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The
blood-red "T" and "O" on the patches of the
men of the 90th Infantry Division when they stormed ashore at
Normandy on D-Day reflected a World War I heritage linked to the
states of Texas and Oklahoma. During that war the 90th
Division, largely composed of draftees from those two states, had
fought their way bravely across France and into the Ardennes
Forest. The valiant courage and individual sacrifice of these men
netted 102 awards of the Distinguished Service Cross, 16 of them
to young soldiers from Oklahoma and 22 to Doughboys who hailed
from Texas. Though the division included many young patriots from
across the nation, the 90th was indeed a Texas/Oklahoma unit.
When the United States again was propelled
into a world war in 1941, the 90th Infantry Division was
reactivated at Camp Barkeley, Texas, on March 25, 1942. The 90th
trained first in Texas, then Louisiana and California, before
sailing for England on March 23, 1944. Less than three months
after their arrival, the T. O. soldiers found themselves crossing
the English Channel for a year of bitter warfare, again forging
their way across France, through the Ardennes, and into the German
homeland.
Army Staff Sergeant Hassell C. Whitfield, a
20-year old native Texan from Erath County, was among the first
members of the division to face the enemy, landing at Utah Beach
on D-Day. Other members of the division continued to land over the
ensuing days, attacking fiercely and demonstrating that the new
generation of T. O. soldiers were every bit as tough as their
fathers in the earlier war. So tough were they in fact, that on
D-Day plus One when the troopship Susan B. Anthony struck a
mine and was sunk near the approaches to Omaha Beach, the T.O.
soldiers of the 2d Battalion, 359th Infantry and Company C, 315th
Engineer Battalion waded ashore without the loss of a single man.
For the men of the 90th Infantry, combat
began in earnest on June 9 when Staff Sergeant Whitefield's 344th
Artillery Battalion, along with the 90th's 345th Artillery
Battalion, opened fire with their 105mm guns across the Merderet
causeway in support of Glider and Parachute regiments of the 82d
Airborne Division. It was the opening volley in what ultimately
became 53-straight-days of continuous combat. Members of the 90th
Infantry fought their way across the Merderet, crushing the enemy
resistance to attack into the Foret de Mont Castre. By sheer
determination and sacrifice the forest was cleared by July 11 and
the 90th pushed eastward, taking Periers on July 27.
On August 12 the division drove across the
Sarthe River, capturing Chambois seven days later in the critical
effort to close the Falaise Gap. Despite fierce fighting and heavy
casualties, the T. O. soldiers continued their drive through
Verdun on September 6 and engaged the enemy at Metz during a siege
that lasted until mid-November. On December 6 the 90th pushed
across the Saar and established a bridgehead north of Saarlautern
inside southwestern Germany, where at last the division took up
defensive positions to rest and replenish their ranks. In six
months of bitter fighting the 90th Infantry Division fought its
way through every enemy obstacle, broke through the barrier into
the German homeland, suffered nearly fifty per cent casualties,
and gained a new nickname. The "T" and "O" on
their patch came to signify these soldiers as Tough Ombres.
It was a well-earned and descriptive
moniker; in their first six months of combat, THREE Tough
Ombres earned Medals of Honor and FIFTY-EIGHT earned
Distinguished Service Crosses, including Division Commander Major
General James Van Fleet who received an Oak Leaf Cluster to the
DSC he had earlier earned while commanding the 4th Infantry
Division.
THE BULGE
By December 1944, Allied commanders
considered the Ardennes Forest that stretched from eastern France
into Belgium and Luxembourg a quiet area. For this reason
the lines were unusually thin, the long front extending for miles
through the dense forest defended primarily by three U.S.
divisions. Normally a division was responsible for defense of a
five-mile front, but with the Ardennes considered under control,
the 106th Infantry was spread out over a 21-mile expanse of hills
and timber. Matters were no better for the 4th and 28th Divisions,
or the reduced elements of the 9th Division, that comprised the
VIII Corps defense.
Adolph Hitler's unanticipated Ardennes
Offensive began at 0530 with a massive artillery barrage in the
pre-dawn shadows of December 16. Destined to be the bloodiest
European battle of World War II, the majority of the nearly 20,000
Americans killed in the month-long campaign came in the first
days. By December 19 the 106th Infantry Division's thin line
suffered devastating losses, including the forced surrender of two
full regiments.
By
Christmas Day the surrounded Belgian city of Bastogne had become
the focal point of all attention. Allied lines reeling under the
surprise and massive enemy advance, the Germans demanded surrender
from General Anthony McAuliffe, Acting Commander of Bastogne's
101st Airborne Division. General McAuliffe's gutsy one-word
response "Nuts" ignited a determined
response from General George Patton to reach Bastogne and relieve
the pressure. McAuliffe's subsequent DSC citation noted: "Though the city was completely surrounded by the enemy, the spirit of the defending troops under this officer's inspiring, gallant leadership never wavered. Their courageous stand is epic. General McAuliffe continuously exposed himself to enemy bombing, strafing, and armored and infantry attacks to personally direct his troops, utterly disregarding his own safety."
As visibly evident as General McAuliffe's determination,
and the courage of his command, were the details of the enemy
offensive in printed maps that accompanied media reports of the
battle. These maps revealed a bulge being forced into the Allied
lines by the German advance, giving rise to the most-commonly
recognized name for the Ardennes Offensive, the Battle of the
Bulge.
While General Patton raced his Third
Army to Bastogne, Allied war planners reacted swiftly to their own
lack of foresight in anticipating the last, desperate German
drive, promptly reinforcing the lines through the Ardennes. Among
that reaction was the withdrawal of the 90th Infantry from their
position inside southwestern Germany, and re-deployment along the
lines in Luxembourg.
The Tough Ombres had a lot to be
proud of, having broken the Seigfried Line and encamped inside
Germany itself. The men of the division spent Christmas between
the Saar and Moselle Rivers with orders to defend against
reinforcement of the offensive in the north, while replacements
arrived to compensate for the heavy losses in the previous months
of fighting. New Years came and went, and five days later new
orders arrived--"Be prepared for movement".
The following day the Tough Ombres
began a cold 50-mile trek into the snow-covered mountains of
Luxembourg. Secrecy shrouded movement, with vehicle identification
masked to confuse German spies as to which Allied divisions were
moving in what directions. Only the top commanders of the 90th
knew the destination, which was along the line less than fifty
miles south of Bastogne.
On January 9, two days after the 90th had
begun its withdrawal to a new front, the division launched an
assault to reduce the enemy salient south of Bastogne. The 90th's
infantry regiments, supported by the division's artillery
battalions, attacked through deep snow and bitter cold, catching
the enemy totally unprepared. After three days of fighting, enemy
communications were shattered in the sector, and on that third day
alone, more than 1,200 German soldiers were captured. Documents
taken from these prisoners illustrated earlier Nazi concerns for
the possible relocation of the Tough Ombres and the respect
with which these fierce fighters were held. One captured German
directive read:
"It is imperative that steps be
taken to ascertain whether or not the American 90th Infantry
Division has been committed (to the Ardennes Offensive). Special
attention must be given to the numbers 357, 358, 359, 343, 344,
345, 915, and 315 (90th ID regiments). Prisoners identified with
these numbers will immediately be taken to the Regimental
G-3"
Unfortunately, by the time the Germans
verified that indeed the 90th Infantry Division HAD been
committed, it was too late. The Tough Ombres were exacting
a heavy toll on the enemy salient. By the fourth day of fighting
the 358th Regiment broke through into Belgium, linking with the
35th Infantry. The enemy salient in the south had been totally
breached.
On January 14 the 90th Division, along with
elements of the 26th Infantry and 6th Armored Division, attacked
Niederwampach from two directions, quickly crushing all resistance
and wresting control of the city from the Germans. Two days later
the advance continued to gain control of the small but important
town of Oberwampach.
Oberwampach
Taking Oberwampach was tough enough, holding
it would be another matter--and a deadly one. In the 36-hour
battle that began on January 16, the Germans launched nine
counter-attacks to drive the Tough Ombres out of the
village. In that same period, Staff Sergeant Hassell Whitefield's
344th Artillery Battalion fired 6,000 rounds of heavy 105mm
artillery rounds in defense, and tank battles raged on every
approach into the strategic hamlet that only days earlier had been
a German stronghold.
Captain Arnold Brown commanded Company G,
358th Infantry Regiment, which had taken up positions inside
Oberwampach. Brown had missed the Normandy actions, arriving as a
replacement in August, but had fought through the last actions
leading up to the crossing of the Saar. Getting into Oberwampach
itself had been a deadly battle. At one point while moving across
the open fields, his company came under direct machine-gun attack.
Calling his radio-man to his side, Brown began calling for
artillery. He was still barking instructions through the handset
when the radio operator fell at his side, shot through the head.
Finally, an American tank arrived to knock out the enemy position.
Upon moving into Oberwampach, Captain Brown
quickly deployed his platoons in strategic positions on roof-tops
or in the rubble that had once been a peaceful farming community.
From these he was able to monitor the enemy's movement over one of
the main routes into Bastogne. To coordinate his company's defense
against the nine counter-attacks, mounted by infantry and columns
of tanks and preceded by heavy artillery, Brown set up his command
post inside a local home.
The
Schilling family grudgingly welcomed the arrival of the American
liberators, having suffered already from the gunfire, tank rounds,
and artillery that had laid waste to the homes of friends and
neighbors. The G.I.s who crammed into the small shelter took
quickly to the family, and especially to the Schilling's five year
old son. In addition to Captain Brown and other key members of his
staff, Staff Sergeant Hassell Whitfield was among the temporary
occupants of the Schilling family home.
Throughout the night the Germans continued
their assaults. Recalled Captain Brown, "When the Germans
were not making a ground attack, they were bombarding us with
artillery fire and direct fire attack." He further
recalled two of his senior platoon sergeants advising him, "Captain,
this is the roughest that we've ever experienced. I think we had
better withdraw, if not we'll probably have to surrender."
While Captain Brown respected the advice of
his NCOs, and even agreed with their assessment, his orders were
to hold and he was determined to follow those orders. When
daylight came on January 17, Brown's Tough Ombres had
survived the night, and the enemy attacks lifted. Of the nine
counter-attacks during the period, only the last occurred during
daylight. But when darkness came that evening, the enemy
bombardment resumed.
This time German artillery seemed to have
found their range, and the explosion of the big shells walked
closer and closer to the Schilling home. The family huddled
together in fear, an emotion no doubt felt by many of the young
soldiers in and around the house, who still struggled to keep up a
valiant and defiant face. But for the small Schilling boy, only
five-years old, the loud explosions and the undercurrent of fear
and uncertainty, at last became more than he could bear. Breaking
away from his parents he ran out of the reverberating walls of the
house and into the street where giant balls of fire and a deadly
hail of white-hot shrapnel filled the air. With no thought for his
own safety, Staff Sergeant Whitefield raced after the lad as the
bombardment continued all around him. He was nearing the boy when
both were struck down by a blast that sent shards of steel into
soft flesh.
Captain Brown recalled, "(Staff
Sergeant Whitefield) asked someone to rub his arm, he claimed it
hurt him. I did rub his arm, and he turned blue and died. The
little boy died slowly in his mother's arms, and to see this, you
read about these things, but to see the grief this mother was
going through of her son being killed by something they had no
control over, it really brings some strong lessons to you."
Staff Sergeant Hassell C. Whitefield was one of five members
of the 90th Infantry Division who was awarded the Distinguished
Service Cross for his heroic actions in that deadly 36-hour battle
for Oberwampach. The DSC was awarded to two of his comrades in
Company A, 344th Field Artillery Battalion, as well as two men of
the 359th Infantry Regiment. Like the great soldiers they were,
four of these five earned the award for heroic offensive actions
in fierce fighting against an equally aggressive enemy.
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