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Newsletter,
September 2007-2008
MEMBERSHIP DUES:
The annual dues for 2007-2008 can be sent to
Sheila Bousquet, 17 Collier Ave. Bristol CT 06010.
Our dues remain at five dollars, Your membership is greatly
appreciated.
IN MEMORIAM:
Our deepest sympathy is extended to the
family of Phil Kobylski who passed away this past year. Phil
always was a big supporter of the museum, and a number of
interesting military items which he loaned are on display. Phil
served on active duty with the Big Red One (First Infantry
Division) during the Korean War while the division was on
occupation duty in Germany. Following his active duty,
Phil put in more than twenty years with the Connecticut Army
National Guard.
CHRYSANTHEMUM FESTIVAL:
The museum will once again be having an antique
military aircraft slide show - part II. Chuck Bouffard, a
retired U.S. Air Force T/Sgt., will be showing his slides of
aircraft he was involved with during his career, especially in
the 1950s and 60s. Some of the aircraft to be depicted are
the F-84, F-86, B-57 and F4, all of the Vermont Air National
Guard, and C-119 "Flying Boxcars" of the Air Force
Reserve which were based at Bradley Field. The slide show
and open house will be at the Bristol Armory on Friday evening,
September 28, 2007, at 7:00pm.
ANNUAL MEETING:
The annual meeting of officers and members will
be held at the Armory on Thursday, October 25, 2006 at
7:00pm.
NEW MUSEUM ACQUISITIONS:
Mr. John Reddick of Burlington has forwarded to
the museum a phrase book which was issued to American soldiers
stationed in England during World War II. This book was
issued to the late Rocco F. Civizzio of Bristol who served as a
T/Sgt. in the Army. Mr. Civizzio was a brother of the late
Joanne (Civizzio) Reddick, John's wife, who recently passed
away. She wanted the phrase book to go to the museum in
memory of her brother. The phrase book states in large red
letters that it is "not to be produced in public." Our
sympathy to John and thank you.
FEATURED MILITARY ARTICLE:
The following story was donated to the museum by
the late Alfred Greenleaf. Al was a decorated World War II
veteran who served during the Italian Campaign as a T/Sgt. with
H Company, 87 th Infantry, 10th Mountain Division. The author is
unknown. The 10th Mountain Division is still in existence and is
presently defending our freedom battling the Taliban and other
terrorists in the mountains of Afghanistan. The wars may change,
but the miserable conditions of mountain warfare are, in many
ways, still the same.
THE VICTORY DRIVE
Author - Unknown Soldier of the 10th Mountain Division
Edited by JOHN DENEHY
Typical weather conditions during
the winter in northern Italy
It was cold enough to make you miserable, but not cold enough to
turn the slush underfoot to ice. You slipped and swore. It
was dark, but not dark enough. You were under Jerry observation
and you could not smoke or talk to lift your spirits. It was wet
and it was snowing and raining at the same time, but it was not
enough to stop the war. It was strange and grew stranger as you
approached the front lines. You were leaving the main highway
and were going into the lines for the first time: date February
3rd, 1945, in the Apennines of Italy.
Soldier thinks back to where it
all began for him
You remember now what had gone on before to prepare you and take
you to this place - Fort Lewis, Camp Hale, Kiska, Camp Swift,
Fort Patrick Henry. You remember boarding the U.S.S. West Point
and leaving the States for "destination unknown." You remember
crossing the Atlantic while being seasick and trying to eat and
keep down poor chow. You remember trying to sleep on smelly "D"
deck where two men occupied the same one-man space, and the
forbidden, but enjoyable, crap games and the Wacs on board ship
you connived to meet. These things and places go through your
mind, although your mind should be on Jerry and your next step.
You had disembarked at Naples where you were jammed into
freight cars which headed for another mysterious destination.
You passed by the battle-scarred ruins of Cassino - a prelude to
what you can expect to undergo. You saw historic Rome where you
drank forbidden wine. You arrived at Leghorn and saw the leaning
Tower of Pisa. From there you were loaded into trucks which
headed for another unknown place. Suddenly you heard that you
are going up to the front lines. Now you are sweating and
swearing as you slip and stumble while moving forward, adjusting
your equipment and peering ahead into the darkness.
Arrival on the front lines
You relieve company "M" of the 86th Regiment ... Your quarters
are some Italian farm houses, not only smelling of cow dung but
of human dung and the residue of filth accumulated during months
of warfare. You black out the buildings and try to rest, awaking
in the morning to the task of cleaning up the mess. There is
little to cheer you up - only confidence in yourself, your
comrades and your faith in the U.S.A.
Germans occupy the high ground
You are to occupy and rebuild gun positions to begin your
assault on the enemy by firing into his various lairs in the
Viaiciatico and Querciola (Coca-Cola) sector. Jerry is looking
right down on you from Mt. Belvedere. He haqs the advantage. He
shoots back using his 88s and everything else in his arsenal.
The papers back home report the exchange of fire "Only slight
patrol activity and artillery duels on the Italian front."
You are being baptized in fire and death, just "slightly."
All this activity transpired in the miserable snow, rain, and
bitter cold. On February 19th you jump off supporting the 2nd
Battalion's rifleman to drive, with other units, to Mt.
Belvedere, key to the Apennines and our advance ...
Battle for Mt. Belvedere
There are a few million land mines blocking your path and enemy
snipers concealed behind every rock. The weather turns good and
the soil is good for digging foxholes. It could be more
difficult and deadly. Jerry has done his best to make his
position impregnable. You do better than Jerry. You take with
your flesh your part of the mountain on February 21st. You loose
Corporal Hollingworth who is killed near Polia. You know all the
while when you assault this fortress that it will be the first
of many. The jagged Apennines peaks stretch endlessly up and
beyond Mt. Belvedere, and you know that you will have to hit
them all.
A Brazilian unit comes up on line to relieve us on February
25th. You can take a break and prepare for the next job. The
break, as all breaks are, is a happy one, but all too short.
Vidiciatico is a nice town. You do a great deal of sleeping and
drinking, take baths and see movies. It is a good week, ... the
calm before the storm.
You are going into position after 8 hours of heavy enemy
shelling and intense waiting in the fog and cold. On March 3rd,
we will be supporting the 3rd Battalion, afterwards supporting
the 2nd Battalion. You are moving up and over ridges and hills,
over Mt. Castello and down the ridge line of Mt. Vella de Vetta,
repositioning your mortars and machine guns minute by minute as
you advance. You continue your fire on through the night under
barrage of enemy artillery and mortar return fire. It was
another one of those "duels" the papers back home would write
about. The air is full of hot lead and death, and you are full
of fear and cold. Foxholes do not seem to be good protection
from the shelling which covers almost every foot of ground, and
a foxhole certainly does not protect you from the cold. You
tremble and sleep is impossible. You wish it was daylight.
Victory in battle and German
prisoners
The next day some of you are given the unglamorous task of
mule-leaders in order to bring supplies over the rugged hills
for the battalion... The company jumps off over two miles of
exposed terrain in support of the battalion's riflemen to
capture Hill 962. The ground is covered with dead and wounded
men, burning vehicles and the air is filled with dust. This is
the reality of war. These are the things you will remember. The
great happiness of victory is tempered with death and blood. On
a lighter note, you can chuckle now when you see the German
prisoner who is losing his pants while being forced to keep his
hands over his head by an American prisoner guard. The GI is
chewing out the German with a poor command of the German
language causing the prisoner to loose his superiority complex.
Victory is real. The prisoners you take in great numbers
are real. You have taken Hill 962 and the regimental objective
of Castel di Aiana and Mt. Della di Croce.
You take time to care for your wounded. You are tired. The
weight of the mortar and machine gun you have carried on your
back during the fighting has exhausted your body and your
nerves. There is no celebration. You want only to sleep. You can
not relax in the company of a beautiful signorina, or enjoy some
cognac or vino. All civilians are gone from the battle zone. You
desire and deserve more, but Tedeschi "tutti portato via",
so you sleep in your foxhole to the sound of crashing German
artillery.
The morning after the night's rest bring up the question, "What
today?" You rest as much as possible and you wonder. But
rest is not to be because our artillery rocks your spot on
earth. The shelling continues for three days and it seems like
you are on the front lines. However the 3rd Battalion of the
86th Regiment is on the front along with the 2nd Battalion which
went up as a relief. Their next move will be to go to
Montecatini for a rest and your question is, "When do we go to
relieve them?"
Back on the line
You relieve the 3rd Battalion on March 8th by passing through a
road crossing at Canovecchia. We call it "Shrapnel Junction"
because Jerry has the crossing zeroed in and is plastering it.
You live through the Junction, but Lt. Baker is hit and killed
by a Jerry mortar shell as he is moving up to a mortar
O.P. in front of Montese. You are eight days on the line where
we pound them and they pound us. The weather is sunny for a
change, and some of the guys, despite the risk, leave their
foxholes to take a sun bath. Jerry is above you in the Montese
where he can dominate us. You are hurting, and it is another
period of "routine shelling being reported on the Italian front"
which consists of Jerry's 88s, mortars. You have to live in
foxholes and eat "C" rations. This is going on night and
day. Sleep is sketchy and baths are only a dream.
Rest and relaxation in the town of Montecatini
It is the routine that you were bucking for - a rest in
Montecatini. It is a good deal filled with delights such as very
bella signorinas riding their bicycles, staying in hotels,
eating "B" rations, ultra-soft army cots, hot baths, cognac,
vino, champagne, vermouth and the smiles of the signorinas. Life
is wonderful and you are enjoying it thoroughly. There is a lot
more to this town than its world-famous sulfur baths. You study
the Italian language - words such as Quanto Coste? Dove casa?
Buono giorno, Buono sera, etc. You figured it is going to be a
long stay in Italy. You recall your missing comrades who were
lost in the battles in which you had participated, and you
wonder how you were able to endure and survive 37 days on the
line. There are too many bull sessions with your buddies when
you should be resting. You are more tired from the rest than you
would have been had you been training strenuously. Now you can
look back and actually see some humor which happened in combat
and which did not seem humorous at the time.
The final push
April 14th, 1945, opens with beautiful weather. The sun is
shinning and the skies are a clear blue. The Apennines and Mt.
Della Spe are literally sparkling in the morning light. In peace
time this would be a fine day. You are well prepared. A General
Order of the Day from Field Marshall Alexander of the British
Army conveys to us the momentous job ahead. We are to vanquish
the German forces in Italy with one sweep. The whole valley
around you is filled with military equipment and supplies. The
peaceful air you breathe is actually charged with the
electricity of the coming combat. You check your weapons and
ammo. Our tanks began to growl into position and our heavy
artillery jockeys forward. Mules and Alpine mule skinners
attached themselves to your platoons. For the previous six days
the Jerrys were hit with artillery fire, and our P-47 fighter
bombers pounded them with bombs and napalm. There had been
several delays to the big offensive, but you can smell that the
order to begin the big push is imminent.
Finally the order comes and we take off to annihilate completely
Nazi power in Italy. We storm the formidable mountains which are
fortified with the enemy's mine fields, artillery, machine gun
fire and snipers. To break German might you have to hurdle
natural obstacles and man-made ones as well. The 87th Infantry
spearheads the 5th Army's dash while leading the rest of the
10th Mountain Division. Your fire and fury breaks a link in the
Nazi's Apennine chain. The hills and villages began to fall to
our advance. The day is memorable because of "Hell's Corner," a
name we gave the area consisting of hills 903, 840, 847 and the
village of Torri Lussi, all of which are our first day's
objective. We certainly see hell there. When night comes, you
dug in. Sleep is impossible. People don't sleep when the earth
is rocking from artillery concussions and when you need to keep
one eye open. A comrade, Clarence Lynn, is killed by artillery
while descending Mt. Della Spe. We tend to our wounded, and
replacements join us to fill our vacant ranks. The moon-less
night is stabbed everywhere and every minute by gun flashes,
tracers and flares. Nobody worries about chow this night.
Just being alive is a miracle in itself, a kind of spiritual
food.
On the next day, April 15th, you reposition mortars and machine
guns time after time. You are constantly on the move running,
sweating, climbing, then stumbling and falling down. You fight
up and down seven more mountains, Mt. Pigna, Mt. Sette Croci,
Hill 834, Hill 766, Hill 807, Hill 802 and Mt. Le Coste. You are
cheered up when it is reported that the whole 5th army is in
motion. You take more prisoners and then dig in for the night.
On the 16th, you received direct support from tanks and tank
destroyers. You would like to cheer them on but you are much too
busy. Battalion riflemen are riding on top of the tanks as they
churn up the dust. The Germans are laying down a smoke screen to
hide their retreat. You help knock off San Trinita, Mt Croce, C.
Bacucchi, Hill 753 and the battle-flattened town of Tolei. The
Po River is ten air miles away. You sleep very little that
night.
The next morning brings the attack on Mt. Serra and the village
of S. Prospero. Our left flank is exposed and Nazi artillery
from both our front and from the left flank pour it on us. Fred
Anetsberger and Lester Allison are killed on the approach to Mt.
Serra. With the capture of Mt. Serra a good roadway became
available to our advance. Fatigue hangs like a cloud. You remain
in position over the 18th and still take artillery fire from the
exposed left flank which kills Corporal "Tex" Dalton while
he is manning his mortar. Enemy aircraft strafe our position
this night. Luckily, the Luftwaffe inflicts no casualties or
damage. The air attack only disturbed our relative peace. We are
loaded into trucks and head for Mariano and renew the attack on
Lavino and the Samoggia River in the Monte San Pietro sector.
The push on the 20th takes you to the promised land, the Po
River Valley. Now the geography will no longer be against you.
We can really put together a big drive.
The end of the campaign seems to be in sight. If Jerry couldn't
stop you in the mountains, how can he stop you in the valleys?
Jerry throws everything he has at us, but the towns of Tomba and
San Bucca fall to our advance. The Po Valley is blanketed with
haze, but you can see the green, fertile farmland. It is going
to be strange fighting on flat land, but strange in a nice way.
The region looks like a giant garden, though not a peaceful one
because there are tanks battles going on. You ride in trucks and
civilians welcome you everywhere with flowers, food and wine.
The road is littered with Jerry equipment and there are long
lines of German prisoners, some are unescorted. The date is
April 22nd. When we reach the Po River itself we meet renewed
Jerry resistance. Our high spirits sink when we are hit by Jerry
artillery, bazooka rockets and planes. Even though the banks of
the Po is bristling with enemy opposition, you knew that the
river had to be crossed and there are no bridges left standing.
On April 23rd, we have to cross the Po in assault boats which
are jammed to the gunwales. Prior to embarking we are under a
hail of air-bursting shrapnel which kills Ed Ringlein. You pray
as the boats inched across the river, hoping not to be killed or
wounded. Many are getting wounded.
A bridgehead is established at Camatta in spite of the enemy's
opposition. You are up against a new Nazi tactic, snipers
dressed in civilian clothes. The bridgehead is held until the
engineers erect a bridge and our tanks come across as the
Division's advance continues. We depart in a cloud of dust on
captured German vehicles, which come in handy. German soldiers
surrender as they are met. There is a halt for two nights at
Bagnola San Vito to clean up the rear, but generally the road to
Verona from the Po is a swirl of duct and rapid advancement.
Outside Verona Jerry is now setting up road blocks with
artillery and tank fire, but these are mere annoyances and we
clear them away. You head for Lake Garda's eastern shore. Hills
and mountains are ahead of you. Now the mountains are the mighty
Alps which are greater than the Apennines and tower out of
sight. Again Jerry digs in and more road blocks and snipers have
to be cleaned out. On April 28th, you took an old wagon trail up
to Mad Della Neve after dark. You pass over a treacherous ridge
to the highway below in an effort to trap Germans who are re
treating to Austria. The Jerries are disorganized and beaten.
They offer only token resistance and oppose you in small,
halfhearted groups.
You proceed to Toree Del Beaco on Lake Garda where you await
ordersto advance towards the Brenner Pass. You will be against
an Alpine fortress, the redoubt of Hitler, a seemingly
unconquerable task. You sweat and wait. On May 2nd, 1945, your
war in Italy ends. The news hits like a thunderclap, a pleasant
one which seems to be too good to be true. It takes some time
for you to digest the news and believe it. But it is official.
Gradually you relax and sleep with out nightmares. You sleep
without artillery and mortar fire. You sleep like a baby. You
sleep in peace.
RESPECTFULLY
DEDICATED TO THOSE WHO MADE THE
SUPREME SACRIFICE
FRANK P. BAKER
ANDREW L. DALTON, JR.
JOHN HOLLINGSWORTH
LESTER L. ALLISON
FRED J. ANETSBURGER
CLARENCE W. LINN, JR.
EDWARD J. RINGLEIN
071015
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Newsletter,
September 2006-2007
MEMBERSHIP DUES:
The annual dues for 2007 can be sent to Sheila
Bousquet, 17 Collier Ave. Bristol CT 06010.
Our dues remain at five dollars, Your membership is greatly
appreciated.
IN MEMORIAM:
This year, we have been greatly saddened by
the passing of two members, Alfred Greenleaf and Harry Snyder.
Both men were veterans of World War II. Al served in combat as a
ski trooper with the famous 10th Mountain Division. He was
awarded the Bronze Star for bravery during the Italian Campaign.
Harry was a long-term member who worked tirelessly with his wife
at his side during the years we conducted our fund-raiser gun
and militaria shows. Harry served in the Army Air Force during
World War II as a flight engineer/tail gunner on a B-25 bomber
in the Pacific Theater. Harry was seriously wounded when his
plane was shot down, and he spent three years in army hospitals
recovering from his wounds. Our sincerest sympathy to the
Greenleaf and Snyder families.
MUM FESTIVAL EVENT:
There will be a Military Aviation Slide Show at
the Bristol Armory on Friday evening, September 22, 2006 at
7:00pm. Color slides of famous military aircraft of World War
II, the Korean War and some of the Vietnam era, will be shown.
We are planning to have a number of former pilots,
aircrew/ground crew veterans in attendance who may wish to make
comments and answer questions about specific airplanes shown in
the slides. Following the slide show, the museum will be open to
visitors.
ANNUAL MEETING:
The annual meeting of directors and members will
be held at the armory on Thursday, October 12, 2006 at
7:00pm. Election of officers will take place.
NEW ACQUISITIONS:
S/Sgt. Christopher Sharry and SFG Greg Lebeau
have donated a variety of captured war souvenirs which they
obtained while serving with Bristol's Company C in Bagdad.
S/Sgt. Sharry also donated a photo of Specialist 4 Robert Hoyt
of Company C who was killed while on duty in Iraq. Some of these
items are now on display at the Bristol Historical Society where
we have our summer traveling display. Mr. & Mrs. Leonard
Kowalski have donated the army uniform and locker box of S/Sgt.
Charles Sakowski who served with the 43rd Division during WW II.
Gary Wyrebeck, a Vietnam War marine veteran, donated a copy of
the Bristol Press Extra which came out when Japan surrendered in
1945. Emily and Norman Taillon donated US Navy souvenirs which
were accumulated by Maurice Taillon during World War II. Rocky
Cipriano, a navy veteran, has donated a small piece of the
flight deck of the USS Valley Forge. Rocky was a plank owner of
the ship (original member of the crew), and the piece was sent
to him when the ship was scrapped in 1971.
FEATURED MILITARY ARTICLE:
Clarence Hultman of Bristol shares with us his
experiences as a World War II B-17 bomber pilot. Clarence flew a
B-17 across the Atlantic Ocean via the northern route to the 8th
Air Force which was located in England. U.S. aircrafts
made the dangerous journey many times during World War II.
Fortunately, losses were very minimal despite the ever-changing
dangerous weather conditions and, by today's standards,
primitive navigational equipment available to air crews.
ACROSS THE ATLANTIC OCEAN
IN A B-17 BOMBER
By CLARENCE "Clancy" HULTMAN,
Second Lieutenant,
600th Sqd., 398th Bomb
Group
As told to JOHN DENEHY
In late March, 1945,
my combat-ready crew and I picked up a brand new B-17G bomber at
Hunter Army Air Field in Savannah, Georgia. From Georgia we were
to proceed to England where we would join up with the Eight Air
Force. Before departure, we did a number of night training
flights to sharpen up our celestial navigation and other
navigation skills which would be needed by both myself and the
navigator. Being the pilot of the plane, I would do most of the
flying. I often kid about my copilot. I said he was along for
the ride, and his main duty was to operate the landing gear and
the flaps. All kidding aside, I needed him often to relieve me
while we were making long flights. We were about to make the
longest flight of our lives. I was twenty-two and he was twenty.
There were seven other crew members besides myself.
Our first destination
was the airfield located at Fort Dix, New Jersey (now called
McGuire Air Force Base) where we refueled. I can't remember if
we stayed over night. Our next destination was Grenier Army Air
Base located in Manchester, New Hampshire. Our route would take
us right over Hartford, Connecticut which is only seventeen
miles from my hometown - an excellent opportunity to divert a
bit from my flight plan. Before leaving Fort Dix, I called my
sister and gave her the approximate time I would be over my
hometown to say goodbye. We were about two thousand feet high at
the most when I flew over Bristol. I easily knew where I was
because I could read "Bristol" which was written in big letters
on the roof of Sessions Foundry. Coming in from the west, I
banked left and went down South Street buzzing Dunbar's where I
had worked before leaving for the service. I banked left again
and flew over Page Park and up to Vanderbuilt Road, Jennings
School, and Birge Pound. I finally flew over my home on Concord
Street while rocking the wings at my family who were all out on
the front lawn waving at the plane. Among the family
members were my parents, my sister, my fiancée and even my dog.
Interviewer's note
- Clancy Hultman wasn't the first
military airman to buzz Bristol during World War II.
Warren "Gus" Beach did it a number of times in a P-47
Thunderbolt, and Phil Rokota, a bombardier in a B-17, did it on
his way to Europe. Phil persuaded his pilot to let him have a
last look at his home town. He dropped a note to his
family. Eventually both airmen were shot down over Europe
and would spend many months as prisoners of war.
From Bristol
we headed north to Grenier Army Air
Base near Manchester, New Hampshire. We stayed there for a
couple of nights and then departed for Goose Bay, Labrador, a
distance of 569 miles. It was late March, but the winter was
still well entrenched at Goose Bay. It was cold and there was
snow everywhere.
Interviewer's note
- The hazards of flying in this
desolated area can perhaps be best illustrated by the tragedy
which befell a B-26 crew from the 319th Bomb Group in December
1942. The B-26 got lost in bad weather on a flight from
Greenland to Goose Bay when the radio direction finder went dead
and the navigator made an error in the heading he gave the
pilot. The plane ran out of gas, and the pilot crash-landed on
the coast north of Cape Skaglet. The whole crew survived the
crash without a scratch. They managed to survive for almost two
months on the plane's skimpy emergency rations before they
eventually starved to death. They did not know that they were
only fifteen miles from an Eskimo village. Several members of
the crew attempted to find help by using the plane's life raft,
but they were never heard from again. No attempt was made by the
rest of the crew to walk out because of the snow and barren
landscape. They hoped and prayed that a search plane would find
them and they thought that they would have a better chance of
being spotted if they stayed near the plane.
After we arrived
at Goose Bay, the base commander requested that one of our crew
members join him for dinner. Cpl John Swords, one of our gunners
and occasionally a bomb togglier (bombardier) was the lucky guy.
John's father and the base commander were old buddies back in
civilian life. Being that we had time on our hands, we went ice
fishing. What a job it was to try to chop a hole in that ice.
The ice must have been about four feet thick. I had chopped a
hole which was about three or four feet wide at the top and only
about six inches wide at the water level. Used a hand line and
caught a beautifully colored salmon. All that work for nothing
because the fish was only about six inches in length, so I threw
it back in. We finally got clearance and departed for our next
stop Bluie West 1 which was a steel-planked runway located at
the end of a long fiord on the southeast coast of Greenland.
This would be a distance of about seven hundred plus miles. We
were about two hours away from our destination when the radio
operator received a message instructing us to return to Goose
Bay because the base in Greenland was obscured by bad weather.
However a B-17 which had taken off ahead of us landed at Bluie
West 1 in perfectly clear weather. We wondered if we had
been misled by English-speaking Germans who had access to our
radio traffic. I made a 180 degree turn and headed back to Goose
Bay as the weather quickly began to deteriorate. What a long day
that was. We made our landing approach into Goose Bay in the
middle of a heavy snow storm. Finally we could see two
black objects on the ground surrounded by snow. They were jeeps
which were parked there so we could see the beginning of the
runway. Thank you Goose Bay for your help. In another day or two
we departed again for Bluie West 1. Making a landing at
Bluie West 1 necessitated following a radio beam to a fiord
which would lead us to the runway. We were about eight hundred
feet high, and there were steep mountains on both sides of the
fiord. I had to really concentrate because there were two fiords
near each other and you could easily get them mixed up,
especially in poor visibility. There were also landmarks, one of
which was an old, half-sunken ship, another clue which helped us
to know that we were following the right fiord to the runway. We
had previously received detailed instructions at Goose Bay to
help us navigate into Bluie West 1. The instruction included a
very good training film which also helped to make my approach
little easier. We landed on a steel runway which ran up hill. Up
hill when you land and down hill when you take off. There was a
glacier a few miles off the end of the runway and mountains in
every direction you looked. We followed a jeep over to our
parking place.
From Bluie West 1
we flew to Reykjavik Iceland, a
distance of about seven hundred and seventy-six miles. After a
brief layover we departed on the last leg of our journey to
Valley, Wales which was a long flight of about 850 miles. From
Whales we flew to a large airplane storage depot in England
where newly arrived planes from the U.S. would be assigned to
the various groups located throughout East Anglia. I was
directed to taxi the bomber right up close to another B-17.
There wasn't more than a foot or two away from me and the other
plane. There were hundreds of planes packed on the airfield,
mostly B-17s and B-24s. That was the last I saw of the new plane
I brought over. Ultimately, we ended up as a replacement crew
assigned to the 600th Squadron, 398th Bomb Group, First Air
Division. Our base was located at Nuthampstead, England.
I flew five combat missions
before the war in Europe ended. Two of them were what we called
"milk runs", like flak and no enemy fighter interceptors. The
other three, to say the least, were frightening. My first
mission was on April 10, 1945. Our target was a SS barracks in
Oranienberg, Germany. I was flying in the lead squadron and my
position was on the extreme right of the first "V"
element. We were on our bomb run when all of a sudden a ME-262
jet fighter came flashing down from above. First jet I ever saw.
Man that plane was fast. He was firing 20mm shells into Lt.
McAfee's B-17 which was in the second element on my extreme
left. I only caught a glimpse of the action out of the corner of
my eye, but I could tell that the bomber was badly hit and was
on fire. Lt McAfee's bomber went into a dive, leveled off for a
brief moment and then blew up. Only four crewman managed to bail
out. The copilot, Lt Don Jones, like me, was on his first
mission. He and four others were killed. I believe that our
escorting P-51s later shot down the jet.
On April 13, 1945,
Friday the 13th, I flew my second mission. This time the target
was an ammo dump at Bad Klenen, Germany. We were told that there
would be no flak of enemy fighters - a milk run. The lead
squadron was from the 601st Bomb Squadron. We in the 600th
Squadron would be the low squadron. I was flying in the second
element, 1st "V", 2ndbomber on the left. Our target was
changed while in flight to a railroad marshaling yard in
Neumunster, near Hamburg. We dropped our bombs, but Lt. Palant's
bombs were stuck and did not drop. All of a sudden they all went
out. The bombs were "RDX" bombs which were unstable and
dangerous and were not supposed to be salvoed. Shortly after the
bombs fell away, they blew up. There was a tremendous
orange-colored blast which set off a colossal concussion wave
and sent shrapnel flying into almost every B-17 in the 601st
Squadron. Crewmen were wounded, control cables were severed and
fires were started. All of us were in shock. We could hardly
believe our eyes. The force of the explosion threw on B-17 over
on its back, cracked my copilot's windshield and rocked our
plane. Badly damaged B-17s to the front of us were falling out
of formation, a number of them on fire. I believe that we lost
four or five bombers. Several crash landed and burned up. Other
crews were parachuting out, but some never got out and perished.
The war was in its final weeks, but I was starting to feel that,
after my first two missions, I might not survive my tour with
the Eight Air Force.
My fifth and final combat mission
was the last mission flown by the 398th Bomb Group and the 8th
Air Force in World War II. Our target was the Skoda Armament
works in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia. The Russians were advancing
into the area and we apparently did not want them to get such an
industrial prize. The mission was an all-out effort which
included our group as well as two others, the 91st and 381st.
This was the only mission of the war where a warning was issued
by allied radio as the bombers were in the air winging their way
towards the target. This was done to warn the Czech workers in
the factories. Many did leave their work and the loss of
civilian lives was minimized. However that warning did give the
German antiaircraft gunners plenty of time to get ready for us.
We had been ordered to bomb visually, but the target was
partially obscured by low clouds and we couldn't drop. The flak
wasn't bad, but then we were ordered to turn back to the IP and
make another bombing run. This time the flak was murderous. Our
group last two B-17s. There were only three survivors from one
of the bombers. Seven managed to bail out, but four of the crew
were later executed by the German soldiers who had captured
them. One of the gunners never got out and was killed in the
crash. The other B-17 had one killed and the others were taken
prisoner. There was a total of four bombers lost by the other
groups. Four of our aircrafts received major flak damage and
nineteen received minor damage, which included mine. One thing I
learned about flak was that when it was black in color it was
usually far enough away and wouldn't hurt you. But when it was
orange in color, you better look out. After we made our "360",
the ball turret gunner kept telling me that orange colored flak
was following me close behind. They sure had our range and
altitude. There were a small number of flak holes in the plane
which we noticed after we landed eleven hours later. The war
would be over in a little more than a week. My final "mission"
was what we called "trolley rides", a sight-seeing flight
over a number of devastated German cities so that the ground
crews could see the results of their hard work. By the middle of
May, I was piloting a B-17 on my way back across the Atlantic.
My last stop was Bradley Field right here in good old
Connecticut. What a wonderful sight. What a wonderful feeling.
Interviewer's note
- Bradley Field was the first stop for hundreds of B-24 and B-17
bombers being flown back from England after V-E Day. Clancy"s
group flew all their B-17s out of England within a two week
period. As a ten-year-old boy, I can clearly remember seeing
B-17s and B-24s flying right over my home at all hours of the
day heading west. Every day was am air show. Within a month they
stopped coming. Most of the bombers were flown to Kingman,
Arizona, where there was a huge storage depot in the desert.
Within a year or two, almost all the war birds were melted down
to become aluminum ingots, pots and pans etc.
Interviewer's note
- Clancy went home to Bristol, Connecticut on a well-deserved 30
day leave. After his leave, he reported back to the 398th which
was then based in Tampa, Florida. He later was assigned to Boca
Raton, Florida where there was on B-29. Those with the most
hours in B-17s got the first shot at getting checked out and
qualified to fly the Super fortress. The group was being prepared
to be sent to the Pacific. Clancy continued to pile up
additional hours in the B-17 to qualify for the B-29, but the
atomic bomb made the B-29 transition no longer necessary. The
war ended, and Clancy Hultman came home to stay as a married man
with a family. He then went on to a long career with the
Wallace Barnes Company.
070820
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Newsletter, September 2000-2001
Dues:
Annual membership dues of five dollars can be
mailed to museum secretary Jacques Comeau. Your financial
support of the museum is always deeply appreciated.
Annual Meeting:
The annual membership meeting of the museum will
be held on Wednesday evening, October 18, 2000 at the Bristol
Armory. Any member is welcome to attend.
In Memoriam: Our museum membership
has been greatly sadden by the passing of Russ Herold and Tom
Gage. Both Russ and Tom were World War II veterans of the
Pacific Theater. Tom served as a defender of the Bataan and
survived the infamous Bataan Death March and forty-one months as
a prisoner of the Japanese. For many years, Tom was the author
of a popular newsletter entitled "Philippine Notebook". Russ
Herold served with the 20th Air Force, 500th Bomb Group, as a
B-29 gunner and flight engineer. Russ's experience was the
subject of one of our past museum newsletters. Several years ago
the Confederate Air Force B-29 "FiFi" paid a visit
to East Hartford. "FiFi" is the only B-29 in the world
that still flies. I had the pleasure of bringing Russ over to
see the plane. This was the first time he had seen a B-29
since World War II. It turned out that Russ was the only visitor
in attendance who actually had flown in a B-29 during World War
II. A local T.V. station channel featured Russ on that evening's
broadcast. Our deepest sympathy to Marge Herold and her
family and to Mrs. Gage and her family. These two gentlemen were
truly members of the "Greatest Generation".
Museum Acquisitions:
Member Earl Dube has donated a large, framed
painting of the Battle if Chipyoung-Ni which took place in Korea
in 1951. Earl's unit participated with great distinction in this
battle. Mrs. Tish Dietz has donated a World War II Army uniform
which was worn by her late father, Edward J. Quinn, and also a
77th Division mug which was owned by her uncle, Joseph Seger.
Joseph Biron has donated a beautiful model of the destroyer
U.S.S. Mulany. Joe served on the Mulany as the executive officer
during the Korean War.
MUM Festival: On
Friday, September 22, 2000 at 7:00pm, a panel of Korean War
Veterans will speak about their combat experiences in the
armory's dining hall. This program will be open to the public
and all members and their friends are encouraged to attend.
Featured Military Article:
Museum member Earl Dube shares with us his
recollection of the Korean War. Earl was an artilleryman with
the famous Second Infantry Division. The Second Division was one
of the first American units to participate in the Korean War.
WITH THE
ARTILLERY IN KOREA
By EARL DUBE
Corporal, Headquarters Battery, 37th Field
Artillery, Second infantry Division, United States Army
As told to JOHN DENEHY
I enlisted in the
Army in the autumn of 1949 shortly after graduating from high
school. The job market was pretty tight, and I was ready for a
little travel and adventure. I took my basic training at Fort
Devens as well as some infantry training. In February of 1950, I
reported to the 2nd Infantry Division at Fort Lewis, Washington.
The Division was being brought up to strength, and I was one of
thousands of new recruits from all over the country who were
arriving on daily troop trains. Hundreds of us were assembled in
a field and our names and assignments were called out : the
assignment was "infantry". "Infantry, infantry,"
was all I was hearing. My name came up and then the word
"artillery !" Why? I will never know. The next day
another train pulled in and on it was my friend Walt Depatra
from Bristol CT. Walt was also assign to artillery.
Walt went to a firing battery and I went to headquarters
battery. Again, I knew absolutely nothing about being an
artilleryman. I really didn't know what to do, but they put me
into a radar section. You know what? I got to be pretty good
with the radar and I learned to distinguish little things like
the difference between a tank and a truck.
On June 25, 1950,
the Korean War broke out and things started to
happen. I got orders to the Far East. No one else in the battery
got any orders. Just me! I was given a bunch of shots and
a thirty-day leave. I was one unhappy guy because I was leaving
my unit, my friends, and heading off to only God knows where as
a replacement. Just as I was getting ready to go home, all
leaves were cancelled. The entire 2nd Division had been alerted
and was shipping out to Korea. Boy, I was sure happy that I was
going to stay with my Division and buddies. Within three days we
were loaded onto some ships and then sailed west across the
Pacific. It took sixteen days to get to Korea, and I was sick as
a dog almost every day. We were originally supposed to stop off
in Japan for further training and combat preparation, but the
situation in Korea was very bleak and reinforcements were
desperately needed. UN forces had their backs to the sea and
were dug in around the Pusan Perimeter. The thought of going
into war didn't bother most of us because we were young and
naive. We felt that we would have no problem kicking their
butts.
On August 4, 1950,
we arrived at Pusan. What a shock it was when we disembarked. I
had never seen such poverty and the smell was absolutely
overwhelming. It is hard to describe, a combination of oil fumes
in with garbage and human excrement. After we formed up, we got
into trucks and headed up to the front. I carried a M-1 carbine.
All of us were issued a lot of live ammunition for our weapons
and we were sent out to provide perimeter defense. Our battery
was going to augment a section of the 24th Division's line. They
had been the very first US force sent in to Korea about a month
before us and the Division had been badly mauled. My first night
was a scary experience. Three of us were in a foxhole. We
divided up the night so that one guy would stay awake for two
hours while the other two slept. Sometime in the middle of the
night, one of the other guys heard something moving around and
opened up with his M-1. We all were now wide awake and shook up.
It seemed to take forever until it was dawn and light enough to
see what had happened. Well, guess what? The guy had
riddled a goat. The US Army was going to have to pay some farmer
forty dollars for the damage.
It was not long before
I saw my first death. Five of us were formed into
a patrol, and were ordered to go up to the top of a nearby
mountain and burn down a large farm building. Intelligence
believed that the North Koreans were using the building as an
observation post. We had a lieutenant and a radio man with us.
On our way out we came upon a lone MP at a road junction who
directed us to take a different trail because we were heading
towards an infantry fire fight. We could hear the gunfire off in
the distance which faded away as we climbed up the mountain. We
were quite apprehensive of what might be awaiting us as we
climbed up to the farm. We would have been easy targets.
Thankfully no bad guys were there.
Let me tell you, the
place was beautiful. It must have belonged to a very influential
family. The building was a perfect model of a traditional Korean
architecture with a tile roof which curved up. We walked all
around and checked everything out. Intelligence was right. From
this vantage point you could see the entire battalion and the
location of all our field pieces. The house was loaded with
oriental antiques, artifacts, etc., and we were going to burn it
down! I told the lieutenant that we should salvage some of the
stuff as souvenirs, but he was afraid he would get in trouble.
We were just starting to pour gasoline around when we got the
word by radio to get back down to the battalion and not destroy
the building. We came down from the mountain and arrived at the
place where the MP had been stationed. Something was not right.
He was sitting in a hunched over position on the ground. When we
got to him, we could see that he was dead. Someone had run a
bayonet into his back. Since day one we had been plagued by
North Korean infiltrators who outfitted themselves in white
peasant clothing and passed themselves off as South Korean
peasants or refugees. They were everywhere and caused us a lot
of grief. We looked around in the nearby rice patties but we
could not find anyone. We wanted to get even. When a stretcher
was brought up and the MP was placed on it, rigor mortis had set
in and they could not get his knees down. I'll never forget that
sight. Welcome to the Korean War!
During the months of August and September
we must have moved around the Naktong River Perimeter to a
hundred different firing positions because our defenses were
thinly spread out. However, we were getting plenty of
experience, and according to feedback from prisoners we were
taking, we were getting quite good. They could not believe the
quantity of artillery fire we were pouring down upon them. All
this success despite the fact that we were limited to
twenty-five shells per gun per day. Let me tell you that having
enough artillery ammunition was always a problem during the
early phase of the war. What helped to make the difference was
the weather. The summer turned out to be quite wet which bogged
down the enemy in the mud and we would go a few days without a
firing mission. We still got twenty-five shells a day whether we
used them or not so they added up.
A lot of our fire
missions were directed by L-5 light planes which were attached
to our outfit. Because of the numerous rugged mountains, radio
communications with our ground forward observers was often a big
problem. As long as it was daylight , or if the weather was
good, the planes were the way to go, but we found it was
necessary to run phone lines to our ground forward observers.
There is a misconception
that being in the artillery is a safer job than
being in the infantry. Not if you are a forward observer or
attached to the fire direction center. FOs are out in front with
the infantry, and fire direction centers are right behind the
infantry and about a mile in front of the guns. We got shot at
plenty of times. I well remember in those early days of the war
when the 15th Field Artillery took a direct hit on their fire
direction center. They were totally wiped out. Right after this
happened, a major decided to set up a double shift at our fire
control center so that if a similar disaster were to happen to
us he would have ready replacements. Because of the mountains,
our radar was useless and those of us in the radar section were
considered to be excess baggage. We were reassigned to fire
direction centers and promoted to corporal. I could not believe
they gave me this job.
I was sent to
Charlie Battery and I had six guns which could not fire until I
gave the order. I had a lot of responsibility, but I also had a
lot of authority, more than I had ever had before in my young
life. I was the one that the FOs talked to. My job was to handle
all the computing, deflections, slide rule adjustments, and
chart plotting and I got along well with the gun crews. There
was a time when the colonel came in to direct artillery fire at
his command. I saw him coming and worked out the adjustments
with the guns beforehand. He could not believe how quickly the
guns were ready. He told me to tell the range officer that he
was very pleased with their readiness. I suggested that the
colonel tell them himself because it would mean a lot to them.
He did and after that I always had the fastest guns in the
battalion.
One day, a North
Korean mortar zeroed in on our fire direction center and started
to drop shells almost on top of us. One of the shells went off
only yards away from our tent and seriously wounded a bunch of
our guys. They were sprawled out on the ground, screaming in
pain and covered with blood. GIs were running every which way to
take cover and my first instinct was to do the same. Somehow I
hung in there and immediately coordinated a return barrage with
the FO, and we knocked the mortar out in a few minutes. I am not
a hero. Believe me, I never was so scared in my life. I was
later awarded the Army Commendation Medal for knocking out the
mortar. The major in charge was awarded the silver Star. Do you
know where he was when all this was going on? Hiding under the
table!
The guns I was
working with were 105mm Howitzers which had an accurate range of
about eleven miles. Most of the time we worked with a range of
only a mile or two because of the steep mountains. The
traditional sights we trained on back in the States were
useless. One of our West Point officers improvised a high-angle
technique similar to that of a mortar by which we could lob
shells over a mountain and onto the reverse slope with great
accuracy. When I returned to the States after my tour in Korea,
I was assigned to West Point to teach the same tactics to the
cadets.
Things happened fast
after the Marines landed at Inchon on September 16, 1950. Almost
simultaneously, we in the Eighth Army began a big offensive to
break out of the Pusan Perimeter. It was slow at first and many
units participated in furious and deadly battles. But
MacArthur's end run had worked its magic, and North Korean
opposition began to collapse. Within a few weeks we passed
through Seoul and crossed over the 38th parallel and into the
North Korean capital of Pyongyang. We bivouacked in Pyongyang,
and for me there were other duties now that the war had taken a
brief lull. By the way, there was a railroad junction near our
location in Pyongyang with a lot of rail equipment standing
around. The wheels on one of the big steam locomotives had this
inscription: " Session's Foundry, Bristol CT ". I will
tell you, I was thrilled and proud of my home town. I called all
my buddies over to show them my discovery.
I became a truck driver
for the Red Ball Express and drove a
two-and-one-half ton truck every day between Pyongyang and Seoul
carrying everything you can imagine to keep the 2nd Division
provisioned. I was one of about five hundred drivers who drove
one hundred and seventy-five miles each way everyday for two
weeks. On one of my trips I did manage to take in part of the Al
Jolson Show in Seoul. My last few trips were used to carry
nothing but winter-type sleeping bags because the October nights
were beginning to get quite cold. I helped the supply sergeant
to load up my truck so he gave me an extra one. Boy, did it come
handy later on in November and December when the temperatures at
night would go down to twenty below zero.
At the onset of
November, I returned to the artillery and the Division moved
northward in what we thought would be the final phase of the
Korean War. The North Korean Army was a shattered remnant of
what it had been and there were rumors that we would be home for
Christmas. We advanced to an important North Korean
communication center by the name of Kunuri which was near the
Chongchong River. I do remember that when we bivouacked near
that river a lot of guys came down with severe diarrhea and
sickness. Turns out that they got lazy and were washing their
mess kits in the river and leaving them on the ground. Miniature
mice were eating food remnants and leaving their waste products
in the mess gear. Simple solution was to use the hot water and
soap solutions the mess personnel had set up for us. The days
were getting colder and shorter and we prepared to celebrate
Thanksgiving. What a wonderful meal our cooks prepared for us.
Turkey, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie and all
the trimmings. All of this and plenty of hot coffee. Being not
far from the mess tents, we always were supplied with hot
coffee. Unfortunately, for thousands of my comrades in arms,
this would be their last Thanksgiving. Our fire missions in
support of the infantry had been picking up noticeably and now
our intelligence was receiving ominous reports of contact with
Chinese forces. The day before Thanksgiving, the major and Sgt.
Turner wanted me to drive them well to the north to reconnoiter
the area. This was one of my duties as part of the advanced
party. We didn't see anything unusual, but we did talk to an old
farmer and he told us through an interpreter that there were
many, many Chinese in the area. On the morning of November 24,
1950, the entire 8th Army jumped off on a fifty mile wide front,
and we fired the largest artillery barrage yet up to this point
of the war. By the end of the day, the 2nd Infantry Division had
reached a town called Kujang-dong which was about 10 miles north
of Kunu-ri. This would prove to be the furthest north we would
ever get in North Korea.
On the night of November 25, 1950, the
Chinese launched a massive assault all along our front. The ROK
II Corps on our left flank was specifically targeted and was
overwhelmed. As a result, the Second Division was in great
danger of becoming cut off and surrounded. For the remaining
frigid days and nights of November, all elements of the division
would be desperately fighting for their lives. A withdrawal was
ordered. An entire Chinese Division occupied much of the high
ground above the road. Deadly mortar and machine gun fire was
zeroed in on the Second Division as truck convoys traversed the
road of death which would become known to military historians as
"The Gauntlet".
As the division began pulling back, we got
word that we going to be the rear guard. I thought that meant
that we would go back to the rear of our withdrawal and guard.
Not quite. In reality we were going to stay put at Kunuri and
provide protective fire while the rest of the division would
pull out. Other artillery battalions were firing until they ran
low on ammunition and then they would pull back a few miles and
try to set up again. Some units fought to the death and were
overrun. At one point we were called out and assembled in a line
with our rifles and small arms. Everyone was going to be a
rifleman, no matter what else may have been their military
specialty. It was about one o'clock in the morning and the
Chinese bugles were sounding to our left, right, and center. We
were being prepared for "Custer's Last Stand". We were so
scared that some guys messed their pants. Much to our relief,
the Chinese attack did not materialized in our sector - they hit
somewhere else. On the day before we finally withdrew, I fired
all day and up to midnight. My relief fired from midnight until
six in the morning. I was awakened out of a deep sleep and
told to get ready to drive one of the two 3/4 ton trucks which
was loaded with all our firing equipment, tents, etc. Next to me
in the front of the truck was M/Sgt. Turner. Four other guys
were in the back in the most uncomfortable seating arrangement
you can imagine. It was dark and freezing cold. A light snow was
falling. All of us were cold, exhausted and hungry. We were the
next to the last truck in our convoy. Behind us were thousands
of Chinese.
When we turned the corner to proceed down
the Kunuri-Suchon road, I could hardly believe my eyes. There
must have been six thousands civilian refugees clogging up the
road. Old people, kids, and women with babies on their backs
trudging south in the frigid landscape. Hundreds would die.
There was nothing we could do for them. On both sides of the
road were wrecked military vehicles of all types. Many of them
were burning and exploding. There were dead bodies all over the
place - GIs, Chinese, Turks, and civilians. I noticed that many
of the dead GIs were missing their combat boots which obviously
had been looted by the Chinese who were equipped only with cheap
sneakers. They suffered as much, if not more, than we did from
the horrible cold. The burning vehicles illuminated a
"Hell on Earth" situation. I really thought that we were
not going to make it out of there, but dawn was beginning to
break. As soon as it got light, US Air Force F-80 jets and F-51
Mustangs arrived and began to put bombs, rockets, machine gun
fire and burning napalm onto the Chinese positions. God bless
the US Air Force! Incoming Chinese fire dropped off
significantly. Another good development for us occurred when a
bunch of guys from the 82nd AA brought up a quad fifty and some
20mm guns mounted on flat wagons. They proceeded to rake the
surrounding ridges with devastating results. Never the less, we
lost ten of our artillery pieces and most of their crews in the
Gauntlet. It took me eight hours to navigate six miles around
the dead bodies and destroyed vehicles which blocked the road. I
helped push a jeep into a ditch to help us get by. Groups of GI
infantrymen were organized by their officers and NCOs and
supported by thanks in an effort to rid the Chinese from our
left flank. Some of these courageous men succeeded, but most
were killed, wounded, or captured. Our battalion S-3 officer,
Major Thomas Hume, was last seen heading up a ridge with his
favorite "long rifle" which was a special rifle he
had used as a member of the American Olympic Rifle Team. He
never returned to us. We found out months later that he had been
captured by the Chinese. They tortured him to death by beating
him and splashing cold water all over his body. He was tied to a
pole and succumbed to the freezing temperatures. I was not
surprised to hear of his death because nobody was going to get
anything out of him. He was a soldier's soldier and those who
served under him admired him greatly.
As we were coming out of the Gauntlet, we
pulled over to the side of the road to allow some of our
artillery pieces to go by. They had priority. Much to my
delight, Walt DePatra was on one of the trucks - we were so
happy to realize that both of us were alive. We started up again
after the guns went by and proceeded through what also became
known as "The Pass". Just beyond the pass was a bridge
which crossed a shallow river. As we drew near the bridge, we
were informed that the Chinese had the bridge zeroed in with
their machine guns and small arms. Fortunately for us, a large
eight inch gun had fallen through the bridge as it was being
towed by an artillery unit to our front. We could not pass over
that bridge even if we wanted to. I wheeled the truck off the
road away from the bridge and headed for the river. While
looking through my rear view mirror, I could see the
shadowy outlines of Chinese soldiers looting our dead as
darkness once again began to descend. We went right into and
through the river to the other side. The frigid water came right
up the floor boards, but thank God, we made it across. After I
got back onto the road we went for a few more miles. Suddenly
there was a bright light ahead of us in the middle of the road.
It was an MP with a flashlight. He told us we could turn on our
lights and proceed safely on our way into friendly lines. At
last I was able to put up the windshield and to continue with
some comfort from the blowing wind. Try driving your car in
below zero weather with your head out the window and you will
see what I mean.
I drove for another hour and then we saw a
big glow in the sky. It was a truck compound where a bunch of
vehicles had pull over and a large bonfire fueled by burning
truck tires was roaring. I just had parked my truck when
another truck pulled up behind me and a bunch of GIs got out. I
asked the driver if he was going to join everyone to warm up by
the fire. He told me he would be right over and not to bother to
wait for him. After a while by the fire, I noticed that the
driver hadn't showed up. When we went back to his truck to check
on him we could not believe what we saw. The poor guy was
sitting behind the wheel and he was dead! He had taken
either a bullet or a piece of shrapnel when he went through the
Pass and evidently had not told anyone. It was hard for me to
understand how no one else in that truck did not realize that
the man was seriously wounded.
We sat by that bonfire until the break of
dawn. When it was light enough for us to see each other, guess
what I saw? The smoke from that rubber fire had turned our faces
black. We looked like performers in one of those old-fashioned
minstrel shows. Everyone had white streaks under their eyes
where tears had washed away the smut from the smoke. We sure
looked like a bunch of "Sad Sacks". I refueled the truck
and got ready to head south. Do you know that they couldn't get
anyone to drive the truck of the dead GI had been driving. They
said that no one else knew how to drive a truck. That was a
bunch of bunk. There was a M/Sgt who could have driven it. I
guess that they figured the truck was too bloody or jinxed or
who knows what? We left a perfectly good truck for the Chinese.
What a shame. On the plus side, a couple of drivers went back to
the Pass to try to pick up some of the wounded that had been
left behind. For some reason, which I will never be able to
understand, the Chinese did not fire on them, and a few lucky
wounded guys were rescued. Most of the others either died from a
combination of their wounds and the cold, or from medical
neglect and brutal treatment as prisoners of the Chinese and
North Koreans.
I must have driven for about another six
hours. The truck was sputtering because of ice in the gas
filter, but I was not going to stop. We wanted to put as many
miles as possible between us and the Chinese, and I was not
going to stop even to let the guys pee. Sgt Turner yelled back
and told them to pee off the back of the truck. I know that if
II stopped we probably would not be able to start the truck
again. It took us two days to reach Seoul and cross over the Han
River to Ascom City where some remnants of the division were
bivouacked. At least we had an opportunity to get some rest. The
only food we had with us for the past four days was a #10 can of
cheese and four cases of butterscotch lifesavers. Within a day,
my buddies and I were hit with a mysterious foot malady. We
could hardly walk. The pain was almost unbearable and the doctor
could not do anything for us. He thought that we might have some
kind of nerve condition that occurs just short of frostbite.
After a few more days the pain went away. I have not been
bothered with any foot problems since then. Our Division had
taken an awful beating. Of all the men lost in Korea, the Second
Infantry Division took more casualties than any other American
division during the Korean War and over one quarter of our
casualties took place when the Chinese intervened in 1950.
However we did come out of that rap intact, and once we got
reorganized and re-equipped, our division would be destined to
go on and exact a terrible revenge on our enemy. We spent
Christmas 1950 in Seoul. Just before Christmas, the major had me
check out a 3/4 ton weapons carrier and drive him over to a MASH
compound. He had arranged to pick up five nurses who were going
to an officers' Christmas party at the Chosan Hotel in Seoul. I
think it was the only hotel left standing. When we picked up the
girls, the major got out of the front seat and go in the back
with them. When we got to the hotel, he came out of the truck
his face was covered with lipstick. I should mention that there
was one nurse who seemed to be really interested in me. There
was no doubt in my mind, the chemistry was there! I asked the
major if she could ride up front with me. You know what he told
me? "Corporal, don't you know that enlisted men are not
supposed to fraternize with officers?" What a beauty! I waited
outside in the cold for four hours while the major and his
friends drank and danced the night away. I did however enjoy
listening to the American music that the GI band was playing.
After we dropped the nurses off, the major took the truck away
from me and went back to the nurses' compound to have a
rendezvous with one of his girlfriends. I told him that he was
not authorized to drive the truck. However, he drove off,
despite my objections, grinding the gears like you could not
believe. Rank does have its privileges.
We went back up on the line in January,
1951. Once again, we were a component of the 23rd Regimental
Combat Team. A large Chinese force was advancing towards the
important crossroad of Chipyoung-ni. Our orders were to deploy
in a defensive perimeter around Chipyoung-ni and to stop the
Chinese advance in that area. Besides my unit, our force was
composed of the 23rd Infantry Regiment, the French Infantry
Battalion, "B" Battery, 82nd AAA Battalion, "B" Battery,
503rd Field Artillery Battalion, "B" Company, 2nd Engineer
Battalion, 2nd Clearing Platoon, 2nd Medical Battalion and the
1st Ranger Company. The advancing Chinese had already wiped out
a South Korean infantry division during their approach to our
positions, and they were occupying all the hills around us. They
outnumbered us six to one and we began to realize that we were
totally surrounded. When our Commander, Col. Freeman, requested
permission to withdraw, he was ordered to hold our positions at
all costs. We knew that we were in for a big fight, but our
spirits were good and we were well prepared with about two dozen
big guns and an enormous amount of ammunition.
Of this particular battle, I have several
clear memories which perhaps seem trivial in the whole scheme of
things. Keep in mind that this was one of the major battles of
the entire Korean War. For five days, we were totally
surrounded, and without massive air drops of ammo and other
supplies, as well as close air support, I don't think I would be
telling this story today. As a result of our superior artillery,
total control of the air, and the magnificent courage and spirit
of our infantry, the Chinese forces pitted against us were dealt
a major defeat. Their casualties were horrific. We had
pre-registered our eighteen 105s on every possible approach to
Chipyoung-ni. When they attacked us, they ran right through our
deadly box barrages and we pulverized them with artillery fire.
Out of thousands of Chinese, very few of them survived the
barrage. I wondered how our side was going to get rid of so many
dead bodies. It was pay back time for those of us who had
survived the "Gauntlet" and the "Pass".
I remember one incident right at the
beginning which involved one of our tanks. I had just come out
of the fire direction center after being on duty all night long.
All I wanted was to crawl into the lean-to and get some sleep,
but I could hear a tank racing its engine again and again. The
tank was on the other side of a small hill from where I was.
Well, nosy me, I wondered over to see what was going on. A bunch
of guys were trying to push a tank up an icy hill so that the
tank's gun could be better positioned to fire on any possible
Chinese attack. This was in broad daylight and no Chinese
were going to come at us because the Air Force would wipe them
out. The Air Force made night fighters out of the Chinese. Well,
a captain with the tank drafted me to help push the tank. Every
time we pushed the tank a few feet, it would slide back on the
ice. It almost ran over me once. I finally got myself out of
that stupid detail. However, they did end up getting the tank in
place by breaking up wooden ammo boxes and placing the wood
under the tank's treads.
There was a high hill to our south which
we believed was occupied by the enemy. Yes, we found out they
were there when the patrol we had sent up there to check things
out ran into a fire fight with the Chinese. They pulled back,
but several men received minor wounds. One guy got hit in the
arm, and the other guy got hit in the hip. About half way down
the hill, the wounded men were made as comfortable as possible
and left with a few cigarettes to hold them over. The other
patrol members came back to get some stretchers and additional
help to bring in the wounded guys. When they got back to the
wounded men, they found both men dead. The men had gotten cold
and had gone into shock. Boy, was the colonel mad when he found
out about the wounded guys dying. I had never seen him so mad.
Our doctors had made it very clear that anyone who was wounded
had to be kept warm. There was three feet of snow on that hill
and a stretcher would have been useless to begin with. Everyone
involved in that incident felt terrible. Combat deaths that
should not have happened.
I also remember how difficult it was
trying to dig in. The ground was frozen so hard that our
entrenching tools were incapable of penetrating the surface. Do
you know that the entrenching tool now used by the military has
a pick attached to it? That change came about as a result of our
experience in Korea. The only way you could break through the
ground was with explosives or you could use a shell crater which
already had been made by an exploding mortar or artillery
shell.
At one point during the battle, the
Chinese overran my position. It was dark and there was a lot of
snow on the ground. After a long tour of duty, we were exhausted
and sound asleep in our snow-covered shelter. There was a lot of
noise and commotion outside, much more than normal. When I
glanced out of the shelter, I was horrified to see Chinese
soldiers all around us and on the move towards our rear. They
had just overrun "B" Battery of the 503rd Field
Artillery and were advancing towards our guns. They did not see
us because we were obscured by the darkness and snow. None of
those Chinese came back because they ran into our cannon guys
who mowed them down with small arms fire. We did see other
Chinese to our front taking a large number of prisoners (about
sixty-one) from the 503rd, but there was no way that we could
help those guys because a large number of our own men were mixed
in with their captors. If we fired at them we would have killed
a lot of our own guys.
On the third day of the battle of
Chipyoung-ni, a large formation of C-119s dropped ammunition and
other provisions on our positions. The cargo planes flew over
one hundred sorties that day. The first of the lumbering
aircraft came right over us and began to drop large packets
which were attached to parachutes. Right away, Chinese machine
gun tracer fire started to arch up towards the transports from a
near by mountain top. All of a sudden two Air Force jets roared
in and dropped napalm right on top of those gunners. Man, they
plastered them! The fire flowed down the side of the mountain
like lava from an erupting volcano. A bunch of us were sent out
to gather up the ammo dropping down from the shy. If one of
those packets landed on you it could break every bone in your
body. One guy told us to point straight up at the packets and
follow your arm down. Then step either to the right or left and
the packet would miss hitting you. He was right. Do you know
that most of those fuses for the artillery ammunition being
dropped were made by the E. Ingraham Company of Bristol, CT -
another product from my hometown surfacing in a remote country
in the middle of a terrible war. I understand that those fuses
had been a military secret for some time before we got them.
They were timed to go off about twenty feet above ground. We had
set up our box barrages so that fifty rounds would go off in
front of our target and fifty more would go off behind the
target. We could get six rounds per gun into the air before the
first one hit target. The effect was absolutely devastating. The
Chinese tried to run right through our fire. At times we would
fire to the north and then turn around and fire to the south. We
got them coming and going in every direction.
On the fifth day, a column of tanks from
the First Cavalry Division broke through from the south and we
were no longer surrounded. The defeated Chinese forces withdrew
to the north to lick their wounds. I went over to Walt DePatra's
firing battery to see if he was OK. We had a joyous reunion
because we had both survived another tough battle. You would not
believe the enormous amount of shells casings which were piled
up all around our guns. We could have built the Great Pyramid of
Giza with them. Later that day, I was driving the major up to
our forward positions because we were once again part of the
advance party. We passed a lot of our infantrymen whom we had
supported during the battle. When they realized that we were
from the 37th Field Artillery, they broke into cheers and
applauded to us. What a wonderful surprise. We were very proud
and humbled by this honor from the infantry. I must admit that
it affected me emotionally. We waved and smiled back at our
infantry brothers, and everyone of us had tears flowing down our
cheeks.
Earl Dube continued on in the
Korean War until he acquired enough points to rotate back home.
He was among the first to return after a full tour in the Korean
War in July of 1951. Following Chipyoung-ni, Earl also
participated in Operation Killer and Ripper. For the first time
in Earl's experience, the Chinese would attack and then be
defeated and be forced to fall back. Now the 2nd Division would
follow up the Chinese retreat with an attack of their own.
"From then on, we were the ones on the offensive," Earl
remembered. What also helped was an unlimited supply of ammo,
better equipment for cold weather, even better air support, and
more experienced and improved South Korean military.
Beside the Army Commendation Medal with the Combat V, Earl
earned the Korean Service Medal with seven battle stars. After
returning to the USA, Earl participated in Operation Snow Flake
at Fort Drum, New York where new cold weather gear was being
tested in 1952. "It was colder there than it was in Korea"
recalled Earl. He finished up his enlistment as an artillery
instructor at West Point. He is now retired from his successful
auto parts business and lives with his wife, Betty, in Bristol
CT. He is active with a Korean veterans group in the
Bristol American Legion Post 2.
061025
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