner side when E Company joined us. We were in a rough square, about 150 yards to a side.

The fir trees there had been planted very close together by the local foresters and had grown to a height of about twenty feet. We couldn’t see more than about twenty yards in any direction, except over the open farm land that was our front. I went around to make sure the platoon leaders were having their men cut off the lower limbs of the pines to give them longer fields of fire and prevent the enemy from sneaking in too close.

I had just finished my rounds and was starting to help Lieutenant Caldwell dig our foxhole when the audacious young fellow who had so eagerly tried out his rifle the day before came charging wildly up to me and stammered, “Germans! Germans!” and pointed to the rear. If only he had fired that rifle at them, some of his buddies might have had enough warning to save themselves.

Before I could move a step, the clatter of machine guns and the
b-r-r-r-ip
of burp guns sounded almost on top of us. The men on the rear line were only partly dug in, and they dove for the ground. These were mostly replacements, and they were shocked and nearly paralyzed by the suddenness and fierceness of their first action. Very few of them even attempted to fire back.

Lieutenant Caldwell and I began firing our rifles and yelling at the men to start shooting. Then I told Caldwell to keep trying to get them to shoot while I went up to the front—actually back to the front—to get more men.

Bullets cut through the branches and zipped all around
me as I ran back. Every damned man I came upon was trying to hide in his foxhole or under a tree, making no attempt at all to fight back. I rousted a bunch of them out and got them to follow me, running as low as possible under the whizzing bullets.

It was easy to tell where the Krauts were from all their firing, and I led the dozen or so of my men out to the side and killed a couple of them, wounded three, and took a prisoner. A few managed to get away.

Actually, it turned out to be only a combat patrol, but they were so heavily armed with automatic weapons that they sounded like a whole company. They sure raised hell with us for a time.

With the excitement over, I got the men back to cutting branches to clear fields of fire. I told them that was far more important than digging foxholes. They had found out the hard way.

Normally I would have continued to work on our defenses, leaving the wounded to our very capable medic, but I couldn’t find him anywhere. Then I heard muffled moans from a nearby foxhole and went over to find my new young Lieutenant Smith lying shot to death, with his body blocking the entrance. I tugged at his limp, two-hundred pound body but couldn’t budge it due to my bad arm, so I yelled for help. His body was riddled with German bullets; he must have died instantly. All our talking the night before would never serve any purpose, although I couldn’t help wondering if he might have had a premonition.

Underneath Smith’s body was Sergeant Servat, who had been terribly wounded in the face. Somehow the gutsy sergeant was still conscious. A third man was at the bottom of the log-covered hole, and it was our missing medic. He was quite unhurt but completely pinned down by the other two. He quickly went to work.

First we sent the walking wounded, including the Germans, toward the rear. Then the medic worked on a man hit in the gut, and I did what I could for Servat. I tied bandages around both sides of his face and asked if he thought he could make it back to the forward aid station some 1,200 yards away. He nodded, and so I pointed him on his way, telling him he was bleeding internally and that he mustn’t stop to rest but had to keep moving to save his own life. There were no stretcher bearers. Somehow he made it. It must have been the longest journey of his life.
*

The man with the stomach wound needed to be evacuated, but the stretcher bearers were all casualties themselves. I offered to rig up some kind of stretcher and send two men back with him, but he didn’t want to be moved. He said he was sure he would be okay until a jeep could get that far. I wish I had insisted, because he died that night from shock and loss of blood. The medic and I second-guessed ourselves and felt pretty sick about it.

My arm was so sore that it was almost useless. I couldn’t grip a shovel handle, so I ordered the German prisoner to dig my foxhole. He was about forty, and a couple of times he wanted to stop and rest, but I was so damned mad at the deaths and wounds he and his buddies had caused that I took it out on him a little and wouldn’t let him stop. Then I had him cut some thick pine logs to make a frame for the top, and on this frame he spread big pine boughs, then his rain cape, and then a thickness of dirt as extra protection against tree bursts. About a foot of small pine boughs made a wonderful mattress at the bottom. This was the best foxhole I ever had, being high enough to sit up in and wide enough for two men to stretch out in. We weren’t used to such elegance.

Lieutenant Bowman, heavy machine gun platoon leader from H Company, was sent up to us with his two sections and four water-cooled machine guns. They added tremendously to our defense. I let Lieutenant Bowman share my deluxe foxhole because Lieutenant Caldwell had decided to dig in closer to the open field in case his artillery was needed.

Just before dark E Company made it up to our left. They had had a rough day. This left only our right flank exposed, and I had already moved our own light, air-cooled machine guns over there and cut some wide and deep openings through the pines for better observation of enemy movement. We were well dug in and could hand out a tremendous amount of damage if attacked.

The fronts of both E and F faced eastward across big open fields, which were about halfway between Kleinhau on our southeast and Grosshau on the northeast. Both of these villages lay in the open farmland about three quarters of a mile apart, and we were about one quarter mile west of the main north-south road connecting them.

First Battalion’s A, B, and C companies were all on line to the left of E; those companies had taken heavy maulings and were in very bad shape. We were all so short of officers and men that we made no attempt to move ahead for the next few days. We made ourselves as comfortable as possible, staying close to our foxholes because of the frequent systematic shelling day and night.

Meanwhile, F Company received one hundred replacements and one officer, bringing us up to a total of 150 men, which was only about ten short of full combat strength. I was still shy a weapons platoon leader and an executive officer, and so I had to take on the executive’s job of assigning the new men. Each man was interviewed briefly to find out his MOS or Military Order Specialty; most turned out to be simply basic riflemen.

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