Wednesday, 6 November 2013

THE US FIRST ARMY THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2; THE BREAK OUT INTO BRITTANY CHAPTER 6



The following day being the 1st of August the 3rd Army was activated under Lieutenant General George S Patton and the American forces swept into Brittany while Patton’s forces turned east to clear the Cotentin Peninsular, the First Army turned west to link up with the advancing elements of the British 21st battle group with a view to trapping the German 7th and 5th armies in a huge pincer movement around the town of Falaise and destroy the German armies in the field.

The Third Army subsequently advanced westward to capture Man, the erstwhile headquarters of the German Seventh Army and also cut off the retreat of the German forces trapped in the Cotentin Peninsular. German Dictator Adolf Hitler, in a foolhardy move ordered Field Marshal Von Kluge to launch a counter offensive against the advancing Allied Armies with a view to splitting the British and American armies between Mortain and Avranches and throw them back into the sea if possible.

 Against his own better judgment Von Kluge committed the remainder of his seven armored divisions in a counter attack codenamed operation Luttich. Von Kluge’s intentions were intercepted by the Ultra intelligence operation and the Allied commanders duly informed, waited for him.

 On August 7th the attack was launched by the panzer divisions that could muster only 75 Panzer IV and 70 Panther tanks and 32 self propelled guns. Hopelessly outnumbered, the offensive was over in 24 hours with the German forces completely routed and desperately seeking to avoid the encirclement that was closing in on them around Falaise.

The depleted German armored divisions were almost completely annihilated by the combined power of four Allied armies that had them completely surrounded and pulverized with air and artillery strikes, which completely decimated them, and left the dazed survivors fleeing on foot in the direction of the Seine River in the bid to escape the noose of the Allied encirclement. Two complete German armies the 7TH and the 5th were caught in the jaws of the Allied pincers.

A failure of proper co-ordination between the 90TH division of the First army and the inexperienced Polish 1st armored division of the Canadian 4TH Army, particularly in the sector closed by the Polish Corp left a fifteen mile gap through which many German soldiers managed to escape on foot out of the pocket, leaving behind 50,000 prisoners and most of their vehicles and equipments.

 Some historians blame General Bradley who had now been lifted to the command of the two American armies the 12th army group for stopping Patton’s forces just short of the point of sealing the pocket for fear of the advancing British and American units converging on the pocket clashing accidentally. 

 Altogether over 150,000 Germans managed to escape from the pocket, crossed the Seine River and regrouped on the other side. Over 100,000 German soldiers were killed or wounded in the operation. This defeat gave the Allied armies the opportunity to advance towards the Seine over undefended territory as all the Allied armies advanced in pursuit of the fleeing enemy.

The fleeing Germans crossed the Seine River and hastily built a new defensive line on the left side of the River. With the collapse of the German positions in Normandy, the advancing British and American armies began a race for the French capital to forestall a regrouping of the German forces.

 As they approached Paris the Allies decided to bypass the city and instead pursue the fleeing Germans to give them no respite. General Courtney Hicks Hodges had assumed the command of the First Army upon the elevation of Lieutenant General Omar N Bradley to the command of the newly formed 12th Army group consisting of the US First Army and General George S Patton’s Third Army.

 Lieutenant General Hodges now ordered his Army to cross the Seine River across bridge heads established between Mantes – Grassi courts and Mellon to the east, beginning an equally spectacular advance with three Corps towards Namur, Liege and the German frontier.

Moving on the right flank, VII Corps crossed the Aisne River on August 29, while Soissons was overrun by elements of the 3rd armored division which also seized Laon the next day after overcoming heavy enemy resistance. The advance of the 3rd armored division proceeded swiftly and on the 1st of September 1944 advanced to a point 30 miles north east of Laon

The next two days saw the columns advancing over 40 miles, crossing the Belgian border in the Hirson area and reaching Charleroi and Mons. Moving on the left flank a rapidly advancing column of XIX Corps moving from the Mantes bridge head led by the 2nd armored division advanced over 13miles on 30th August and another 20 miles of break taking advance brought it close to Montdidier in Belgium.

By September 2, XIX Corps had reached the Belgian border south of Tournai, an incredible advance of 60 miles in 2 days. The consequence of this swift advance was that the armored division completely outflanked and by passed large pockets of German soldiers as they outpaced and outran the retreating German army. The Germans trapped in the pocket extending from Mons area to Compiegne – St Quentin reaching a line east of Cambrai eventually capitulated and over 25,000 of them were taken prisoner over a period of three days.

On the 4th of September, the First army turned at a right angle to the east, with the V Corps moving on the right flank crossing the Meuse River north of Sedan on the 5th- 6th September 1944. Sedan eventually fell to the 5th armored division on the 6th of September opening up a front that led to a rapid advance across Belgium and Luxembourg on a 65 mile front.

The 5th armored division eventually liberated the city of Luxembourg on the 10th of September, and by the 11th, V Corps had reached the German frontier, confronting the Siegfried line and its defenses. Up north, units of the VII Corps captured the Belgian town of Namur and the River Meuse crossings near Dinant and continued to advance down along both banks of the River towards Liege’.

German resistance was heavy but by September 8th, the Americans broke through and Liege fell, but the relentless advance of VII Corps brought its leading elements into Luxembourg which was located 13 miles southwest of Aachen. The First Army was now deep within the defensive depth of the West wall also known as the Siegfried line.

The German crisscross of defenses, mine fields, road blocks, artillery emplacements and pill boxes slowed down but did not completely stop the First Army which pressed on with determination to breach the defenses of the Siegfried line and gain a foothold on German soil.

That notwithstanding the American advance still made some territorial gains on the 10th of September 1944 that brought the big guns of VII Corps into range of German territory for the first time. Further north in Belgium, VII Corps had pushed its way forward alongside XIX Corps and had captured both Eupen and Malmedy while XIX Corps was at the outskirts of Maastricht and further south had crossed the Meuse River.

In a spectacular advance, the First Army had swept down from the Seine River across France, Belgium and Luxembourg and was now at the front door of Germany in the autumn of 1944. First Army was now poised to take the first major German city seized by the Allies in World War 2, that is Aachen and there after invest the German positions across the Roer River in a bid to breach the Siegfried line and make a dash for the Rhine, the last natural barrier preventing the Allies from striking at the heart of Germany and the Ruhr industrial region.

At this point German resistance stiffened considerably as the war entered into Germany proper. The autumn rains, mud and onset of winter along with swollen Rivers combined to place natural obstacles on the path of the advance of First Army as they prepared to breach the extensive defenses of the Siegfried line.
 The expectation that the war would be over by Christmas was to prove to be a hoax and a futile dream to the average American as the network of pill boxes, Dragon’s teeth, forts and concrete tunnels extending hundreds of miles across the frontlines made them realize that defeating Germany was not going to be a walk over as they had been led to believe.

The First Army thus had the tough privilege of taking the first major German city in battle. The initial plan had centered on by passing the city and allowing it to fall on its own terms but as the Allies advanced, it became increasingly clear that the Germans were preparing an all out defense, and that it would be dangerous to leave such a well fortified position in the rear of the Allied lines. General Courtney Hodges therefore ordered the units of the VII Corps to invest the city beginning in the first week of September.

Because Aachen sat right in the middle of the Siegfried line it was completely fortified with an extensive network of tunnels, pill boxes, barbed wire entanglements and concrete obstacles known as Dragon’s teeth. Because of its historical importance and strategic location it had become imperative to seize it in the drive to Germany proper.

 Even though the German garrison commander General Gerhard Von Schwerin commanding the 116th Panzer division had intended to surrender the city to the Allies in order to spare the civilian population the ravages of war and also save the old imperial city from destruction, Adolf Hitler’s directive for him to launch an attack on the Allied lines frustrated his plans, which in any case was soon divulged to Hitler when his surrender letter was intercepted and delivered to Hitler.

He was promptly arrested and replaced by General Gerhard Wilck, who set about defending the city with the corresponding heavy loss of lives and destruction of property. By the 16 TH of September, Aachen had been surrounded on three sides by the First Army’s 1st infantry division but the dearth of supplies and the diversion of logistics support to assist Field Marshall Montgomery’s Operation Market Garden in the Netherlands prevented the First Army from immediately taking the city.

The fighting eventually carried on through late October and involved bitter battles on the part of the 30th and 1st infantry divisions which bore the brunt of the fighting and the casualties. Aachen being on the hinge of the Siegfried line saw the beginning of a stiffening of German defenses and a willingness to fight on the part of the Germans that had not been obvious in France particularly after the battles of the hedgerows and the break out from Brittany.

In Aachen, which represented the first calculated effort by the Allies to denigrate and ultimately breach the Siegfried line, the American fighting spirit in the face of a tenacious all- out defense began to emerge. For once both parties shared parity in terms of determination to hold pre-determined objectives, which for the Americans rested on a determination to destroy the German army once and for all, regardless of the cost.

 Aachen and ultimately the battle of the Hurtgen forest showed the beginning of a willingness by the American military authorities to pay the price for victory in blood and material losses in a way that stunned the German High Command and began to shape their beliefs in the fact that unless the Americans in particular could be stopped, the war was lost as far as the western front was concerned. A lot of steely resolve was demonstrated by both parties as the hard slog unfolded.

In Aachen the First Army fought a sustained battle of attrition for over six weeks from the first week of September to the third week of October. In the words of General Eisenhower it was the beginning of the hard slog campaign against the German enemy in the face of the clear defeat the Allies faced in Operation Market Garden which was thought up by Field Marshal Montgomery as a plan to force a way into Germany through the northern route and thereby outflank the Siegfried line.

It had become pretty clear after the failed operation that there was just no way to outflank the Siegfried line and the dreary prospect of the positional and entrenched warfare of 1914-1918 loomed as an unavoidable prospect for the Allies as the First Army bore down on Aachen.

Sunday, 20 October 2013

THE US FIRST ARMY THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2; THE BREAK OUT FROM ST LO : CHAPTER 5


The soldiers from the XIX Corps started the push to St Lo from Carentan on July 3 pushing past the German east flank over the bridge at Ariel, ten miles north of St Lo. Repeated German efforts to destroy the bridge and halt the advance of the Americans were thwarted by the superb combat skills of the 3rd armored division, particularly the combat engineers who fought tenaciously to keep the advance route open to the American tanks of the 3rd Armored Division.

With the road junction in the village of St Jean du Hayes secured, the tanks of the 3rd Armored Division were able to turn left to start the push south while the US VIII Corps advanced down the western flank to secure the Armored advance. The 29th infantry division was now able to advance on the town itself especially as the dominant height of hill 192 was securely in American hands. St Lo finally fell on July 16, 1944.


OPERATION COBRA
In mid July, the US First Army under Lieu Gen Omar N Bradley began preparations towards Operation Cobra, a planned break out of the hedgerow country of Normandy focused on a three mile stretch of the frontlines close to St Lo. Cobra was an adaptation of the British plan, operation Epsom and Good wood which involved a heavy carpet bombing of German front lines on a narrow stretch followed by close armor and infantry exploitation of the breach caused by the heavy bombardment.

Against fortified and entrenched German positions, it was realized that the Allies could successfully employ their massive air power to carpet bomb a narrow stretch of the German frontline positions through which a concentrated thrust by armor, infantry and artillery closely following can exploit, resulting in a decisive break through the German lines and rapid advance into the open country beyond the hedgerow area into Brittany.

 The Allies knew the concentrated force of 3,000 bombers within a three mile stretch of the frontlines would pulverize every German unit within the vicinity and the overwhelmed and traumatized defenders could easily be overcome before they have a chance to recover and return to their positions.

For Operation Cobra, the second armored division’s combat command A and the 22nd infantry Division practiced close combat co-ordinate assaults and drilled thoroughly in preparation for the attack with the infantry force projected to ride on the rapidly moving tanks into battle to speed up the advance and secure the tanks in their flank and rear, while protecting them from grazing fire.

First army whose troops were to handle the attack began extensive preparations for the operation which was tentatively scheduled for the 18th of July but was rescheduled due to weather problems in the United Kingdom which fore stalled movement of aircraft and reduced visibility which was vital for accurate bombing runs. On July 24 the weather had cleared sufficiently for the attacks to begin but as the first wave of planes took off, the overcast returned resulting in the cancellation of the operation.

However a squadron of planes unaware of the cancellation orders proceeded to bomb and ended up dropping their bomb loads on American positions resulting in 25 American fatalities and over 130 soldiers injured including Lieutenant General Lesley Mc Nair Junior, the highest ranking American officer to be killed in the fighting in the European theatre of operation.


0n July 25th the weather finally cleared and over 3,000 American bombers and fighters of the Eight air force dropped a combination of fragmentation, napalm and high explosive bombs on the German positions devastating the Panzer Lehr Division while General Collins VII Corps subsequently led an advance into the gap thus created, meeting sporadic but determined resistance from the remnants of Panzer Lehr and the German 5th Parachute division to the West that had escaped the bombing relatively unscathed.

In spite of the intense resistance on the first day that held VII Corps to an advance of only two miles, the next day the attack was pressed and the Americans noticed the resistance was stymied not organized. That same day the US 1st infantry division and the 2nd Armored joined in the attack as planned with a view to widening the breach and seeking a deeper penetration of the breach in the German lines. The commitment of General Troy H Middleton’s VIII Corps after a slow start turned the tide as the Germans began to withdraw seeing that their flanks were collapsing, and the tempo of the American advance increased.


The American advance was helped by the fact that the bulk of the German armor had been deployed to stave off any advance on the British /Canadian front where the Germans felt a breakthrough, would be more dangerous to their position in Normandy and had consequently deployed the bulk of their armor and reserves. Whereas the British were confronting seven German armored divisions, the Americans faced just one and a half division, without any depth of defense or reserves.

First Army therefore resolutely pursued the break through with vigor against just over 177 German tanks standing in the way against over 2,500 tanks leading the American advance with most of them equipped with the Rhino tooth designed to cut through the hedgerows headlong.
 Brushing past pockets of determined German resistance led by 88mm gun emplacements, the advance continued relentlessly until the 28thth of July when the German defenses finally gave way under the combined pressure of VII and VIII Corps attacks. As the Americans approached the breakthrough point, German resistance mounted in the form of counter offensives by the 2nd SS Panzer division, 17th SS Panzer grenadiers and the 352nd division all seeking to escape the American entrapment.

 The desperate bid launched against the 2nd armored division failed and the disheartened Germans fled on foot abandoning their vehicles and equipments. In fact Panzer Lehr was completely put out of action as a coherent unit after the fighting as reported by its commander General Bayerlain ‘with its armor wiped out, personnel missing or captured, and all headquarters records missing’.

Meanwhile the newly appointed German supreme commander in the West Field Marshal Von Kluge rushed forward re- enforcements in the form of the elements of the 2nd and 116th panzer divisions that caught up with the XIX Corps led by Maj Gen Charles H Corlett which had just joined in the fighting on the left flank of VII Corps resulting in the fiercest fighting since operation Cobra started between 28 and 31st July. Other desperate attacks on the 2nd armored by elements of the German 2nd SS Panzer and 17th SS Panzer grenadier divisions were repelled by the Americans as their confidence grew in the knowledge of the fact that the initiative now lay with them.

On the 30th of July the US VIII Corps seized Avranches described as the gateway to Brittany and the next day 31st July, XIX Corps threw back the last of the German counter offensives finally freeing the way for US forces to advance into Brittany and beyond the Boca’ge country.

Picture courtesy of HERE and HERE

Saturday, 12 October 2013

THE US FIRST ARMY THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2 ; THE BATTLE OF THE HEDGE ROWS CHAPTER 4


As the Allied Armies continued to consolidate and expand their footage on the coast of Normandy, the 1st United States Army was charged with securing the Cotentin Peninsular and the port city of Cherbourg. That meant that the units and men of the First army had to advance eastwards towards the base of the Cotentin peninsular.

The first challenge the First army faced was to advance into and beyond the dense hedgerows that inundated the Normandy country side and was known as the Bocage to the French. The dense hedgerow made the Normandy terrain suitable and ideal for defensive warfare and this, the Germans greatly exploited to the detriment of the Allies.

 In fact the hedgerows and their unsuitability for tactical military maneuvers presented the Allies with such a formidable problem that it took two whole months to advance and break out of the bocage province of France. The Germans had so fortified this terrain and enjoyed such tactical advantages that the whole Allied offensive efforts to break out of Normandy bogged down, and mounting anxiety and despair began to grip the Allied military leadership at SHAEF (Supreme headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe) and doubts began to mount as to the effectiveness of General Montgomery’s plans for a break out into open country beyond the Bocage country.

With the British 21ST battle Army Group also held back in the hedge row fighting and struggling to take Caen, their D-Day assigned objective, the whole Allied offensive was being threatened with a stalemate, and the Allies desperately needed to fine tune their plans for an eventual breakthrough into open country beyond Caen for the British and into Brittany for the Americans. The Germans feared the effect of a British breakout more as the region beyond Caen led directly to Paris and the Seine River.

For this reason, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel concentrated most of his available Panzer divisions within the vicinity of the British positions around Caen. With the British tied down at Caen and the Americans bogged down in the hedgerows, the only viable option for the First Army was to fight its way out of the hedgerow country. With time and some measure of ingenuity the Allies found an effective way to flush the Germans out of the hedgerows.

This involved the principle of combined arms and consisted of close support and tactical co-ordination between infantry, armor and artillery, and involved clearing one hedgerow at a time. With German machine guns, mortars and anti tank guns deployed beyond the perfect cover of the thick hedges, the element of surprise naturally was absent and Allied casualties were heavy as breaching the well-camouflaged German positions was a big challenge.

 The Americans in particular were vulnerable in this fixed positional warfare as their tanks were highly vulnerable to the German hand-held anti-tank guns also known as panzerfaust each time they tried to go over the top of the hedges exposing their vulnerable underbelly to the projectiles of the German anti tank guns.

With each field surrounded by the hedgerows about the size of a football field, each assault had to concentrate on taking one plot at a time in separate costly assaults in terrain that highly favored the defense over the attack. With the fighting bogged down, the First Army had to improvise, and here the ingenuity of the average American soldier came to play.

  A soldier attached to the 2nd Armored Division’s 102nd Calvary reconnaissance squadron by name Sergeant Curtis G Collins decided to implement a suggestion he overheard one of the men making during a discussion on how to overcome the hedgerows. He suggested that a metallic tooth could be welded to the front of the Sherman tanks to cut through the hedges in an assault.

 He accordingly designed a heavy steel tooth from abandoned German metal beach obstacles and welded it to a Sherman tank and found out that the tank became quite effective in cutting through the thick hedges in an advance.

Tanks fitted with the metallic teeth became known as Rhinoceros tanks because of the steel cutters that they carried and the idea became so popular and effective that Army commander General Bradley directed that the steel tooth be fitted on as many tanks as possible.  By late July 1944 over 60% of first Army tanks were fitted with the Rhino teeth.

With improvements in the tactical maneuverability of the Allies, the First Army was able to now set its sight on a breakthrough from the hedgerows and make a bid for the capture of St Lo and eventually break out into Brittany and cut off the Germans remaining in the Cotentin Peninsular.

 The fresh impetus in advance took the First Army to within the outskirts of St Lo but to get there Carentan had to be captured and this task was subsequently accomplished by the 101st airborne in concert with combat command A of the First Army’s 2nd Division on the 12th of June 1944. Carentan stood at a strategic point on the important road junction between Omaha Beach and Utah Beach.

The capture of Carentan was thus assigned to the 101st airborne Division that had landed just close to the city at midnight of 5/6TH of June on D-Day. Carentan, a small town of four to five thousand stood at the base of the Cotentin Peninsular and dominated a road junction that linked Cherbourg to the Northwest, Bayeux and Caen to the South east and Countenance to the South west.

The Germans flooded much of the Douve River flood plain before the invasion making the resulting marshland impervious to armor and infantry advances. The task of capturing Carentan was thus left to the 101ST airborne and an armored force detached from the 7th armored Division whose advance elements had advanced from the beach and linked up with the 101st close to Carentan.

The only access to the town through the flooded marshlands was through bridges and cause ways that had been largely destroyed by the Germans in the face of the Allied advance. It took a courageous charge face-on against the German defenders, which included units of the elite German paratroop units known as the fallschirmjagers regiment of about two Battalions strength to reach Carentan

The US First Army’s VII Corps and the V Corps had assaulted Utah beach and Omaha Beach respectively. Both units now vigorously pushed forward to integrate their lodgment areas respectively after the visit of the Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D Eisenhower to Omaha Beach on the 7th of June.

The Germans strongly resisted this move and even committed Panzer forces to if possible split the American-held beaches and drive the Allies to the Sea. The US 101st airborne was thus directed to Capture Carentan and prevent the German breakthrough, because Carentan was the hinge on which both sectors were linked.
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Saturday, 5 October 2013

THE US FIRST ARMY THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2; THE BEACH LANDINGS CHAPTER 3


As a result on D-Day, 6th June 1944, three divisions of the US First Army were responsible for projecting American military power in the Allied invasion of France. While the landings on Utah met with relatively light opposition and made rapid progress, the landings on Omaha beach ran into a heavy curtain of well prepared and pre –positioned defensive fire that tied the attackers down on the beach for several hours during which, at some point the senior officers led by Lt General Omar N Bradley briefly considered abandoning the beach head altogether.

The landings in the words of General Bradley became a nightmare as the officers and men of the 1st and 29th infantry division of the First Army were pinned down by heavy fire from the experienced and battle hardened German 352nd division made up of both veterans of the Russian front and Italian Campaign with a mix of raw recruits and inexperienced conscripts. 
    



The bravery of the American soldiers that day under intense machine gun fire and mortar rounds in breaching the German beach obstacles and assaulting the German positions well entrenched in the cliffs above, through the open gaps created by demolition charges set by the combat engineers under fire would remain a defining moment in the annals of the United States Army in the 20th century.

Small groups of infantry men led by brave officers exploited the gaps created by the combat engineers and assaulted the German positions above the sea walls with support from pointblank naval gunfire from a group of US destroyers that risked running aground as they moved right up to the beaches to place direct fire on the fortified German positions on the high ground overlooking the beaches below.

The bravery and tenacity of the men of the 1st and 29th infantry division as well as the 116th regiment will go down in history as one of the sacred moments of American military achievements. With 29 out of the 31 D-D amphibious tanks lost to the waves as they disembarked, the beach obstacles, high sea wall and heavy enemy fire threatened to derail the whole operation.

Against overwhelming odds, stemming partially from inadequate planning, and faulty intelligence, the fighting on Omaha beach became a study in heroism, courage and perseverance. In fact the fighting on Omaha Beach became symbolic of the spirit and resilience of the Allied Servicemen as they undertook the arduous task of re- conquering Western Europe from the Nazi overlords that had held the continent hostage for over four years. Even the German defenders were amazed at the tenacity of the Allied soldiers who refused to give up even in the face of withering and debilitating fire.

The heroics of the 29th infantry division will continue to maintain a hallowed place in the annals of military history where courage, perseverance and tenacity are concerned. Against the overwhelming odds facing the soldiers on Omaha beach that day, nobody gave them a chance of pulling off a coup that day against the well entrenched German defenders and yet their victory was crucial and essential to the overall success of the Allied cause

In the face of heavy mortar and machine gun fire particularly the newly launched MG 42 machine gun, the fastest in the world at that time, the GI’s had every reason to cut loose and make a dash for the beach and the returning landing crafts on their way out of the combat zone, but the fact remained that they chose to endure the withering machine gun fire of the Germans.

 Even senior officers observing the fighting from the warships offshore deemed Omaha beach a lost cause by 08; 00hrs that morning and were actually actively considering withdrawing the soldiers pinned down behind the sea walls. In fact postwar interviews granted by some of the German soldiers involved in the fighting revealed their amazement as to why the American soldiers simply refused to give up even when some of the first assault waves suffered 80-90% casualties.

Even the famous combat photographer Robert Cappa, who landed on D-Day on Omaha beach at 6; 15 am with the first wave of assault troops on Easy Dog sector of the beach, headed back to the invasion ships anchored offshore at a point when the ordeal became unbearable.

Men saw their buddies cut down in a hail of withering fire. The men of the 29th infantry division were helpless, despondent and trapped, yet they would not give up. With radio contact lost as most of the radios were water logged and damaged, it was difficult to radio messages demanding a halt to further disembarkment.   This led to congestions on the beaches as the men sought cover on the few beach obstacles providing some form of shelter. In fact most of the radios were jettisoned by the signal officers as they leapt off the landing crafts into the water to escape the murderous fire from the beach defenses as soon as the ramps were opened.

With so many wounded and dying and many sheltering behind the seawalls and beach obstacles, it was now a race against time as to the next course of action. With death flying around in the form of bullets and mortar rounds, while the mines and beach obstacles made the 100 yards dash across the beach to the seawall a suicide mission, it became a terrifying spectacle as the stalemate endured for hours while men searched for a strategy to break the deadlock.

It was a terrifying and horrendous experience for the men particularly as most of them had no combat experience, but the soldiers knew that there was not going to be a looking back in this campaign dubbed by the Allied Supreme Commander as the Great Crusade.


 They knew they had no alternative but to seize and hold that beach that day to enable the follow-up supplies and re-enforcements to come through so that the great campaign to liberate Western Europe could go through. They knew that enormous time and resources had been poured into this operation by their nation and that the events of that day were crucial to the success of the whole Allied undertaking.

THE US FIRST ARMY THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2; THE PREPARATION FOR OPERATION OVERLORD CAP 2


The US First Army was the primary United States Army designated for the beach landings in France under the code name operation Overlord. Three divisions of the First Army were to land on Omaha and Utah beach supported by the US 82nd and 101st airborne divisions who were to land in the rear and protect the western most flanks of the designated beach heads on the Normandy coast between Sainte Honorine des pertes to Vierville Sur mere for the 1st infantry and the 29th infantry division on Omaha Beach, as well as Pointe du Hoc for the 5th Ranger battalion.

On Utah Beach VII Corps , 4th infantry division and the 359th RCT of the 90th infantry comprising about 23,250 men were to land around Poupperville and La Madeline, while the 101st airborne division was to land around Vierville and the 82nd airborne division was to land at Saint Mere Eglise to protect the right flank of the invasion beaches. Altogether First Army’s contingents numbered about 73,000 men including 15,600 men from the airborne divisions.

The planning for the beach assaults took six months and by April, exercises aimed at fine tuning the troops for the actual assault landings were already taking place all over England. One of them , code-named Operation Tiger became a major disaster when German E- boats attacked and sank two troops transports carrying the assault forces involved in the training exercise to the exercise beaches on the coast of South England.


Troops of the US 29th and 1st infantry division were to land on Omaha beach, while troops of the US 4TH infantry division, all of the First Army were to assault Utah Beach under the overall command of Lieutenant General Omar N Bradley.

Photo Source: Overlord

Thursday, 26 September 2013

HONORING THE HEROICS OF THE UNITED STATES FIRST ARMY. A LEGACY FOR ALL GENERATIONS. PREFACE CHAPTER ONE

 
The United States First Army as a fighting group was initially commissioned in France in 1918 at the height of WW1 as American infantry forces arrived in France in sufficient numbers under General John J Pershing to constitute an Army. The term First Army was thus coined to mark the first functional American Army that assembled in France on their way to the Western front in support of the Allies in WW1 in 1918. The US First Army was thus activated under General Hunter Liggett who took command of the activated force on the 10th of August as the first of the three United States field Armies that were established as part of the Allied Expeditionary Force .

The First Army was thus to prove a veritable training ground for many notable officers that were to emerge later during WW2, following the end of WW1 in November of 1918. The First Army served as part of an occupation force in Germany until its demobilization and inactivation in April 1919.

The First Army however continued to exist as part of the four American Armies that were created when Douglas MacArthur was Army Chief and had to re-organize the Army in compliance with the National Defense Act of 1916 which was amended in 1920. The First Army was thus located in the North east of the United States with its headquarters at Fort Jay’s Governor’s Island in New York. On 11th September 1933, it was thus re-activated under the command of General Dennis E Dolan.

The First Army was composed of three Corps, with the first Area Corps being quartered in Boston, the second Corp Area was situated at Fort Jay, Governor’s Island in New York and the third Corp was situated at Fort Howard (Maryland) near Baltimore Maryland.

First Army as it then was, was more of an administrative unit saddled with the responsibility of training the regular army reserve and National Guards units in the three Corps Area. In 1938 , First Army  under the command of General Hugh A Drum  was tasked with the responsibility of creating a true field Army as the wind of war began to blow all over Europe. A Staff recruitment program began and its troops were programmed to take part in large scale military exercises in Louisiana and North Carolina between 1939 and 1941.

As the United States entered the war in 1941, General Dolan was given the command of the newly established Eastern Defense Command which he held until he retired in 1943 as he approached retirement age. The command of the First Army thus passed over to General Grunnert who remained in control until the First Army Headquarters was moved to Bristol in England in January 1944 under the command of Lieutenant General Omar N Bradley. 

Photo source  See here

Sunday, 15 September 2013

THE UNITED STATES FIRST ARMY, THE FORGOTTEN HEROES OF WW2 - FOREWORD 2

The place and recognition given to the fighting units of the Allied Armies in World War 2 seemed to tie in many instances to the flamboyance and public relations proficiency of its commanding officers. Such seemed to be the undoing of the First Army whose two commanding officers, General Omar N Bradley and General Courtney Hicks Hodges were not particularly charismatic personalities and as such the pall of recognition that hovered over the commanders invariably affected the perception of the public concerning the men and thousands of heroic soldiers and officers who fought under their command.


I wonder how many people today particularly link the June 6th D-Day landings on Omaha Beach and Utah Beach with the US First Army or that the First Army bore the brunt of the fighting in the US sector in the battle of the Hedgerows, the capture of St Lo and the eventual breakthrough to Brittany following the launch of Operation Cobra, its central role in orchestrating the envelopment and destruction of the German Seventh and Fourth Armies in the Falaise pocket and the eventual pursuit across the Seine River.