When I finished my basic training in the States, I was shipped overseas
like countless others. Upon arriving in France, we moved up to Luxembourg
by trucks, in the bitter cold of that winter, and from there, we were
then shipped to St. Vith in Belgium. I soon found out that I was with
the 87th Infantry Division (which I had never heard of) and, much to my
dismay, I was made the first scout in my squad. I also learned that the
first scout had been shot along with the second scout and I was the replacement.
We soon went into the attack, and as I moved through woods, the first
enemy soldier I saw, I captured. Three of us had been sent on ahead to
reconnoiter and when we were about four hundred yards distant, I noticed
this German soldier bent over by a tree. He never saw me. I called out
to him and he stood up ramrod straight. He then put his hands in the air
and walked toward me. Stopping a few feet away, he reached down to his
pistol, lifted it out of its holster very slowly and handed it to me.
He was a forward observer and was talking on a telephone calling in 88
rounds upon our troops.
The following morning we formed again and had as our target a small town.
"Scouts out" and I stepped from the timber line toward the village. Immediately,
we came under fire and it seemed that every German in the opposing army
was firing at ME! Somehow we made it to the town and I proceeded to go
through it. I guess that I was a great distance ahead of the squad because
when I turned around, I discovered that I was alone. The rest of the unit
had retreated. Or so I thought. I stayed the afternoon because the snow
was so deep that I could not retreat with them. I waited until dark and
returned to the company.
In the afternoon, as I again was at the head of the column, we came under
fire from a German tank. I hit the ground and hugged it for dear life.
When the tank had expended its ammunition, (about five rounds) I discovered
that the only white piece of ground in the vicinity of where I was laying
was under my body. That tank tore up all the real estate within my reach.
|