Category Archives: man card

Going Inland

80 years ago today. Operation Detachment. Iwo Jima, 20 February 1945 0900, D-Day plus 1.

Official wartime caption. “Going Inland, Determination written on their countenances, Marines start the drive to the interior of Iwo Jima. Running at a crouch, they dart across the tableland in the shadow of Mount Suribachi, taking advantage of the scant protection offered by small rises in the volcanic sand.”

(From the Thayer Soule Collection (COLL/2266) at the Archives Branch, Marine Corps History Division)

Note the M1 Carbine with rifle grenade attachment and said grenade on the side of the Marine’s pack. For close-in work, the Marine is the distance has a 12 gauge shotgun.

For reference, Canfield notes that the U.S. military purchased more than 500,000 12 gauge combat shotguns for use in WWII (not counting guns used for training or guard duty) including models from Ithaca (Model 37), Savage (Model 720), Stevens (Models 520-30 and 620A,) Remington (Models 11 and 31), and Winchester. The Marines, specifically, preferred Winchester Model M97 and M12 pump guns and had a TOE for 306 such scatterguns per division.

The Iwo Jima Campaign would include 35 days of active ground combat which still reverberates through history.

 

Bazooka Joes

80 years ago this week. 503rd Parachute Infantry Regiment. Two soldiers of an M9 2.36-inch bazooka section blow out a Japanese pillbox at Heart Point, on Corregidor Island, Philippines on or around 19 February 1945. Note their slung M1A1 Carbines and the billowing parachute silk overhead. 

Talk about a recruiting poster! Signal Corps Photo SC 201373 by Pfc. Morris Weiner.

Some 2,050 men of the Rock Force: 503rd PIR; 462nd PFABn; and 161 Abn Engr. Bn, landed topside on Japanese-held Corregidor on 16 February 1945 to destroy Japanese gun positions and allow ground forces to close in on the facility. The unit suffered 169 dead and 531 wounded in addition to more than 210 injuries in the drop itself.

It was the 503’s third combat jump of the war, having landed at Nadzab in New Guinea’s Markham Valley in Operation Alamo in September 1943 and at Noemfoor in Operation Table Tennis in July 1944.

They wouldn’t jump again until February 1967 when elements of the 2nd and 3rd Bn, 50rrd PIR would leap out over Katum, South Vietnam as part of Operation Junction City.

They are currently part of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, based at Caserma Del Din, Vicenza, Italy.

Clothes Horse

Some 130 years ago this month, a 20-year-old Leftanant Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill, seen in the uniform of the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars.

National Army Museum. NAM. 1992-10-143-1547

Churchill, having grown up surrounded by toy soldiers (he would ultimately amass a collection of more than 1,500), flags, and castles, cut his teeth in the Harrow School’s Rifle Corps as a 14-year-old lad.

Winston Churchill as a schoolboy at Harrow showing him in the uniform of the Harrow Rifle Corps

He then passed the Sandhurst “further” entrance exam on his third attempt in June 1893, 95th out of 389, and entered the Royal Military Academy that September, graduating 20th out of a class of 130 in December 1894.

Newly-minted Lieutenant Churchill, standing 5’ 6″ in his boots, received his commission from Queen Victoria with an effective date of 20 February 1895 and promptly took up a subaltern’s position in the fine old 4th Queen’s Own Hussars, a unit that dated back to 1685.

Lieutenant Winston Churchill joined the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars in Feb 1895

Even though not one of the more fashionable Guards units, the price of uniforms and equipment cost £653, a fleshed-out charger fit for a young officer of his standing another £200.

It was all very flash, you see. 

Officer of the 4th Queen’s Own Hussars

Plus there was the inevitable “death of a thousand cuts” that came from officers club membership dues, canteen charges, retaining his batman to keep said uniforms clean and ready, retaining an enlisted groom to keep his charger shod and fit, polo outfits (he was on the regimental team) and other myriad expenses of a dashing young horseman.

This was against a paltry yearly salary of just £120.

His active military service included shipping out with the 4th to India, where he “saw the elephant” on campaign with the Malakand Field Force, earning an India Medal with a Punjab Frontier clasp.

He would then go on to be a supernumerary lieutenant attached to the pith-helmeted 21st Lancers for the Sudan campaign, where, in what could be described as the “most dangerous two minutes of Winston Churchill’s life,” he rode in the 21st’s famous charge at Omdurman outside of Khartoum in 1898, earning the Queen’s Sudan Medal and the Khedive’s Sudan Medal.

Omdurman, Charge of the 21st Lancers by Stanley Berkeley

Churchill resigned from the 4th Hussars on 5 May 1899, capping his Victorian military career…sort of. 

Lieutenant Winston Churchill, 1899.

He would go on to be a war correspondent (followed by a short stint with the South African Light Horse), author, and politician of some sort, seeing active service again in the Great War as lieutenant colonel of the 6th Royal Scots Fusiliers, in a more muddy khaki uniform on the Western Front.

Winston Churchill, Colonel of the Royal Scots Fusiliers, at Armentières, 11 February 1916 note French Adrian helmet

Perhaps dating back to his time with the Hussars, Churchill did notably still harbor a reputation as a clothes horse. As noted by Rick Atkinson in his “An Army at Dawn. The War in North Africa 1942-43” of Winston’s risky 10-hour flight to Morocco for the Casablanca conference via bomber, “As was his custom on long plane trips, the prime minister wore a silk vest and nothing else” under his RAF Air Marshal’s uniform and parachute.

Buckeyes in Manila

A great moment showing in time, 80 years ago today. AP Photo caption, “During the hard street fighting against Japanese strongpoint at the New Police Station, Pandacan district, GIs of the 129th Infantry Regiment, 37th Infantry Division, climb through some Japanese barbed wire in Manila, Philippines. 13 February 1945.”

Check out this inset, with details showing a rifle grenade launcher on the Joe’s M1 Carbine to the left, what looks to be a religious medal hanging from the neck of the man to the right, large eye bale netting on the M1 helmets for attaching camo, and grim, determined faces.

A National Guard Division from Ohio, the 37th was known as the Buckeye Division for obvious reasons. Activated for federal service on 15 October 1940 under native son Maj. Gen. Robert S. Beightler, they shipped overseas to Fiji just six months after Pearl Harbor on 26 May 1942 and, from there went into combat in the Solomons at New Georgia the following year, campaigning around Bougainville through 1944.

January 1945 saw them, under Kruger’s Sixth Army, landing on the beaches of the Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines where they would race inland to Clark Field and Fort Stotsenburg, fight through Manila, and into Northern Luzon where they ended the war processing the last Japanese forces to surrender there post-VJ-Day.

The 37th Infantry Division suffered 5,960 battle casualties during WWII, surpassing their butcher’s bill for the Great War which stood at 5,387.

On the Beach with the Boys

Official wartime caption, 85 years ago today: “Men of the 1st Royal Welsh Fusiliers practice firing their .55 caliber Boys anti-tank rifles on the beach near Etaples, 6 February 1940.” At the time the unit of regulars was part of the 6th Infantry Brigade, assigned to the 2nd Infantry Division, of the British Expeditionary Force in France.

Kessell (Lt), War Office official photographer, IWM F 2441

An infantry unit formed in 1689, raised by Henry Herbert, 4th Baron Herbert of Chirbury, and primarily recruited in North Wales, the regiment was designated a fusilier regiment in 1702 and earned its “Royal” prefix in 1713 after honors at Blenheim (1704), Ramillies (1706) and Malplaquet (1709).

The Royal Welsh kept appearing on campaigns from Culloden to Minden, Bunker Hill to Yorktown (where it was the only British regiment not to surrender its colors, instead smuggled them out, tied around an ensign’s waist).

They fought the French in Haiti, Egypt, Martinique, the Peninsula, and Waterloo. They then fought alongside the French in the Crimea, Manchuria, and on the Western Front as well as in 1940, as seen above above.

The 1st Royal Welsh evacuated at Dunkirk– leaving their heavy Boys behind– then, after defending the British Isles from Mr. Hitler, moved to India and Burma to fight the Japanese, taking part in the defence of Kohima in 1944 with Bill Slim’s “Forgotten Fourteenth” Army.

1st Royal Welsh Fusiliers move forward on a jungle path near Pinbaw, Burma, December 1944. Note the mix of M1928 Thompson SMGs and No. 1 Mk III Enfields. Photo by No 9 Army Film & Photographic Unit, IWM SE2889

Postwar, the unit saw service in England, Germany, and Cyprus, combat in the Malayan Emergency, along with 13 tours in Northern Ireland, and continued service in Bosnia and Iraq.

On St David’s Day (1 March) 2006, the regiment amalgamated with The Royal Regiment of Wales to form The Royal Welsh and are known as the “Nanny Goats” after their mascot, a Persian goat enrolled as a lance corporal.

They are based at Hightown Barracks, Wrexham, serving in an armored infantry role.

Their motto is “Gwell angau na Chywilydd” (Welsh) (“Better Death than Dishonour”)

Minting British Army Lance Corporals

It’s said that the rank of lance corporal in a British Army infantry unit, denoted by a single inverted chevron, is the hardest one to earn and the easiest to lose.

Whereas the U.S. Marines run a two-week corporal’s course for what is a step higher rank (E-4), the British Army puts the screws to privates looking to earn their stripe.

For reference, the British Army’s lance corporal’s course, run by 1 Rifles on Cyprus, takes seven weeks.

In a recent course that saw 68 privates start and 47 complete, they conducted:

  • 47 days of training vs only three down days
  • 20 days of field exercises
  • 15 section attacks
  • 14 platoon attacks
  • 7 reecces

The footage, in a great 25-minute doc:

Baptism for the American Ski Troops

Some 80 years ago this month, members of the intelligence and reconnaissance (I&R) platoon, 86th Mountain Infantry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division, logged the first documented combat use of ski troops by the American military as they sent patrols over the snow-covered Campiano-Mancinella Ridge, also known as Riva Ridge, to scout the German positions there overlooking Mount Belvedere.

Sgt. Stephen P. Knowlton, Durham, N.H., I & R Platoon, 86th Mountain Inf., 10th Mountain Div., does a couple of short turns to get his “ski legs” as he prepares to leave on a 3-day ski patrol deep into enemy territory. 21 January, 1945. Spigvana, Italy. Graning, 3131st Signal Service Co., SC 201357

As detailed by the Army:

Five Soldiers were sent on a mission to report on the location and enemy strength on the ridge. The team used skis but hid them away before reaching the top. The men free-climbed to the top of the cliff. The men took out three German soldiers but were chased from the area by machine-gun fire.

“From then on, there was increased activity on the ridge,” wrote Lt. Col. Henry J. Hampton, who served as commander of 1st Battalion, 86th Infantry Regiment during the operation. “There was continual improvement and digging of old and new positions. The result of this patrol was that we had one trail over which a small force of well-trained mountain men could advance.”

“A 5-man ski patrol of the I & R Platoon, 86th Mountain Inf., 10th Mountain Div., begin to climb up the mountain as they start deep into enemy territory on a 3-day patrol, the longest one ever made in this region. All 5 men are famous skiers and have held records at one time or another. 21 January 1945. Spigvana, Italy.” Photographer: Graning, 3131st Signal Service Co. SC 201358

Two GIs with the 10th Mountain Division in the Apennine Mountains Italy, likely early 1945, Note the snow camo, Ray Bans, and mix of M1 Garand (front) and M1 Carbine (rear). LIFE Magazine Archives – Margaret Bourke-White Photographer WWP-PD

Simple origins

Formed following reports of wildly successful Finnish ski troops in the 1939-40 Winter War, FDR stressed that something similar could be established from U.S. soldiers, with experienced men drawn from among the estimated 2 million Americans who enjoyed the winter sport in the States.

 

U.S. Army Takes to Skis, 1/14/1940 Lake Placid, N.Y.—Perhaps taking a lesson from the Fighting Finns who glide swiftly over the snow to cut down unwary Russians. Men of the 26th Infantry, U.S. Army, stationed at Plattsburg, N.Y., slide along in single file as they receive ski instruction at Lake Placid from Rolf Munsen, Olympic star. Credit: ACME;

Formed beginning in November 1941 by blending earlier ski troop detachments from the 1st, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 41st, and 44th Infantry Divisions, then greatly expanded by volunteers from other units who attested to peacetime alpine experience, the 10th Mountain remains the only American military division recruited by civilian organizations, the American Alpine Club and National Ski Patrol.

The training cadre was drawn from the Ski Patrol itself and included many American winter Olympians.

These American ski troops got lots of press in 1943 during training. 

Famous image of Corporal Hall Burton, Mountain Trooper, At Camp Hale, Colorado, ca. 1943 10th Mountain M1 Garand ski 111-SC-329331

World War II American soldiers on skis take aim with M1 Garands during winter training in the Colorado Rockies 10th mountain

Following something of a dress rehearsal in the liberation of the Aleutians, the 10th arrived in the North Apennines and the Po Valley front on 6 January 1945 and went into tough combat, earning their motto “Climb to Glory” in the hardest of ways.

During its brief four months in combat, the division suffered a staggering 4,866 casualties– a full quarter of its strength. This average of 1,216 casualties per month was the highest in the Italian campaign.

While ISR platoons in other American infantry units were issued skis and told to make a go of it as best they could (see the slapstickyness below), only the 10th actually sent patrols out on the devices.

60th Infantry Regiment, 9th Infantry Division – 12 January 1945. Wearing Quartermaster-issued snow capes, American soldiers go into training as ski troops. Lt. William M. Trafford, left, of Vinal Haven, Maine, gives instructions to one man while others look on. L-R: Pfc. Donald L. Taylor, Devils Lake, N.D.; Cpl. Edmund J. Hums, Jr., Pottstown, Pa.; Pvt. Ernest Bassett, Pittsfield, Mass.; Pfc. Glen K. (illegible), Ypsilanti, Mich.; and Pfc. Alfred J. Peters, Buffalo, N.Y. SC 199088-S

NATO Sky Soldiers

NATO has put out a 12-minute moto video on the Alliance’s paratroopers including cameos by German Fallschirmjäger, Italian Folgore brigade Paracadutisti, French 1er RCP (1er Régiment de Chasseurs Parachutistes), American 173rd PIRA and Airborne School candidates, and the Polish 6th Airborne Brigade (6 Brygada Powietrznodesantowa).

It’s not bad.

That Belgian Chill

80 years ago today.

Members of the 740th Tank Battalion and Headquarters Company of the 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, advance in a snowstorm behind a tank to attack Herresbach, Belgium. 28 January 1945, with the help of a local.

U.S. Army Photo.

A tank and infantrymen of the U.S. Army’s Company G, 740th Tank Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, push through the snow toward their objective near Herresbach, Belgium, during the Battle of the Bulge, Jan. 28, 1945. 111-SC-199509

For those who haven’t read of the fight between the three refurbished M4 Shermans of the 740th against the lead element of Battle Group Peiper and the 1st SS Panzer Division during the “Bulge,” you have some research to do. 

Cold Canuks

80 years ago today. Infantrymen of the French-Canadian Régiment de la Chaudière, who are wearing British winter camouflage clothing, on patrol, Bergendal, Netherlands, 24 January 1945. This is either a training course or a unit’s sniper section. The rifles are No.4 Mk.I (T) or No.4 Mk.I* (T). Equipped with No. 32 scopes.

(L-R): Sergeants R.A. Wilkinson and René Letendre, Lieutenant Pierre-Paul Elie, Corporal W. Arsenault and Private Jean-Paul Drouin. Department of National Defence. Library and Archives Canada, PA-137987 by Lieut. Barney J. Gloster

Formed as a reserve unit in 1869, the regiment sailed for Britain in July 1941 and garrisoned the islands until landed on Juno Beach at Bernières-sur-Mer, France, on D-Day, 6 June 1944, from HMCS Prince David and fought their way across Northwest Europe over the next 10 months as part of the 8th Infantry Brigade, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division.

Private Jack Roy of Le Régiment de la Chaudière preparing to disembark from HMCS Prince David off Bernières-sur-Mer, France, 6 June 1944. Note the No. 38 field wireless set across his chest, E-tool slung over his shoulder, helmet skrim, and wrapped Enfield. PD-371 LAC 3396561

An unidentified infantryman of Le Régiment de la Chaudière, 8th Infantry Brigade, 3rd Canadian Infantry Division, preparing to disembark from HMCS Prince David off the Normandy beachhead, France, 6 June 1944. Note that his Enfield is in a protective plastic bag. PD-360. LAC 3202207

They earned 19 battle honors for their time in Europe.

Still on the Canadian rolls, as a reserve unit, they are garrisoned in Levis, Quebec.

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