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82nd Airborne Division, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 3rd Battalion 1st Squad, H- Company |
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On 6 July 1942, at Fort Benning, Georgia, the 505th Parachute
Infantry Regiment was activated under the Airborne Command, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. On
4 February 1943, the Regiment was assigned to the 82d Airborne Division. The Regiment
arrived at Fort Bragg, North Carolina on 12 February 1943
Sicily - Operation Husky
On 9 July 1943, just over a year after it's activation the 505th
made the first regimental size combat parachute attack as part of Operation Husky l. Under
the capable leadership of Colonel James M. "Slim Jim" Gavin the 505th
was organized into a Regimental Combat Team which included the 3rd Battalion of the 504th.
As a staff officer in Airborne Command under General Lee, Colonel Gavin wrote
"Instructional Pamphlet for Airborne Operations". These theories and
observations would now be put to the test.
Their objective was to parachute behind enemy lines into an
egg-shaped area around Gela, Sicily. They would then close off roads leading to beaches
and secure the drop zone for further use. Especially important near the DZ was enemy-held
Objective Y - a series of 16 concrete "pillboxes" from which German gunners
controlled movement on nearby roads. However, Mother Nature did not cooperate.
On July 9th Colonel Gavin was informed that wind velocity in
the landing area was 35 miles per hour but the invasion was underway and there was no
turning back. It was under these harrowing conditions that the 505th had its first
trial-by-fire. Only 15% of the combat team had been delivered to the correct DZ.
Nevertheless, small groups of lost Paratroopers cut every phone line that they found
which devastated the communications of the Axis forces.
Ambushes were conducted and even Objective Y, the deadly
pillboxes, were secured. By continuing to fight in small groups the 505th led the
Germans and Italians to overestimate the number of airborne invaders thus impeding any
meaningful counterattacks. The German Herman Goering Panzer Division was another matter.
Even though outmanned and outgunned, the 505th used raw courage and fighting spirit to
block the steel behemoths of this Division from advancing toward the Allied landings on
the beachhead. With Sicily secure, the Allies continued attack on the Axis powers with
landings on the Italian mainland.
Salerno - Operation Avalanche
A landing on mainland Italy took place in the early morning of
12 September 1943 at Salerno under General Mark Clark. Within 72 hours German Field
Marshal Kesselring was poised to drive the Allies back into the sea. This set the stage
for the 505th's second combat jump. On the night of 14 September 1943, Jim Gavin's 505th
Parachute Infantry totaling roughly 2100 combat hardened paratroopers dropped onto the
tenuous Salerno beachhead. It was an encore performance of the previous night's precise
parachute jump by the 504th and no less spectacular. Within 24 hours these two units of
the 82nd Airborne had jumped on short notice and shored up the faltering Salerno
beachhead.
Two weeks later on 29 September the 505th had probed into the
outskirts of Naples thereby capturing the first major European city for the Allies. On 9
December 1943 Colonel Gavin was promoted to Brigadier General and assumed the duties of
the Assistant Division Commander of the 82nd Airborne while Lt Col Herbert Batchellor
assumed command of the 505th. During the early months of 1944, the Division was moved to
England as the allies were preparing for the assault on Western Europe. The regiment again
changed commanders. Lt Col William Ekman assumed command on 22 March 1944 and would lead
the 505th through the remainder of the war.
D-Day
The largest combined military operation in
history,"D-Day", was to be spearheaded by the 82d and 101st Airborne Divisions. Visibility was hampered by poor weather conditions as the C-47's
crossed the English Channel during the first hours of the 6th of June 1944. When the troop
carriers finally did made landfall on the Cherbourg Peninsula they came under heavy German
flak scattering many of the troop carrier flights. It was 0300 hours on 6 June 1944, when
the 505th were given the green light to jump. Some Pathfinders were able to
signal their dropzones. However, many of the troop carriers missed their dropzones and the
All-Americans of the 505th began landing across a large swath of the countryside around.
Nevertheless, the 505th PIR was one
of the first airborne units to hit the ground and despite the subsequent confusion
surrounding the landing, were able to use it to their advantage mustering enough troops
under the command of the 2nd Battalion Commander, Lt. Col. Benjamin Vandervoort to
liberate the first town in France, - St. Mere-Eglise. The paratroopers jumped
prior to the actual start of the invasion "H-Hour". Because of the tradition of
being the first into the fight, the 505th Regimental motto is "H-MINUS". For
their performance in the invasions the 505th was awarded the Presidential unit citation,
the unit equivalent of the Medal of Honor awarded to individual soldiers. In the words of
author Clay Blair, the paratroopers emerged from Normandy with the reputation of being a
pack of jackals; the toughest, most resourceful and bloodthirsty in Europe.
Operation Market Garden
Its success, however, was short-lived because of the defeat of other Allied units at
Arnhem. The gateway to Germany would not open in September 1944, and the 82nd was ordered
back to France.
Battle of the Bulge - The Ardennes Offensive
Suddenly, on December 16, 1944, the Germans launched a surprise offensive through the
Ardennes Forest which caught the Allies completely by surprise. Two days later the 82nd
joined the fighting and quickly blunted General Von Runstedt's northern penetration of the
American lines above Bastogne.
Meanwhile, on the morning of 19 December the 501st PIR of the 101st airbourne division was
digging in at Bastogne, as the Germans quickly infiltrated and cut off the road between
the two elements and the "Battle of the Bulge" offensive flowed around the two
airborne units.
Despite a lack of cold weather equipment once again airborne spirit, courage, and
hard-nosed determination won the day as the 505th withstood the bleak winter and stopped
the fanatic German attacks at Ste Vith and the Salm River.
For its valor in the seven major campaigns of the European Theatre of Operations, the 505th was awarded two Distinguished Unit Citations and three Foreign decorations: the French Forragere, Netherlands Military Order of William, and Belgium Forragere.