Th th Rar Battalio On or about 2 February 1945 Division, 416th Infantry Division, 19th...

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On or about 2 February 1945, during Lieuten- ant General George Patton’s corps commanders’ conference, the subject of river crossings was discussed, not for the first time. The strategic goal was to reach and cross the Rhine River, which was the last significant natural barrier between the position of the western Allied forces and the German capital of Berlin. Patton ordered Major General Walton H. Walker, XX Corps commander, to cross the Saar River with the 94th Infantry Division and establish a foothold to enable the 10th Armored Division to cross. Walker reported that the 319th Engineer Combat Battalion could put a footbridge across the river but that the Hocker Mountain (or Hockerberg) cliffs on the East side were too steep for soldiers to climb. According to Walker, Patton then asked what the 5th Ranger Battalion was doing. The 5th Ranger Battalion was activated on 1 September 1943 at Camp Forrest, Tennessee, and was originally commanded by Major Owen H. Carter. After months of training at Camp Forrest, the U.S. Navy Scout and Raiders School at Fort Pierce, Florida, and Fort Dix, New Jersey, the 5th Ranger Battalion boarded the HMS Mauretania on 8 January 1944 and set sail for England. After ar- riving at Liverpool on 18 January, the battalion continued intense training for the upcoming invasion of Europe. On D-Day, 6 June 1944, the 5th Ranger Battalion, along with the 2d Ranger Battalion, took part in the landings at Omaha Beach. Over the next several months, the 5th Rangers then fought their way across France and into Germany. The Saar River was the western boundary of the Saar- Moselle Triangle. On the east side of the Saar was the heavily fortified Siegfried Switch Line. The fortress city of Trier was the top of the triangle, and capturing it was the primary mission of Walker’s XX Corps. The German Wehrmacht had escaped over the Saar River and destroyed the bridges in January 1945. Their defensive strategy was centered on the Siegfried Line, a defense system of concrete and steel pillboxes, “dragon teeth” tank obstacles, and tank ditches. The Germans fully recognized the importance of holding the Triangle and city of Trier. They moved the 11th Panzer Division, which had recently suffered heavy casualties, along with tanks and the 256th Volksgrenadier Division, into defensive positions to support the 2d Army history By Roger B. Neighborgall The 5th Ranger Battalion and the Battle of Irsch-Zerf 24 February - 5 March 1945 ON POINT Fall 2009

Transcript of Th th Rar Battalio On or about 2 February 1945 Division, 416th Infantry Division, 19th...

On or about 2 February 1945, during Lieuten-ant General George Patton’s corps commanders’ conference, the subject of river crossings was discussed, not for the first time. The strategic goal was to reach and cross the Rhine River, which was the last significant natural barrier between the position of the western Allied forces and the German capital of Berlin. Patton ordered Major General Walton H. Walker, XX Corps commander, to cross the Saar River with the 94th Infantry Division and establish a foothold to enable the 10th Armored Division to cross. Walker reported that the 319th Engineer Combat Battalion could put a footbridge across the river but that the Hocker Mountain (or Hockerberg) cliffs on the East side were too steep for soldiers to climb. According to Walker, Patton then asked what the 5th Ranger Battalion was doing.

The 5th Ranger Battalion was activated on 1 September 1943 at Camp Forrest, Tennessee, and was originally commanded by Major Owen H. Carter. After months of training at Camp Forrest, the U.S. Navy Scout and Raiders School at Fort Pierce, Florida, and Fort Dix, New Jersey, the 5th Ranger Battalion boarded the HMS Mauretania on 8 January 1944 and set sail for England. After ar-riving at Liverpool on 18 January, the battalion continued intense training for the upcoming invasion of Europe. On D-Day, 6 June 1944, the 5th Ranger Battalion, along with the 2d Ranger Battalion, took part in the landings at Omaha Beach. Over the next several months, the 5th Rangers then fought their way across France and

into Germany.The Saar River was the western boundary of the Saar-Moselle Triangle. On the east side of the Saar was the heavily fortified Siegfried Switch Line. The fortress city of Trier was the top of the triangle, and capturing

it was the primary mission of Walker’s XX Corps.The German Wehrmacht had escaped over the Saar River

and destroyed the bridges in January 1945. Their defensive strategy was centered on the Siegfried Line, a defense system of concrete and steel pillboxes, “dragon teeth” tank obstacles, and tank ditches. The Germans fully recognized the importance of holding the Triangle and city of Trier. They moved the 11th Panzer Division, which had recently suffered heavy casualties, along with tanks and the 256th Volksgrenadier Division, into defensive positions to support the 2d

Army history

By Roger B. Neighborgall

The 5th Ranger

Battalion and the

Battle of Irsch-Zerf

24 February - 5 March 1945

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Mountain Division, 416th Infantry Division, 19th Volksgrenadier Division, and the 25th Panzer Grenadier Division already in place. All divisions, except for the 2d Mountain Division, had participated in the Battle of the Bulge and were un-dermanned. Unlike the U.S. Army, which incorporated individual replacements into units, the Wehrmacht did not. German formations fought until they could no longer function as effective fighting units.

The irony of the situation was that XX Corps was back on the banks of the Saar River in early February 1945, almost exactly where it had been on 19 Decem-ber 1944. On that date, XX Corps consisted of the 90th and 95th Infantry Divisions and the 6th Armored Division. The mission then was to cross the Saar River and capture Trier. However, the von Rundstedt offen-sive, commonly known as the Battle of the Bulge, intervened.

On 19 December 1944, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in Europe, ordered Patton to reorient his Third Army and attack north into the German penetration into the Allied lines. Third Army consisted of eight infantry divisions and five armored divisions, plus as many as ten artillery battalions of 105mm guns or larger. The total personnel count was over 300,000 men. The Third Army’s shift from attacking east to north was an amazing feat of planning and logistics that was pulled off in just forty-eight hours.

Patton’s immediate challenge was weather. It was cold and rainy and muddy, with snow on the ground and with a low ceiling that eliminated air support. Patton ordered the Third Army chaplain to pray for good weather. Chaplain James O’Neill did so, but reluctantly, noting that is was not customary to pray for nice weather to kill fellow men. O’Neill prayed:

Almighty Father, we humbly beseech Thee, of Thy great goodness, to restrain these immoderate rains with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for Battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon Thee that, armed with Thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppres-sion and wickedness of our enemies, and establish Thy justice among men and nations. Amen.

On the back of the chaplain’s prayer, when it was issued to all soldiers, was a message from General Patton:

To each officer and soldier in the Third United States Army, I wish a Merry Christmas. I have full confidence in your courage, devotion to duty and skill in battle. We march in our might to complete victory. May God’s bless-ing rest upon each of you on the Christmas Day.

I received the card containing the prayer and message while in a 1½-ton truck, headed for a mission. I read the Christmas greet-ing first and thought it a very nice thing for General Patton to do. When I read the prayer for good weather, I was confused—it was obvious that the weather was miserable.

After the Battle of the Bulge was successfully concluded, the 5th Ranger Battalion received orders on 22 February 1945 to join XX Corps and was assigned to Major General Harry J. Malony’s 94th Infantry Division for a special mission. The strength of the battalion was twenty officers and 378 enlisted men organized into six rifle companies (A-F). Each company had two light machine guns and two 60mm mortars. Each Ranger had the choice of an M1 Garand, M1 carbine, or Thompson submachine gun. I was a staff sergeant in Company A and chose a Garand. Company A was commanded by Captain Charles “Ace” Parker, who earned a Distinguished Service Cross on D-Day. Additionally, there was a headquarters company that had the battalion commander, Lieuten-ant Colonel Richard P. Sullivan, and his staff, along with six 81mm mortars, two heavy water-cooled .30 caliber machine guns, twelve

Staff Sergeant Roger Neighborgall joined the 5th Ranger Battalion shortly after the battalion landed in Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944. (Author’s Collection)

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rocket launchers (better known as bazookas), and a supply of anti-tank mines.

Our mission was to cross the Saar River and climb the Hockerberg; fight through a forest known as the Waldgut Hundscheid and the Siegfried Line to the Irsch-Zerf road; set up a defensive position to preclude the Germans from using the road to re-supply the defenders of Zerf; and protect the flank of the 10th Armored Division. The length of the mission was not to exceed forty-eight hours, or until relieved by the 10th Armored Division.

The order to transfer the 5th Ranger Battalion to the 94th Division for a mission behind enemy lines resulted in wild ex-citement and celebration, as well as meticulous preparation to ensure success. Each soldier was issued two chocolate D-ration bars and two K-rations, extra grenades, and as many machine gun ammunition belts as he could carry. Additionally, each company received about twenty anti-tank mines.

On 23 February 1945, we left Weiten to march to the Saar River crossing point at Taben-Rodt. We understood that the 94th Infantry Division had established a bridgehead over the river. Our march was continually under German artillery fire; at about 1730, two rounds landed on 1st Platoon, Company A, of which I was a member. Six soldiers were killed instantly and eighteen were wounded. I was blown into a ditch and knocked uncon-cious. I was awakened when two medics lifted me by my head and feet to pitch me onto a pile of dead soldiers. I was wearing a tag indicating that I was dead. The wounded had already been hauled to an aid station.

Having found myself very much alive but without my own rifle and helmet, I grabbed the nearest M1 and helmet and took off to rejoin my unit, over the objections of the med-ics. (Incidentally, it is unwise to go into battle with a weapon that you have not zeroed in, but off I went.) For every mis-sion, each Ranger is fully briefed on the situation, so I knew exactly where to go. I rejoined Company A at about 1930 and learned that Sergeant Philipp V. Thomas was now acting platoon leader of 1st Platoon. The remaining complement of Company A was now twenty-eight soldiers and one officer. We moved slowly down the river bank at about 2100 hours, in total darkness, to the pontoon foot bridge. I could see that there was a rope to hold onto, and the last words I heard were “Don’t fall in, as nobody will attempt to rescue you.” The river was at flood stage, so water was splashing over the ten-inch plank bridge. Fortunately, the water on the bridge did not freeze, even though the temperature was below freezing. We expected to see elements of the 302d Infantry Regiment, but we found ourselves alone on a fairly wide river bank. The battalion formed into two columns to climb the Hockerberg, which was in the Waldgut Hundscheid. Companies A, C, and F were on the north side, and B, D, and E were about 100 yards south. Headquarters Company followed in the rear. A forward observer team from the 284th Field Artillery Battalion, which was equipped with 105mm howitzers, accompanied Compa-nies A and B and battalion headquarters. The Hockerberg was almost vertical in places, and it was largely covered in bushes and trees. The only way to move forward was on hands and knees, clinging to bushes and following the sound of the person in front of you. The Rangers were trained to move silently, but the loose tops on the anti-tank mines we were carrying rattled

with every step. The rattling drew the attention of the German artillery which, unable to see us, fired rounds indiscriminately. Fortunately, we suffered no casualties. On two occasions, I lost contact with the Ranger in front of me, but I kept on moving upward while privately praying for guidance. The temperature was below freez-ing, but we all were soaked in sweat. Also, for unknown reasons, my compass did not work. Although we did not know it, the Hockerberg was filled with iron ore.

However, we knew we were moving on a ten-degree azimuth. So, sometime in the early morning, Company A commander, Captain Parker, asked the 284th Field Artillery spotter to request two rounds to be fired at a long range but on a ten-degree azimuth. These shots enabled us to orient ourselves. At first light, about 0530, on 24 February, we arrived at the top of the mountain and at the edge of the forest. We could see what appeared to be a plateau with clusters of trees. We used this concealed area to reorganize.

About 150 yards in front of Company A was a pillbox that appeared to be unmanned. Sergeant Thomas and I took a small patrol to investigate. We soon found nineteen unarmed German soldiers enjoying breakfast. Their first reaction was laughter, as they thought we were

Lieutenant Colonel Richard P. Sullivan as-sumed command of the 5th Ranger Battalion in July 1944 and led the battalion through the end of the war. (U.S. Army Special Operations Command History Office)

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Germans in American uniforms. We quickly took our first nineteen prisoners but lost the element of surprise as the other pillboxes were somehow notified of our presence. Our compasses were still unreliable, so we asked the 284th Field Artillery Battalion to fire another two rounds on a ten-degree azimuth. It became apparent that we faced a series of pillboxes all facing southeast, which was the natural avenue of attack. So, the ten-degree azimuth had us attacking on a diagonal. This partially protected us from the overlapping fire of adjacent pillboxes. As for the pillboxes, our plan of attack was to blow open the rear doors rather than attack them frontally. As sunset approached, we had captured over 100 prisoners.

Before it got completely dark, we could see a group of farmhouses on our right front. I led a patrol, and,

This map shows XX Corps’ attack across the Saar River, including the 5th Ranger Battalion’s infiltration behind German lines to block the Irsch-Zerf Road. (U.S. Army Special Operations Command History Office)

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although we thought the houses looked empty, we found the occu-pants hidden in the cellars. After posting a guard detail, we secured the prisoners in a barn and moved inside. We told the prisoners they would not be harmed if they stayed put. The occupants of the farmhouses gave us several loaves of black bread, the likes of which I had never seen, and which I initially thought were rotten. Hunger drove me to taste my first pumpernickel bread. We also discovered smoked hams in each fireplace chimney and made delicious sand-wiches with the bread. This meal was a welcome improvement over military-issue rations.

At daylight the next day, 25 February, we left the farmhouses and moved to the Irsch-Zerf road under sporadic firing from the woods. We found two pillboxes (Nos. 157 and 159) in our perim-eter that were unoccupied, and we put our prisoners inside them. Company A was the first to reach the road known locally as the Saarburger Road. We quickly placed mines on the road and set up machine gun coverage. At about 0830, a German staff car with an officer and three soldiers stopped when they saw the mines. We captured them, a doctor and three medics, along with a consider-able amount of medical supplies. The doctor expressed disbelief that Americans were 4,000 meters behind the front lines. After recovering from his dismay, he decided he was a doctor first and a German officer second, so he and his medical team went to work on both wounded Americans and Germans.

As the day went on, we continued to take prisoners. Next, a German half-track filled with soldiers hit a mine, and its occupants quickly surrendered. Later, a German tank hunter, or Panzerjäger, was stopped by a Ranger rocket launcher. Other Ranger companies

destroyed several German vehicles.Since our lines were under German artillery observation, enemy

rounds and rockets landed frequently in our perimeter. Suddenly, the rounds stopped and an attack by about 200 German infantrymen came from the south. We called in support from the 284th Field Artillery Battalion and broke up the attack. We soon learned that the 284th was assigned to support us exclusively, and there were three other XX Corps artillery units that were on call to provide fire support.

The two days allotted to our mission had now passed, but where was the 10th Armored Division? As darkness fell, it became misty and foggy. An estimated 300 German soldiers then attacked from the east; we saw them before they saw us. Our plan called on us to let them walk through without giving away our position. Several German soldiers walked within a few feet of my foxhole but never saw me. When the last German cleared our perimeter, Sergeant Thomas gave the order open fire, and we shot the Germans in the back. Many surrendered and we collected another ninety prisoners. That night passed without any other serious German actions.

At about 1400 hours on 26 February, the Germans mounted an-other major attack from the southwest. They overran my Company A positions and the result was chaotic. In most cases, we were still dug in our foxholes, and Captain Parker gave the 284th spotter team an order to “fire for effect” on our position. The 284th questioned the order but finally agreed. I hid low in my hole and tried to stay under my helmet. Dozens of 105mm howitzer rounds roared in and detonated. The Germans were slaughtered by shell fragments; many of those who were not killed surrendered. Years later, I met

Then First Lieutenant Charles “Ace” Parker (right) is congratulated by 5th Ranger Battalion commander Lieutenant Colonel Max F. Schneider after Parker was awarded the Distinguished Ser-vice Cross for his actions on D-Day. Parker would later be promoted to captain and command Company A, 5th Ranger Battalion, during the Battle of Irsch-Zerf. (U.S. Army Special Opera-tions Command History Office)

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Corporal Ralph Winkler, who was in the 284th Field Artillery Bat-talion command center when the request to “fire on our position” was received. Winkler personally described to me the mass confu-sion and reluctance the request caused—the 284th’s mission was to support the 5th Rangers, not kill them. I heard Captain Parker’s end of the dialog, and the language he used is of a type not normally heard in church and will not be repeated here.

By dawn on 27 February, now into the third day of our two-day mission, we had very little food and were dangerously low on am-munition. I had no food and only one clip for my M1; however, I had a German rifle and some ammunition. But again we asked, “Where was the 10th Armored Division?” The German artillery rounds and rockets were becoming more frequent. Someone suggested taking the German prisoners out of the pillboxes and putting them up on top. With the prisoners on top of Pillbox No. 157 to “protect” us, the incoming rounds decreased significantly as the Germans were reluctant to fire on their own soldiers. I might add that this approach made security impossible, so some of the prisoners escaped.

On 28 February, the 284th Field Artillery Battalion sent their L-4 liaison planes over our perimeter to drop food and ammuni-tion from 500 feet. Unfortunately, German machine gun fire drove them up to 1,500-2,000 feet, and as a result, no food dropped into the Ranger perimeter, and the ammunition was battered and use-less. Battalion Chaplain Joseph Lacy came to visit Company A, and I told him I was scared that I would be killed. He replied that everyone was scared, but the important thing was not to let the men you lead know it.

On 1 March 1945, the 284th’s L-4s came back, but this time

they dropped canisters of machine gun belts. We had to clean every round, but the results were reasonably good. We got an order to capture several enemy strong points to the south, in the Kalfertshaus area that we had bypassed in our attack. We attacked under a rolling artillery barrage and captured a pillbox by blasting open the back door. Approximately fifty Germans surrendered. One officer, who spoke perfect English, expressed surprise that we could follow an artillery barrage so closely. That night, a hungry German police dog wandered into our perimeter. We fed him, and he became a superb sentry as he growled at noise indiscriminately, whether it was German or American.

As dusk fell, I was in my foxhole when I heard a noise behind me. I turned around to shoot toward the noise and recognized Chap-lain Lacy crawling toward me on his stomach. I grabbed him and pulled him into my foxhole. He said “I was just passing through the neighborhood and thought I’d drop in and say hello.” He had come to comfort me, of course, and to this day, I remember his wonderful sense of humor and the way it lifted my spirits. Military chaplains are the too-often unsung heroes of the troops serving in war zones. Chaplain Lacy also told me, if you see your “buddy” killed, it is correct to say a prayer but also okay to say to yourself, “I’m truly sorry, but I’m glad it is not me!”

On the morning of 2 March, Company A, which had started this mission with about forty men and three officers, was reduced to eighteen men and one officer. My platoon, initially of about

Rangers of the 5th Battalion slowly advance through thick woods shortly after crossing the Saar River on 23 February 1945. (National Archives)

The 284th Field Artillery Battalion was assigned the mission of supporting the 5th Ranger Battalion during the Irsch-Zerf battle. The battalion’s well-placed artillery barrages broke up several German attempts to overwhelm the Ranger perimeter. (National Archives)

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twenty men, was down to eight. At about 0730, the Germans attacked, but we were dug in and easily threw back the attackers. There was a rumor that the 10th Armored Division had made contact with Company E and carried off wounded Rangers and some prisoners. If the rumor was true, Company A received no benefit from their proximity. In the early evening, German artillery blasted the area with little or no result. However, the shelling continued that night at a frenzied pace, and we were pinned in our foxholes, even for biological functions.

On 3 March, several members of the German 2d Mountain Division walked into Company A’s perimeter and surrendered. They reported through an interpreter that their regiment was almost annihilated, that their commanding officer was killed, and that their regiment no longer functioned. They also said that their assigned mis-sion was to destroy the Rangers by killing or capturing the entire unit. They were astounded at our small size.

About 150 Germans attacked from both the north and the west the following day, 4 March. However, by this time the foliage had been destroyed, so we had a

Chaplain Joseph Lacy (right), being presented the Distin-guished Service Cross by Lieu-tenant Colonel James E. Rudder for his actions on D-Day, helped maintain morale among the Rangers during the Battle of Irsch-Zerf. (U.S. Army Special Operations Command History Office)

After capturing this pillbox, No. 157, the 5th Rangers used it to house German prisoners. In an effort to reduce the heavy German shell-ing falling on their perimeter, the Rangers ordered the prisoners on top of the pillbox, and as a result, incoming rounds decreased significantly. (Author’s Collection)

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Roger B. Neighborgall entered the service from West Virginia in 1941. He was awarded the Bronze Star and the Silver Star for his actions during his service with the 5th Ranger Battalion. He returned from World War II to finish his undergraduate degree at Duke University. Upon graduation, he entered the corporate world specializing in the government/business sector where he served for sixty years.

Roger has appeared on both the History Channel and Discovery Channel in World War II programs. He resides in Falls Church, Virginia.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The Irsch-Zerf Road as it appears today. In 1957, the West Ger-man government tore down the remaining pillboxes in the area. (Author’s Collection).

wide open field of crossfire. Additionally, the 284th Field Artillery Battalion gave us supporting fire. We captured about fifty more prisoners and killed many more.

Finally, on 5 March, the 5th Ranger Battalion was relieved by the 302d Infantry Regiment, 94th Infantry Division. During its nine-day battle behind enemy lines, the 5th Ranger Battalion killed or captured over 600 soldiers, and wounded an equal number. President Harry S. Truman later acknowledged our accomplishment by awarding the Presidential Unit Citation to the 5th Ranger Battalion.

RANGERS LEAD THE WAY!

Postscript: In my conversation with Major General Walker after the war, I asked him if a decision had been made to abandon the 5th Ranger Battalion for the greater good. He said that things like that do happen. In this case, however, although the 10th Ar-mored Division forded the river with orders to turn south, relieve the 5th Rangers, and destroy the German 2d Mountain Division, their orders were changed to attack Trier. The plight of the Rangers was never discussed.

The only other survivor of the Battle of Irsch-Zerf known to me is Daniel Farley of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Daniel has reviewed this article and contributed several helpful details and suggestions. O

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