| THE STORY
OF THE 3rd INFANTRY DIVISION
It was Adolph
Hitler's birthday and three platoons of proud troops presented arms at
the Hitler Platz in Nurnberg as a flag was raised to the top of the pole
at one end of the square. A general made a short but dramatic speech.
But the ceremony
was a shocking insult to Nazism. The troops were American; the flag, the
Stars and Stripes; the general, an officer in the United States Army.
This was a
small measure of the 3rd Infantry Division's contempt for the Nazis --
the 3rd which began its war against the Germans early Nov. 8, 1942, off
the coast of French Morocco.
Thirty months
later, May 8, 1945, when the Nazis surrendered unconditionally, the 3rd
boasted three additional amphibious landings, eight campaign stars, 33
Congressional Medal of Honor winners and such memorable milestones as Casablanca
and Tunisia in Africa; Palermo and Messina in Sicily; Monte Lungo and the
Volturno River in southern Italy; the Anzio beachhead, Cisterna and Rome
in central Italy; the Riviera, Rhone River Valley, Montelimar and Besancon
in southern France; the Vosges Mountains, Strasbourg, the Colmar Pocket,
Siegfried Line, Rhine River, Bamberg, Nurnberg, Munich, Berchtesgaden,
Salzburg.
There were
few veterans of the initial D-Day on hand for V-E Day in Salzburg and Berchtesgaden,
a solemn day for both veterans and recruits alike. For during those 30
months, the 3rd had sustained 34,000 casualties -- more than any of the
60 divisions in the European Theater -- in its 3200 mile trail from Casablanca
to Salzburg.
April 16, 1945:
Nurnberg was the goal and the 3rd knew it would have a tough fight on its
hands. Captured Wehrmacht and Volksturm troopers indicated a stand would
be made at Nurnberg which Hitler had selected to play host to the yearly
celebration of the Nazi party.
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OMITTED
PORTION OF HISTORY RELATED TO GERMANY
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After 30 months
of campaigning, after fighting through seven countries, eight separate
campaigns, the war was over for the 3rd. No wonder Lt. Richard Ford, 10th
Engr. Bn., said: "It's amazing to think it's over. I feel a little let
down.”
"ROCK OF
THE MARNE" -- A TRIBUTE TO STRENGTH Origin
& WW1
Then the late
President Roosevelt and former Prime Minister Churchill decided on the
invasion of North Africa they told their army chiefs to select
crack divisions for the amphibious operation, the toughest operation in
the books. The 3rd was picked to hit the west coast of French Morocco and
capture the highly important port of Casablanca.
Both the 3rd's
history in World War I and its state of readiness in this war governed
its selection. Along the banks of the Marne in 1918, the 3rd stood fast
while two German divisions pounded it from three sides. But the 3rd held,
the enemy was forced to retreat and the peril to Paris was eliminated.
Thereafter, the 3rd became known as the "Rock
of the Marne" Division.
The 3rd took
part in the fighting at the Somme, Chateau-Thierry, Champagne-Marne, St.
Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne, and Aisne-Marne. In August, 1919, after a stretch
as occupation troops, the division left France for the States and was demobilized.
Reactivated
in September, 1921, at Fort Lewis, Wash., the 3rd remained in Washington
and California until it went to Camp Pickett, Va., in September, 1942,
to prepare for the invasion of North Africa.
The division's
background was rooted in the history of its regiments. Their battle honors
include the campaigns of 1812, Spanish-American War, Indian Wars,
Mexican
and Civil Wars. The 7th Regt. was first organized in 1798, mustered
out in 1800, reorganized in 1808 and has had continuous service since.
Its long list of battle honors begins with the Battle of Tippecanoe
in 1811.
The 15th Regt.
was organized as a regiment of volunteers to fight the British in 1812.
It also saw action in the Mexican War and took part in six major
battles during the Civil War. The regiment served twice in China, first
during the Boxer Rebellion and later for a 26-year period ending
in 1938, when it returned to the States and was assigned to the 3rd.
The 30th Regt.
participated in the War of 1812 and in the Civil War, but
the history of the present regiment began with its formation in 1901 at
Fort Logan, Colorado. It and the 7th were part of the division in World
War I.
"Blue and White
Devils" is only one of the nicknames belonging to the 3rd. That name is
a grudging tribute from the Germans who were defeated at the Anzio beachhead.
Nazis also called the 3rd the "Sturm" Division, a name often applied to
their own units.
The 3rd's invasion
off Fedala, French Morocco, in the inky blackness of Nov. 8, 1942, was
far from being a perfect landing. Amphibious landings were new and when
the ships' deployment in the transport area became mixed, H-hour was set
back 45 minutes. A dangerous shore line, rocks and a heavy sea, capsized
many boats. Once inland, friendly naval gunfire occasionally hit
advancing troops.
But it was
a start and it was successful. While the division prepared its assault
on Casablanca, Nov. 11, the French asked for an armistice. Gen. George
S. Patton, Jr., commanding Western Task Force, told Maj. Gen. J. W. Anderson,
then CG of the 3rd: "Thanks for the birthday present, Andy."
Next followed
a long period free from combat. The 30th sent troops northward to patrol
the borders of Spanish Morocco. One battalion commanded by Col. (then Maj.)
Charles E. Johnson, acted as honor and security guard at the Casablanca
conference.
Gen. Anderson
left the division Feb. 22 and was replaced by Lt. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott,
later Fifth Army Commander. A vigorous training program followed Gen. Truscott
made it his business to see that the division could march five miles an
hour for the first hour, and four miles an hour thereafter. The pace was
called the Truscott Trot; it made the 3rd famous.
Other American
divisions, the 1st, 9th, 34th
and 1st Armored,
were fighting for Tunisia. When the Afrika
Korps was
about to collapse, the 3rd's 15th Regt. was committed to action.
It hadn't fired a shot when the Germans surrendered.
"Hell," said
1st Lt. Don G. Taggart, current division historian. "We got that battle
star for maneuvering into position."
That star was
the only gift the 3rd ever received without working for it.
SICILY --
SPRINGBOARD TO ITALY
Next amphibious
operation for the Marne Division was Sicily. It was rough. Not only were
Italians and Germans fighting to hold on to Sicily but it was mid-July,
hottest time of the year in a hot country. Water was scarce; climbing one
mountain meant only another mountain to climb.
Licata was
the scene of the 3rd's invasion. Marne-men exhibited their Truscott Trot
immediately. In the drive for Palermo they covered 90 miles in three days,
all on foot. During the attack, the 30th's 3rd Bn. covered, by marching
over mountainous terrain, 54 miles in 33 hours -- a record the division
believes still stands -- then attacked the town of San Stefano Quisquina.
Outside Palermo
the Army commander drew a line where foot troops were to stop; entry was
to be made by armored forces. Gen. Truscott received permission to "patrol"
the town, however, and 3rd Bn., 7th, entered the city to be met next morning
by tankers from the 2nd Armd. Div.
He called himself
"The Old Goat" but there was nothing old about the way Lt. Col. Lyle Bernard
loaded his 2nd Bn., 30th, into Higgins boats and Ducks to make two landing
behind enemy lines as the 3rd pushed up the Sicilian coast toward Messina.
For these two invasions, the battalion won the Presidential Unit Citation.
{Higgins boats
were landing crafts }
Again, at Messina,
Marne-men were first into the city. Again it was the 7th, climaxing a drive
against stubborn German rear guards that resulted in the bloodiest fighting
of the entire campaign.
Thirty days
after the fall of Messina (Sept. 17, 1943), the 3rd headed for Italy and
crossed the recently won Salerno beachhead. Three days later, elements
of the 30th met German troops south of Acerno. Forgotten was the Truscott
Trot in the rugged mountains, the biting rain, and against the powerful,
stubborn German army.
The division
made an audacious crossing of the Volturno River Oct. 13. The river valley
was perfectly flat, fringed with mountains affording the enemy excellent
observation, cross fire and strong artillery support.
Without stopping
to take a breather, the 3rd plunged into the icy waters, crossed the river.
Casualties were high. The situation was tense once during an enemy tank
counter-attack, but the division crunched ahead to the mountains to upset
the German timetable.
It was in the
mountain approaches to Cassino that the division met its toughest opposition
and displayed its greatest offensive prowess. Heavily reinforced, the Germans
sat on Monte Rotundo, Monte Lungo and Monte la Difensa, ringing Mignano
on the north, determined to hold at all costs.
Every foot
of the way was heavily mined. Jeeps were replaced by pack mules. Men died
who might have lived if they could have been transported over the long
and tortuous trails to aid stations. Co. K, 7th, once had 23 casualties
from AP mines while climbing a hill to relieve another company. Mules were
forever straying off the paths, exploding mines and wounding badly needed
men.
As winter approached,
the 3rd captured Monte Rotundo, the south nose of Lungo and all of steep,
barren La Difensa, except one summit guarded by a 200-foot cliff.
{Monte La Difensa is the prominent mountain that was captured by the 1st
Special Service Forces, as depicted in the movie "The Devils Brigade".}
It was on Monte
Rotundo that Capt. Maurice L. "Footsie" Britt, Lone Oak, Ark., former Detroit
Lions' football star, CO Co. L, 30th, became a legendary figure through
his exploits. Despite painful grenade wounds, he inspired his company of
40 to stand off three separate counter-attacks, throwing "at least 30 grenades,"
firing his carbine, a Tommygun, anything he could shoot to beat off the
enemy. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Previously, Capt.
Arlo Olson, Baton Rouge, La., 15th, drove his men through a vastly superior
force in 13 rugged days. Killed by a mortar fragment at San Felice, he
also was awarded the CMH. This type of grim fighting had its results. The
first approaches to Cassino were forced, a toe hold gained for succeeding
troops.
The 3rd came
out of the line Nov. 17, 1943, rested until the end of December in the
knee-deep mud near San Felice. Practice river crossings on the Volturno
indicated that Marne-men would force the issue at the Rapido which flowed
through Cassino.
ANZIO AND
THE RACE TO ROME BEGINS
But with the
new year, a switch in plans sent the 3rd to the Naples staging area to
prepare for a landing 30 miles south of Rome, an operation that was to
roll back the enemy on the southern Italian front. The 3rd and a brigade
of the British 1st Div.
landed Jan. 22 near the little resort towns of Nettuno and Anzio. Winston
Churchill once spoke of "tears, sweat and toil." Anzio was paid for in
guts -- American and British guts. More than 6000 men died during the next
few months to protect 100 square miles of beachhead. In that hallowed niche
reserved for names like Bataan and Guadalcanal, Anzio will live forever.
Anzio always will be a vivid memory to the men who fought there... and
survived.
Three regiments
landed abreast, each speared by an assault battalion. By mid-afternoon
next day, they were 10 miles inland. The enemy's reaction was swift. Instead
of withdrawing, he raced fresh troops from the Rome vicinity and northern
Italy and hurled them into battle. When a
45th Inf. Div. combat team landed on the
beachhead D plus 6, an equivalent of three divisions loomed in front of
Cisterna on Highway 7 as the 3rd regrouped for its first assault.
The brick-wall
defense stopped the attack, which began Jan 29 and ended early Jan. 31.
When the 7th's 1st Bn. finally was relieved, less than 200 men were left;
2nd Bn. had 400; 3rd Bn., 600. Closest to Cisterna were 1st Bn., 30th,
and 2nd Bn., 15th, which had to swing to the defense only 1500 yards from
the objective.
Anzio was barely
14 miles wide and 10 miles from sea to front at its deepest penetration.
The enemy squatted around the beachhead's perimeter and in the Colli Laziali
Hills with perfect observation of every square inch of beachhead.
Sally, the
Berlin broadcaster, knew what type of rations men ate. Among songs she
dedicated was, "Don't Get Around Much Anymore." Among her remarks was,
"As long as there is blue and white paint, there'll always be a 3rd Division,"
The blue and white paint outlasted Sally.
When VI
Corps ordered defensive emplacements dug
along the Mussolini Canal -- the beachhead line -- weary, battered Marne-men
doggedly refused to let the Krauts push them back. The Mussolini Canal
plan was discarded. That line, won during the first Cisterna assault, was
to be held. Men like T/5 Eric Gibson and Pfc Lloyd Hawks would have approved
the decision, the former if he hadn't been killed when he left his field
kitchen to lead a squad of recruits into their first battle; the latter,
if he hadn't been near death in a Naples hospital after saving the lives
of two buddies although he had been wounded in the head, suffered a shattered
arm and leg. Both men won the Medal of Honor.
The first defensive
battle occurred Feb. 16 when Hitler tried to remove the thorn in the side
of Italy. Main weight of the attack was pressed against the 45th
Div. and British
1st Div. near Aprilia. When the line receded
but didn't disintegrate, Col. Lionel C. McGarr's 30th Inf. and the 1st
Armd. Div. counterattacked across the
flat Pontine marshes to steady and re-establish the beachhead line.
Maj. Gen. (then
Brig. Gen.) John W. O'Daniel assumed command Feb. 17 when Gen. Truscott
went to VI Corps. Men well remember his classic retort to Field Marshal
Sir Harold R.L.G. Alexander's question in the War Room. "I believe it is
true that your division did not give an inch. Is that right?" asked the
Commander of Allied Armies in Italy. "Not a God-damn inch!" replied "Iron
Mike."
For a while,
the fight simmered down, then flared again Feb. 29. Field Marshal Kesselring
flung three divisions and elements of a fourth against the 3rd. Wave upon
wave of enemy infantry stormed positions. Supported by seven tanks, a regiment
struck a company Of the 7th, only to be whipped back in retreat. Next morning,
two tanks from Ponte Rotto barreled through Co. L, headed for the battalion
CP. Co. K stemmed, their advance. It was the same all along the line.
Fourteen tanks
grinding from Cisterna toward Isola Bella, held by the 15th, were slapped
down by TDs or turned tread and fled. Because reserves were thin, front
line doughs had to hold. Second Bn., 30th, made the main attack, wiping
out an enemy penetration of 1000 yards at Carano; the 5th restored its
positions between Carano and Ponte Rotto. Krauts stacked their dead, covered
them with a bulldozer.
The push of
Yank forces on the southern front of the Italian boot was the signal to
break out of the beachhead. The date was May 23, an indelible mark in the
minds of Marne-men. The 3rd bore the brunt of the attack. Cisterna, key
to the enemy's defense, its approaches sewed with mines and anti-tank ditches,
latticed with trenches and emplacements, had to be taken.
Late May 21,
all three regiments shifted into place, spent a restless day under the
scant cover of the Mussolini Canal and adjacent ditches. H-hour was 0630,
May 23. The plan demanded the 30th encircle Cisterna from the left, the
15th to by-pass it to the right; the 7th to crash it head-on.
On the 23rd,
the division suffered 995 battle casualties, believed to be the highest
ever sustained by a single division in one day's fighting. Marne-men kept
slugging it out. By nightfall, most companies had lost key personnel; less
experienced carried on. Heroes were legion, four won the Medal of Honor
for the first two day's fighting. Pvt. Henry "Kraut-an-Hour" Schauer killed
17 Germans in 17 hours with his BAR; Pvt. Johnny Dutko wiped out two machine
guns, then charged and silenced an 88; Pvt. James Mills, first scout, led
his platoon in his initial combat; Pvt. Patrick Kessler charged an enemy
gun after 20 of his buddies were killed or wounded, knocked out a strongpoint,
picked off two snipers to help his company advance.
The 7th plowed
into Cisterna. By noon of the 25th, the city belonged to the 3rd Div. while
the 30th raced ahead to Cori. Pushing on to Artena, "Blue and White Devils"
ripped into the crack Hermann Goering Division,
crushing it in a battle that matched Cisterna for ferocity, Next, Highway
6 was crossed, cutting the enemy's escape route from the south; Valmontone,
taken. The race to Rome began. Preceding the capture of Valmontone was
an incident that is an epic in the pages of the 3rd's history.
Pvt. Elden
J. Johnson and Pvt. Herbert Christian were in a patrol from the 15th ordered
to scout enemy positions. No sooner did the patrol run into an ambush than
the leader was killed, a 20mm slug tore off Christian's left leg, machine
gun bullets ripped into Johnson's stomach. Born men went down. In the blackness
of night lit only by the vivid scars of red and green tracers and German
flares, both men struggled to their feet to charge the enemy while 11 uninjured
doughs withdrew. They were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor posthumously.
First Lt. Frank
Greenlee, Nashville, Tenn., led his platoon of the 3rd Recon Troop into
Rome at 0800 June 4 in a photo finish with the 88th
Recon Troop. By nightfall, the first capital
of a Nazi nation had fallen. To the 3rd fell the honor of garrisoning the
city. New uniforms were issued to troops who became garrison for the first
time in 14 months. {88th Recon Troop
was part of the 88th 'Blue Devils' Divsion. Most units claim they were
the first to enter Rome. Surpising that this booklet gives this recognition
to whom it was due.}
June 6 was
D-Day in Normandy, but for Marne-men, who experienced four D-Days, it was
just another invasion. The Rome interlude was brief. The time had come
to stab at "the soft underbelly of Europe." To gird itself for the assault
on southern France, the 3rd, along with the 36th
and 45th Divs.,
returned to the familiar staging grounds at Naples.
BLUE AND
WHITE DEVILS PIERCE "UNDERBELLY OF EUROPE"
Aug. 15, 0800:
VI
Corps poured more men on the Riviera beaches
than splashed on the Normandy shores at H-hour. Military experts
labeled it a perfect amphibious operation. It couldn't have been otherwise.
For the 36th,
it was the second; for the 45th,
the third; for the 3rd, the fourth D-Day. So expert was the landing that
within the first 24 hours, "Blue and White Devils" rounded up 1000 PWs
and began dashing parallel to the coast toward Toulon an Marseille. Sealing
off the two ports later captured by the French for landing of additional
troops, the 3rd now whipped north along the Rhone River valley. Nazis withdrew
towards the Belfort Gap but they weren't fast enough.
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SOMITTED
PORTION ON THE CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE
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Proud wearers
of the Blue and White patch were the division's attached units, the 756th
Tank Bn., 601st
TD Bn. and 441st
AAA Bn. The
mediums of the 756th
always worked in support of the doughs. When 2nd Bn., 7th, was cut off
at Utweiler, it was chiefly because the entire platoon of supporting tanks
had been immobilized by a mine field; when the battalion was rescued, it
was chiefly because the tanks were able to get through and knock out six
more SP guns.
The 601st,
which was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for its work at El Guettar,
lived up to its reputation in its 20 months with the division. In two days
at Anzio, the battalion knocked out or stopped an estimated 20 enemy tanks,
one downed a plane. At Cisterna, one platoon knocked out three AT guns
at less than 50 yards.
The 441st,
one of the first ack-ack units to lend close support to ground troops,
performed nearly 200 ground support missions in France and Germany. One
flak-wagon attached to the 39th FA Bn. was the big punch in rounding up
132 Germans near Vesoul, France. Seven Nazi planes in one day was the battalion
record on the Volturno in October, 1943.
During the
Italian campaign, the division was supported by the 751st
and 191st Tank Bns.
Another unit was the 36th Engr. Regt.,
which formed the nucleus of the beach group for each of the four amphibious
operations.
Today, the
3rd Inf. Div. holds its head high. Victory is no hollow word for only fighting
men know the real meaning of the word. Men of the 3rd know full well the
meaning of victory from 1942 to 1945. Victory was paid for in full.
The 3rd Division
says to the world: "Let us not swerve from our determination that never
will it be necessary for us to do this kind of job again."
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