Memorial Day Tribute: excerpt from"A Foxhole View..." - Page 5

Author: SharkPublished: May 28, 2005 at 12:11 pm 13 comments

Somewhere out in the hills was an enemy artillery observer. We kept behind the houses and had only gone a short distance when he spotted us. As we ran between the open spaces separating the houses, he would call for the 88s. This became a deadly game of cat and mouse — we were the mice.

He would have the 88 trained on the next open space and try to hit us as we tried to cross. He came closer each time, and each time we would wait longer before crossing. This made it hard for him to guess when we would cross. At this rate it took us a long time to travel two blocks. It was after dark before we started back with the food containers. We all made it back safely, but we were physically and mentally exhausted.

The next morning the Germans started a counter-attack over the crest of this same high ground. A young artillery officer had joined us and he kept our artillery very busy, hitting everything that moved to the crest of the hill. The Germans finally gave up, but the spotter sent many rounds just over the hill to greet them as they retreated.

We had finally broken out of the Hurtgen Forest for good. Our next objective was the town of Rolsdorf across the flat plain in the distance. It was part of a very important line of defenses for the Germans and a town that they wouldn't easily give up.

end of excerpt

============

RIP, *Dad.

* from Omaha Beach to Zerbst, Germany
* First Americans to reach the Rhine
* 1 Silver Star
* 2 Bronze Stars
* offered Purple Heart, turned it down because he thought it was bad luck


K-Company
3rd Battalion
329 th Infantry Regiment
83rd Division "Thunderbolt"

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  • 1 - SFC SKI

    May 28, 2005 at 3:15 pm

    Fantastic account, your father had a real eye for detail. Thanks for this post.

  • 2 - HW Saxton

    May 28, 2005 at 3:59 pm

    That was an excellently detailed post on
    the realities of battle. My own paternal
    grandfather fought during WWII in the
    Pacific theatre, participating in the
    liberation of the Phillipines.

    When asked by myself,uncles,cousins and
    other mainly male members of the family
    as to what it it was like and what he
    did he would NEVER give us any details
    on battle experiences. All he would ever
    say was he missed my grandmother and he
    did a hell of a lot waiting only to be
    re-deployed for more waiting.I guess it
    is fairly common amongst veterans from
    what I have read and similar stories
    from friends about their own fathers and
    or grandfathers war service. Obviously,
    these must be quite horrific memories if
    even some forty years later they are
    still unwilling or unable to discuss the
    facts after all this time.



  • 3 - Bennett

    May 28, 2005 at 4:48 pm

    Great reading, and a proud tribute to your father. Thanks for this Shark.

  • 4 - Shark

    May 28, 2005 at 7:09 pm

    Thanks, guys. It feels good to share.

    ==========

    HW, this is almost universal: my dad never mentioned a thing about his war experiences when I was growing up.

    One day, I found a trunk in the attic filled with all of his memorabilia, including his helmet (with a bullet hole through the top), a german lugar, a german helmet, a giant nazi flag, a nazi party knife, a german officers cap, an unbelievable fairy-tale newspaper account of his first contact with the FFI in liberated France, and a few hundred excellent photos. He finally acknowledged that he was in "the war", but that was about all he'd say.

    Late in life, he had health problems, and I asked him just to give me a list of the places he'd been -- maybe in chronological order.

    About a month later, he dropped a huge, hand-written MS into my lap; beautiful, detailed, articulate; he'd remembered EVERY single detail almost by day -- from Omaha in late June 44 --- up to his return and discharge in the fall of 45 -- straight from a haunted memory.

    It was like it had happened yesterday, and I know that it was cathartic; he witnessed some horrible things, done to his friends, done to the Germans, done to the civilians -- and he did a few himself.

    One can't imagine the full horrors of war until one reads a detailed account from the grunts in WWII, either theater, btw.

    Unfortunately, his experiences were shared by literally thousands of American boys.

    PS: re. "heroes" -- although he was officially deemed a 'hero three times by the Army, he despised that word; he said that in the heat of battle, you never knew how you would react -- and he never took credit for his instinctual actions -- or blamed anyone for theirs, even if it was to *hide and cry like a baby.

    *which many of his associates did.


  • 5 - HW Saxton

    May 28, 2005 at 9:45 pm

    Shark, once again that is one hell of a
    post and tribute to your pop.He sounds
    like a hell of a good guy. I'm glad you
    clued me in more on the why's of why a
    lot of(nay,most)WW2 vets won't talk.

    I honestly can't even begin to imagine
    the shit these guys went through.Then it
    is even more mind boggling knowing many
    were what like 16,17 when they went in?
    Faking their ages a little was common I
    understand. Wow. Very intense.

  • 6 - SFC SKI

    May 28, 2005 at 10:31 pm

    What Shark writes about veterans and heroes meshes perfectly with what I have been told by vets. I was in a writers' seminar with vets from WWII on, and they all downplayed anything they personally did, but the tales they told were incredibly heroic. It is one thing to read about the Battle of the Bulge, another thing to meet someone who fought in it, was taken prisoner, and lived to tell about it.

    I am really glad that your father took the time to write all of this down before he died, Shark. Far too many vets never do.

  • 7 - dietdoc

    May 29, 2005 at 8:52 am

    Shark: The "Greatest Generation" (and no better description has ever been proffered) was a truly magnificent group. I proudly count my own father as one of these. What they did for this country and this world has never and, clearly, will never be fully appreciated, ever. And it just started with the battlefields of Europe and the Pacific. It is they who made us the country we are today (at least the good parts) and we owe them a debt we are running out of chances to repay.

    Your tribute was very appropriate and I wish we all could have all personally thanked your father and all the others who sacrificed their youth and came home to, humbly and quietly, build our nation. No complaints, no second-guessing, no grandstanding, no puffed-out chests - just living and glad to be doing so.

    While I pray there will never again be a requirement for such a national sacrifice, for I am quite sure we will not be up to it, I am in awe of those who did before. They are my heroes, even today, in a nation and a world that has far too few.

    Cheers,

    Ron

  • 8 - SFC SKI

    May 29, 2005 at 11:39 pm

    The Huertgen Forest campaign is a little known period in WWII for most people, any plan to publish your father's memoirs?

  • 9 - Cerulean

    May 30, 2005 at 3:47 am

    Once again, my work anticipates the news.

    I know just how confusing the dichotomy between the Catholicism and Wicca can be :)
    That's why I wrote my articles Catholicism vs. Witchcraft Parts I and II.

    http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/05/03/072724.php

    http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/05/19/181950.php

    Judge Bradford, I dedicate these works to you.

  • 10 - Cerulean

    May 30, 2005 at 3:48 am

    I posted the above comments to the wrong thread in error. Sorry. Please ignore the above.

  • 11 - Shark

    May 30, 2005 at 10:18 am

    Ski: "The Huertgen Forest campaign is a little known period in WWII for most people, any plan to publish your father's memoirs?"

    Ski, thanks for asking. I think I'll try in the next year or so. From the many memoirs I've sampled, my dad's are some of the best overall; his experiences aren't 'that' unique to infantry in Europe, but his memory and writing are.

    re: Hurtgen - yes, little known, but one of the worst battles with some of the highest casualties -- mostly from treetop artillery bursts.

    Hurtgen was the longest battle the American Army has fought in history.

    * 24,000 American casualties from enemy fire

    * 9,000 casualties due to sickness and friendly fire.

    * 12,000 German dead

    =====

    What's ironic: since my dad's unit had been in constant contact with the enemy since June 44, they were removed from the Hurtgen for a short R & R period.

    They were sent to... you guessed it, a place called "*The Ardennes Forest" -- where things were really calm and peaceful.

    bad luck, that -- and not a heckuva lot of R&R occurred.


    * site of The Battle of the Bulge
















  • 12 - Shark

    May 30, 2005 at 10:26 am

    DietDoc: re. The Greatest Generation: (bears repeating)

    "..It is they who made us the country we are today (at least the good parts) and we owe them a debt we are running out of chances to repay..."

    Truer words were never spoken.

    I'm amazed that these men could witness so much destruction and horror -- and yet return to build an entire civilization (the good parts!) -- with hardly any reference to the past, anger, or retribution.

    They got married, had babies, created companies, industries, arts, etc. -- and not a peep from them about their suffering and sacrifices. (Unlike today, self-pity was not admired in American life.)

    And as a generalization -- they were (possibly) the *last generation of American "Gentlemen" who not only had character, morals, and manners, but had an incredible amount of personal integrity.

    My pop damn sure did -- and I've met hundreds just like him.

    * sadly, they're either gone, or in their late 80s -- early 90s.

  • 13 - Shark

    May 25, 2008 at 8:50 am

    RIP, Dad.


    xxoo
    Shark

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