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Czechoslovakia V-E Day - May 9th, 1945 |
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At a quater past four on the
morning of the 6th of December, the Third Battalion, led by I Company
and L Company scrambled down the steep banks near Oberlimberg, Germany
and quietly loaded into assault boats, and made its way across the Saar
River. The Second Battalion, crossing after daylight faced heavy mortar
and machine gun fire from enemy pillboxes commanding the river line.
Once across the battalions faced
the fortified cities of Pachten and Dilligen, bulwarks of the Siegfried
Line. (Editor's Note: My father was again wounded on another 13th -
December 13th, 1944.) The main thouroughfares took
on the names like "88 Street" and "Purple Heart Avenue." It became a war
against steel and concrete. Troops were raked by fire from pillboxes cleverly
concealed in harmless looking barns and shops. For sixteen days and nights
the battalions hit again and again into the enemy's fortifications. Continuously
hammered day after day, the enemy was systematically blown out of one
pillbox after another, as all three Battalions were employed to clear
the major portion of Dilligen. V-E Day found the Third Battalion sweeping the woods in Czechoslovakia. From D-Day to V-E Day the Battalion suffered almost 2,000 casualties, including over 400 dead. Awards received for the same period included 15 Distinguished Service Crosses, 116 Silver Stars, 223 Bronze Stars and 3 Croix de Guerres. |
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![]() SS Arm Band "Adolph Hitler" |
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![]() Purple Heart |
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![]() The Third Battalion was the first American unit to cross the Czechoslovakian border. |
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Overview
Map 
     France    
  Germany   
  Czechoslovakia  
    WWII ScrapBook 
  Contact     
Home Page
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