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The Bravest Of the Brave: The 3rd Infantry Division in World War II 34 ARMY ■ November 2003 By Robert P. Broadwater The annals of the United States military in World War II are filled with acts of heroism that give evidence to the highest levels of patriotism, courage, honor and self-sacrifice. Units and individuals left to future generations a legacy that will always shine as an example of what free men can and will do when called upon to defend the rights they hold so dear. With so many acts of bravery, in so many places, one cannot presume to pronounce any military organization to have been any braver, or more heroic than another, but when measured in terms of recorded instances of valor, Photographs: National Archives November 2003 ■ ARMY 35 Lt. Maurice Britt receives the Silver Star from Maj. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott Jr., the commander of the 3rd Infantry Division. the 3rd Infantry Division stands alone. The division’s stellar performance in Operation Iraqi Freedom has brought it again into prominence and reminds us of its heritage. During the four years that America fought in World War II, there were a total of 440 Medals of Honor presented to members of the nation’s military. Members of the Army took the lion’s share of these, with 301 medals. Members of the 3rd Infantry Division won a total of 36 Medals of Honor, or approximately 12 percent of the total number awarded to the Army. The next closest contender was the 1st Infantry Division, with a total of 16, and two other divisions with 10 or more. In addition, 71 members of the division were awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the second highest medal awarded by the Army for bravery. The sheer disparity in numbers between the 3rd Division and the rest of the Army is impressive. The individual stories that go along with those numbers reinforce the 3rd Infantry Division’s reputation as the bravest of the brave. The 3rd Division was mobilized early in 1941 when the President declared a state of emergency. The task of bringing it up to full strength was taken to a fever pitch after Pearl Harbor. By July 1942, the division had been recruited, the men trained and orders had been received for the 3rd to make ready to go to war. It was to take part in Operation Torch, the American invasion of North Africa. Operation Torch was intended to gain a foothold in French North Africa, from which offensive operations could be launched against continental Europe. American troops were to be landed at three points: Casablanca in Morocco, and Oran and Algiers in Algeria. The 3rd Division was entrusted with the capture of Casablanca. The soldiers embarked on transport ships in the United States and sailed directly to Morocco. The landing was successfully accomplished on November 8, 1942, and after the Vichy French forces recovered from their initial surprise, three days of hard fighting ensued before they capitulated. In fact, when the French surrendered, they joined forces with the Americans. Casablanca had been a key objective. Its possession by the Allies ensured that military operations in North Africa could proceed without fear that the Straits of Gibraltar would be sealed off, denying naval access to the Mediterranean. The division next moved east, in support of the British assault on Tunisia. The British forces were attacking the ROBERT P. BROADWATER writes a monthly column for Military Trader. He has also written six books and has had over 70 articles published in national magazines. His next book, on the Civil War Battle of Bentonville, is scheduled for release in the fall of 2003. 36 ARMY ■ November 2003 Mareth Line in Tunisia from two directions: west from Egypt and east from Algiers. The Mareth Line was a fortified position in Tunisia that had been built by the French, but was now being occupied by German and Italian troops. A strong position and well defended, it proved too formidable for the British to take, so Allied forces established a defensive position in the Tunisian mountains while they waited for reinforcements to arrive. It was during this time that Rommel resumed the offensive, attacking the Americans at Kasserine Pass and punching a hole in the Allied line. The German drive stalled, however, when it could not be reinforced, and a strong British force in its front caused the attacking column to call off the offensive and return to the Mareth Line. Allied forces kept up the pressure on the Germans and Italians, and on May 10, 1943, the Mareth Line fell and the Allies had complete control of North Africa. There was little time for the men of the 3rd Division to rest at the end of the North African campaign. Orders were issued almost immediately to prepare for the invasion of Sicily, and the division made ready for its second amphibious operation of the war. Sicily would be the first step in the invasion of Europe, and it would also be the first place where members of the 3rd Division would display the conspicuous bravery that would be recognized with the Medal of Honor. The landing took place on the morning of July 10, 1943, under terrible conditions caused by gale force winds and rough seas. Light opposition was encountered on the beaches as the 3rd Division stormed ashore, and the immediate objectives were quickly taken. The Allies consolidated their beachhead positions and prepared to move inland. The 3rd Division was operating as part of Gen. George S. Patton’s 7th Army. Patton’s orders were to drive westward against Agriento, while the British, under Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, were to advance north, along the coast road toward Messina. Patton, however, had other ideas. He captured Agriento, then thrust his army north and west to capture Palermo. From there, he shifted due east, in a race to beat Montgomery to Messina and to cut off the route of retreat for the German and Italian armies. During this east- tunity to face these foes again. After a ern thrust, the 3rd Division was called brief rest, they were ordered to preupon to make two amphibious landpare for their fifth amphibious landings, as Patton kept the Germans runing of the war: the invasion of Italy. ning by throwing large forces in their Mainland Europe was invaded by rear as he hammered at their front. The first member of the 3rd Divithe Allies when they landed at Salerno sion to earn a Medal of Honor was on September 9, 1943. The Germans 2nd Lt. Robert Craig. On July 11, 1943, and Italians were forced to give ground, near Favoratta, Sicily, Craig attacked and by early October the 3rd Division, and silenced a machine gun that had along with the 7th Armored Division been holding up the advance of his and the 82nd Airborne had captured company. Shortly thereafter, his plaNaples. toon was attacked by an enemy force The strong German position at of over 100 men, and Craig ordered Monte Cassino held up Gen. Mark his platoon to withdraw, while he covClark’s 5th Army, however, and it was ered its retreat himself. In an attempt determined to launch another amto draw all enemy fire to himself, phibious landing behind the Germans Craig charged the German force, in an effort to break the stalemate. The killing 5 and wounding 3. He had ad3rd Division boarded ships for their Lt. Robert Craig vanced to a position a mere 25 yards sixth time of hitting the beaches and from the enemy line and was able to were landed at Anzio on the morning hold their attention long enough for of January 22, 1944. The move had the rest of his platoon to reach the reltaken the Germans completely by surative safety of the crest of a hill. The prise, and the 3rd Division only had concentrated small arms fire of the ento contend with a single company of emy finally shot him down. His Germans when they came ashore. courageous act had saved the platoon Troops rapidly pushed inland, but at the cost of his own life. when resistance stiffened near CisFirst Lt. David Waybur earned his terna, the troops were ordered to Medal of Honor near Agriento on July hold their positions and consolidate 17, 1943. Waybur had been ordered to before the final push was made. The take three vehicles to search for a American high command was unRanger unit that had been trapped beaware that the roads to Rome were hind German lines. His patrol was to only lightly guarded and that the city depart at night to give it some hope of could easily have fallen with a coneluding the numerous road blocks certed effort. The week of inactivity and machine-gun nests that the Gerthat followed allowed the Germans to mans were known to have placed bring up 13 divisions. The opportualong the route. Waybur was successnity for an easy capture of Rome had Lt. David C. Waybur ful in avoiding these, but the patrol vanished, and five months of hard was suddenly cut off and surrounded fighting would be necessary before by four German tanks, and it looked as if the only rational the city finally fell on June 5, 1944. course of action was to surrender. Waybur, however, deThe men of the 3rd Division were awarded 15 Medals of cided to make a fight of it. He ordered his vehicles to dis- Honor for their service in Italy. Conspicuous gallantry and perse and fire on the tanks with .30- and .50-caliber ma- heroism were evidenced daily in the struggle to take chine guns. Three of his men were quickly wounded, and Rome. The first 3rd Division Medal of Honor in the Italian Waybur himself was seriously wounded, but he picked up campaign was earned by Capt. Maurice Britt for his aca Thompson machine gun and charged the lead tank, tions near Mignano on November 10. Britt was commandkilling the crew and causing the tank to run into a small ing a small portion of his company when they were atbridge and into the stream bed below. Despite overwhelm- tacked by over 100 Germans as part of a counterattack ing odds, Waybur continued to battle against the tanks and along the line. Despite the overwhelming odds, Britt and was able to hold his position until the following day when his men held their position. Though wounded in the side he was relieved and his wounded men could be evacuated. by a bullet and in the face and hands by grenade fragThe capture of Messina by Patton’s army signaled the ments, Britt refused to give up the fight. Firing his carbine end of the fighting in Sicily. A large number of the German until he had run out of ammunition, he then picked up an and Italian troops had escaped capture and fled to Italy M1 and continued to battle the Germans, throwing a total and the mainland. The 3rd Division would have the oppor- of 32 fragmentation grenades in addition to his small arms November 2003 ■ ARMY 37 Lt. Audie Murphy Sgt. Sylvester Antolak PFC Wilburn K. Ross The fall of Rome and the Allied confire. Britt wiped out a machine-gun trol of Italy should have earned the crew, killed another five Germans, 3rd Division a well deserved period of wounded an unknown number and rest. They had seen some of the bloodcaptured another four. Britt’s personal iest combat of the war to date and had courage was largely responsible for performed in an exemplary manner thwarting the German counterattack, through all the trials and hardships of which, if successful, would have cut three separate campaigns. With a total off and isolated his battalion. He of 17 Medals of Honor credited to the refused medical attention for him unit, it would already have been self, seeing to his men instead, until awarded more than any other division ordered to seek aid by his battalion had they sat out the rest of the war commander. as garrison troops in Rome, but rest Sgt. Sylvester Antolak was awarded and rear echelon duty had never been the Medal of Honor for heroism exthe role of the 3rd Division. After a hibited during the breakout from short period to refit and reorganize, Anzio, near Cisterna di Littoria, on the division received orders to make May 24, 1944. Antolak was leading his yet another amphibious landing, this squad in an attack on the German potime in southern France. Fighting on sition when they ran into heavy fire Sgt. James P. Connor French soil, 16 additional members of from machine guns, machine pistols the 3rd Division would be awarded and other small arms. The hail of bullets was tremendous, and the squad hesitated amidst the the Medal of Honor. On August 15, 1944, the 3rd Division landed on French storm. Antolak pushed forward alone, a full 30 yards in front of his men. He was seriously wounded and knocked shores near Toulon and Marseilles. When those two port to the ground three different times, but rose to continue his cities quickly fell, the Allies pushed north. German resisone-man attack on each occasion. His left shoulder had tance was crumbling, and the Nazis were in full retreat bebeen badly gashed, and his right arm was shattered and fore the American 7th and French 1st Armies. useless, but he wedged his sub-machine gun under his left During the landing on August 15, Sgt. James Connor armpit and charged the German strong point, closing to a led his platoon through intense fire from mortars, madistance of 15 yards before spraying the position with bul- chine guns, 20 mm flak guns and snipers as they came lets. Two Germans were killed and another 10 surrendered. ashore at Cape Cavalaire. A hanging mine killed his lieuAntolak, refusing medical attention, then reorganized his tenant and seriously wounded Connor in the neck, men and launched an attack against a second German but Connor refused medical attention and pushed his strong point 100 yards away. Again in advance of his men, men forward. The enemy held a commanding position he had covered a distance of 75 yards when he was killed on the peninsula on which the Americans were landing instantly by enemy fire. His heroic example so inspired his and they threatened the entire operation. The platoon atmen that they surged forward and captured the position. tacked this strongpoint, though heavily outnumbered, and 38 ARMY ■ November 2003 his exposed position to pull rounds from his machine-gun Connor himself killed two German snipers. When the platoon sergeant was killed, Connor assumed magazines in order to have anything to fire at all. Ross excommand of the platoon and he pushed the attack for- pended his remaining ammunition in repelling this attack ward. He was felled by a second wound that lacerated his and was ordered to fall back on the company command shoulder and back, but he once more refused to be evacu- post. He refused to follow the directive, however, upon ated. With only about 12 of the original 36 men of the pla- hearing that additional ammunition was on its way. Defitoon remaining, Connor attacked the position, where he re- antly, he held his ground as the Germans surged forward ceived his third serious wound, this time in the leg. The in a last, all-out attempt to overrun him. The eight riflesergeant still tried to lead his men and relinquished com- men, without ammunition but still supporting the machine mand only after finding it impossible to stand. Neverthe- gun, fixed bayonets and waited. A runner arrived with amless, he refused evacuation and continued to direct the ac- munition at the last possible second, and Ross’ gun blazed tion from his prone position. Because of his courageous into action killing 40 and wounding 10 of the attacking example, the platoon was able to neutralize the German force, breaking the back of the assault. Though he had been position, capturing three machine guns and killing seven in combat for five continuous hours and had saved the German soldiers, while capturing another 40. A serious remnants of his company from destruction, he refused to threat to those 3rd Division men not yet landed had been be relieved and remained at his exposed post for 36 hours. The most famous hero of the 3rd Division was among eliminated through dogged determination and bravery. By September 11, the 7th Army had been able to link up the last to win a Medal of Honor in France. Second Lt. Auwith Patton’s 3rd Army, and it seemed as if the war was die Murphy was near Holtzwihr, France, on January 26, nearly over. The 7th Army reached the Rhine River, but 1945, when his company was attacked by six German was ordered to dig in and hold the position due to logisti- tanks with heavy infantry support. He ordered his men to cal problems. When the Germans launched their offensive retire to prepared positions in the woods and, disregarding in the Ardennes that would become known as the Battle of his own safety, remained exposed in order to call in and the Bulge, the 3rd Division, along with the rest of the 7th spot artillery fire. A nearby American tank destroyer was Army, was ordered to maintain their position to prevent hit by enemy fire and abandoned by the crew. Murphy, any of the German divisions that were facing them from alone and far in front of his own lines, continued to call in being used in the offensive. For four months, the division the artillery fire that was killing large numbers of the enfought in this static situation along the Rhine, keeping the emy. He then climbed aboard the tank destroyer, engulfed Germans to their front occupied and holding them in in flames and in danger of blowing up at any second, and turned its .50-caliber machine place. gun against the supporting inPvt. Wilburn Ross was fantry, killing dozens in the awarded the Medal of Honor process. Though alone and surfor his actions near St. Jacques, rounded on three sides, MurFrance, on October 30. His comphy continued this unequal pany had lost 55 of their 88 men contest for approximately one in an attack against an enhour. He was wounded in the trenched force of elite German leg, but fought on until he had mountain troops. When the exhausted all of the available Germans launched a counteratammunition. Returning to his tack, Ross took his light macompany, he organized them chine gun to a position 10 yards for a counterattack that threw in advance of his supporting rithe Germans back and re-estabflemen, and from this vantage lished the line, even though he point, defeated seven separate was himself seriously wounded. German assaults, despite the His spotting for the artillery refact that he had become the sulted in large numbers of the focal point of the entire Ger enemy being killed, and Murman attack and was being phy was personally credited showered by rifle fire and hand with killing more than 50 of the grenades that exploded all attacking Germans himself. around him. By the time the Audie Murphy emerged from Germans mounted their eighth the war as America’s most decassault, the remaining riflemen orated soldier. He continued to had exhausted their ammuniact out in motion pictures the tion. Ross beat back this attack heroics he had lived. “To Hell virtually alone, as the riflemen Soldiers of the 3rd Infantry Division climb ladand Back,” starring Audie Murwere forced to crawl forward to ders as they advance in Besancon, France. November 2003 ■ ARMY 39 The 3rd Infantry Division marches into Cori, Italy. phy as himself, depicted his and the division’s exploits during the war. At the end of March 1945, the 3rd Division, along with the rest of the 7th Army, was finally permitted to cross the Rhine and invade the German heartland. As part of 6th Army Group, they swept through southeast Germany and beat the German army in a race to the Alps in southern Germany and Austria, where the Nazis had planned to reorganize and make another stand. The swift movements of the American Army cut the Germans off from their mountain stronghold, causing the Nazi army to disintegrate, with thousands surrendering daily. On May 8, Germany officially capitulated and the war was over. The 3rd Division fought in Germany for less than two months, but three more members of the division had distinguished themselves during that time and were awarded the Medal of Honor. Pvt. Joseph Merrell was awarded the medal for his actions on April 18, 1945, near Lohe, Germany. His company was attacking a fortified position on a hill when the Germans opened a galling fire with two heavy machine guns, machine pistols and small arms, taking a heavy toll on the Americans and pinning them down. Merrell took it upon himself to silence the machine guns and launched a one man attack. He ran 100 yards through the concentrated fire of the enemy and killed four Germans armed with machine pistols. As he started for the next objective, his rifle was shattered by a sniper’s bullet, leaving him armed with only three hand grenades. Merrell did not hesitate. He zigzagged the 200 yards that separated him from the first machine-gun nest and threw two of his grenades at the position. After the blasts, he rushed the Germans, seized a Luger and killed the crew members who had survived the blasts. He then attacked the second machine-gun nest, 30 yards away. As he crawled toward his objective, he was grievously wounded in the abdomen, but succeeded in killing four Germans in camouflaged foxholes along the way. Throwing his last grenade at the machine gun, he rushed the Germans and finished them off with his Luger. He had just silenced the gun when he was killed instantly by a burst from a machine pistol. His disregard for his own 40 ARMY ■ November 2003 safety had eliminated a dangerous threat to his unit. In the process, he had silenced two enemy machine guns and personally killed 23 German soldiers. From July 11, 1943, until April 18, 1945, a period of 22 months, members of the division had been awarded 36 Medals of Honor, an amazing ratio of more than 1.5 medals per month. This certainly bears evidence to the hard fighting the division was forced to endure during its many campaigns and also serves as a testimonial to the selfless, courageous spirit of the men who served in it. They were among the bravest of the brave. Regretfully, it is impossible to cite each of the 36 examples of bravery here, though each story deserves to be told. The following is a listing of all the men of the 3rd Division who were awarded the Medal of Honor in World War II: SSgt. Lucian Adams Sgt. Sylvester Antolak SSgt. Stanley Bender Capt. Maurice Britt First Lt. Frank Burke Pvt. Herbert Christian Sgt. James Connor Second Lt. Robert Craig Capt. Michael Daly Technical Sgt. Russell Dunham PFC John Dutko Technician Fifth Grade Eric Gibson PFC Lloyd Hawks Pvt. Elden Johnson First Lt. Victor Kandle SSgt. Gus Kefurt PFC Patrick Kessler PFC Alton Knappenberger PFC Floyd Lindstrom Technician Fifth Grade Robert Maxwell Pvt. Joseph Merrell Sgt. Harold Messerschmidt Pvt. James Mills Second Lt. Audie Murphy First Lt. Charles Murray Jr. Capt. Arlo Olson Sgt. Truman Olson Technician Fifth Grade Forrest Peden Pvt. Wilburn Ross PFC Henry Schauer Sgt. John Squires First Lt. John Tominac PFC Jose Valdez Lt. Col. Keith Ware First Lt. David Waybur First Lt. Eli Whiteley B