Satan’s
Gift
Sergeant Ben Taylor
(As told to and edited by his first cousin)
Earl Stubbs
This is an account of former United States Army Technical Sergeant Benjamin Weatherby Taylor’s experiences during World War II. Sergeant Taylor fought during campaigns in Normandy, Northern France, Belgium, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and his combat ended in Czechoslovakia. Sergeant Taylor related his recollections to his first cousin, Earl Stubbs, in June of the year 2000. Ben was born B. W. Taylor in the Bradfield’s Chapel Community of Morris County near Daingerfield, Texas on December 4, 1917.
Ben was drafted into the military and inducted on March 7, 1942. He, along with the other members of the 90th Infantry Division, spent the next 27 months preparing for the landing at Utah Beach on June 7, 1944.
During the induction process, authorities would not accept the initials B. W. as his name. He was forced to use his father’s name, Benjamin Weatherby Taylor, for military purposes and does so to this day. His country awarded Sergeant Taylor a Good Conduct Medal, a Bronze Arrowhead, a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star, five Battle Stars, and a Silver Star.
These events occurred almost 60 years ago. Consequently, this is not intended as a work of academic history but to honor this warrior who contributed so much to his country and to his family…ES
Training
Texas/Louisiana
After being
drafted, I reported for duty on March 6, 1942. I had to pass the physical
before being inducted on March 7, 1942. If you didn’t pass your physical, you went
back home.
The reason I
was late being drafted was because I worked my Daddy’s farm and was necessary
to its operation. Then the need for soldiers became greater and the rules
changed. I was 26-years-old when drafted and was the oldest member of my group
of draftees. Many of them were from Morris and surrounding counties. Sam Black
was from Morris County. The Black family had three boys in the military at that
time. Roland Lyle was another fellow I remember. He was from south of
Daingerfield, the county seat of Morris County. Lyle got out on a medical
discharge. He never went across. Clyde Polland, a boy from Daingerfield, was
another. When he went in for his physical, the sergeant ask him who sent him. He
said local Selective Service Board 42. The sergeant told him he was going home.
He had asthma and emphysema and could not have made a soldier.
They split us
up after basic training in Mineral Wells, Texas. Some from our outfit went to
California. Sam Black was one. Some went to the Air Corps. I was sent to Camp Barkeley
in Abilene, Texas and by that time I didn’t know anyone in my group. Later on,
I ran into a man from Mt. Pleasant, Texas, in Titus County. His name was Dick
Langston. We served in the same platoon all the way through. Dick passed away a
few years ago.
We spent about
two years in Camp Barkeley. I was in a heavy weapons company that included
mortars and machine guns. I fired a mortar. I was in the 90th Division, which
was called the Texas/Oklahoma Division, but boys from other states were in
there as well. We wore a shoulder patch with a red T/O.
We had three
regiments in the division, and I was in the 358th. I was in the first battalion of company D and
the third platoon. A platoon consisted of six squads of 50 or 60 soldiers. Company
D had about 250 men. There was two rifle platoons. There was a machine gun
platoon and a heavy weapons platoon, which consisted of 81 mm mortars. There
was an anti-tank platoon, which guarded the First Battalion Headquarters. I was
in the Heavy Weapons Platoon. Sometimes we were on the front line as forward
observers. Sometime our mortar positions were as much as a quarter of a mile
behind the lines.
In addition to
Ranger Training, our Division trained for jungle warfare, mountain warfare, and
desert warfare. We crawled in the mud, water, and barbed wire. We had to cross
on our backs under the barbed wire. We crawled through muddy culverts and swung
across a creek on a rope with our combat pack.
Once we were
out in the field on the Hanker’s Ranch near Abilene, Texas. I developed an
abscessed tooth, and they took me to the hospital in town. They didn’t just
pull one tooth. They pulled two teeth, and they wouldn’t stop bleeding. I had
no way back to my outfit, so I hitched a ride with a kitchen truck. They took
me back to Camp Barkeley but I was still eight miles from my platoon. They were
in need of guards at the camp, and I was assigned to guard duty with my
bleeding teeth. I spent two days and nights on guard duty, mostly in the rain,
before I could get back to my outfit. When I finally got back, I found out I
was AWOL. However, when I explained my predicament, I was taken off.
We were in
training with the 45th Infantry Division when they were about to ship out for
the invasion of Sicily. The Officers asked for volunteers to join the 45th. A
little guy from Greenville, Texas, named Pemberton, volunteered to go. He
looked very young. Many that went with the 45th got battlefield commissions. One
of the Sergeants in our outfit was given a battlefield commission during the
European campaign. He made Captain. Another sergeant made Lieutenant Colonel
after going to Officer Candidate School in Fort Benning, Georgia.
We never knew
who was a saboteur. There were times when I was on leave in Abilene that people
would ask how many soldiers were at the Camp but I would never tell them.
Another time
at Camp Barkeley, I was assigned as CQ which was in charge of headquarters. The
job was mostly answering the phone. Officers came in and out. During my time as
CQ, a solder was AWOL and had been caught. A captain ordered me to have the
soldier at headquarters at 8:15 the next morning. That night I was pulled off
the CQ job. I informed my replacement to carry out the order of the captain. Unfortunately,
he forgot to deliver the deserter. He came to get me the next morning, as I was
standing for roll call. He said he was sorry about forgetting, and that the
captain wanted to see me at headquarters.
I was pretty
green and didn’t know how to protect myself in the army at that time. The
captain really chewed me out for dereliction of duty and offered me a choice
between a court martial or company punishment. I chose company punishment,
which consisted of reporting three times for three days. It didn’t bother me at
all. Unfortunately, the soldier who forgot his order lost his life early in the
war, and the captain involved received serious wounds.
Once, during
our final training, we were on a firing problem with our mortars. We had three
mortars in the platoon. We had a number one gunner, a number two gunner, and a
number three gunner for each mortar. They all trained for the same things but
each had a special job. The number one gunner was responsible for the gun
sight. The number two gunner checks out the bipod. The number three man checks
out the stove pipe or barrel of the mortar.
The target was
a square made of boards about 1,000 yards down range. After we got the mortar
set up, our Lieutenant came around to inspect the position. The Lieutenant told
us we would be next to fire, and then he noticed that we didn’t have a gun
sight. Unfortunately, the number one gunner forgot the gun sight and had left
it in camp. Then he looked at me and ask, “Taylor. How are you all going to
fire this weapon?” I answered, “Sir, we are going to fire it in degrees of
turns of elevation and turns of traverse.?” The Lieutenant said, “You had
better be good.”
We figured out
how many turns we needed to get there in that short length of time. I asked my
sergeant how far he thought it was to the target. He suggested that we start
off at 1,000 yards. I suggested that we make turns all the way down to the
bottom and then back a few turns. I made sure that the weapon was sturdy.
We were
allowed three shots with dummy shells. We fired the first shot and it was long.
We made a few more turns on the second shot which fell short. No other team had
hit the target even with gun sights. I made our last adjustment and ordered the
firing. The shell hit the target and knocked it down. We were supposed to be
experts on the mortar and I guess we were.
We moved from
Camp Barkeley and went to Louisiana for two months of maneuvers. We were close to Leesville. It rained a lot
and the water got high. We almost had to swim out. Then we came back to Barkeley
in either November or December and the contractors had built us some new huts. We
previously had those six man huts with a tent top. They took several of them
and put them together into barracks. The whole platoon could stay in one
barrack.
There was a
man named Frank J. Westmoreland in our Company. During maneuvers, he and
several other guys from the six squads formed a group and called themselves the
seventh squad. Westmoreland was the section sergeant. He and the other members
of the seventh squad would go build a fire and send other soldiers to a nearby
farmhouse to get eggs. Then they would make egg and pickle sandwiches and sell
them. I bought them when I had the money.
Once during
training we had a tactical problem with no fire and no smoke. Lieutenant Wise
was a tall man and I saw him coming across the field. I knew what he was there
for. The seventh squad had slipped off and built a fire to boil eggs. As he
walked by me he said, “Taylor, what is that fire doing down there. This is
supposed to be a tactical problem.” I denied any knowledge of the fire. He
said, “Go down there and put it out.” The seventh squad had run back into the
woods and hid behind a log. I put the fire out as ordered and when the seventh
squad came out of hiding I told them what had happened. Nobody complained about
me putting out the fire.
Frank was a
fairly fast talker. Later in Europe we would roll out telephone lines to our
forward observations posts from the gun positions so that we could communicate.
I was on one end and Frank was on the other. Someone tapped into our line and
said, “You might as well surrender. The rest of your outfit has already
surrendered.” I said, “Listen fellow, if you want to fight just get started.” At
first I thought it was the enemy. Then I started to listen carefully and it
sounded like somebody in my outfit. Finally, I figured out it was Frank B.
Westmoreland. He was always making jokes.
Later, in
Europe, Frank P. Westmoreland knocked out a Tiger Tank with an M1 rifle and
captured the crew. After that, they sent him back home to train other men.
One of my
closest buddies was a guy named Yandel . Another was Bill Dotson from Oklahoma.
They were cousins.
Training
California/Arizona
In September
we went to Camp Granite in the Needles, California area for desert training. We
traveled by truck convoy to California. The temperature would get up to 110 or
120 during the daytime. At night it would go down to about 40. There was not much vegetation in the desert
but we broke off some switches for our little stoves. There was six men to a
tent. We went to bed without any fire and saved our kindling for the next
morning. We went to bed with two blankets under us and one on top. At about
10:00 pm, we would have to get up and use two blankets on top We nearly froze to death.
While we were
out West, we went to Arizona for mountain training. During that winter, the
coal miners went on strike and we had no way to heat water. We were never able
to take a bath. All of our water came
out of canals from the Colorado River in California.
Once I was
carrying a 45 pound mortar base plate. About half of our crew was on kitchen
KP. As a result, I had to carry a bunch of extra heavy equipment. About the
time we got to where we thought the kitchen was going to be, we were just about
exhausted. I tripped and fell. The base plate fell on my shoulder. I could
hardly walk for about three weeks. I was sent to the aid station for a rubdown
twice a day. During the third week they sent me to the evacuation hospital. There
was a picnic table and a sergeant told me to crawl up on the table. He poked
around on my shoulder asking me if it hurt. I told him no that my injury was on
the inside not on the outside. He said not to worry, I had just taken a little
cold.
Training
New Jersey
We left California on the 28th of December after about four months of training and went to Ft. Dix, New Jersey. While we were there about two feet of snow fell. While we were in Fort Dix waiting to ship out, we had to take gas training. My gas mask was faulty, and I got gassed during training. I did okay with the tear gas. It was hard but I managed to stay the five minutes. After we were allowed to breath a while, we were sent to a tent that had the real gas in it. It caused me problems for about two months. I felt like I had pneumonia. My left lung is still weak. I don’t know how I got over that. I guess the true faith. I never did go to the doctor. I always stayed on my job. I had yellow jaundice overseas. They gave me a volunteer chance to go back to the hospital and be treated. About half did. I didn’t go. I wanted to stay with my buddies. I made it anyway.
We had to pull
a parade in front of General George C. Marshall in the snow. The parade ground
was not level so we were sliding around while we were trying to march. I told
my buddies that we would not pass the review. But we did and we were ready to
go overseas.
Then, we left
Ft. Dix for England on the ship John Erickson. After three days, we had to turn
around and come back to port because of engine trouble. We stayed three more
days on the ship while it was repaired. We were not allowed to leave.
After the
repairs were completed we had to wait for another convoy. The German Wolf Pack
submarines were thick and there was security in numbers. We had to go around by
Northern Ireland before we landed in Liverpool, England, on Easter Sunday,
1944. The crossing took 18 days.
England
I first saw
General George S. Patton in England. When we were told that we were going to
hear our new Third Army Commander, you could have dropped a pin and heard it
hit. We had on our combat gear when we heard him speak. He said that we were
about to go to France. We were not going over there to visit. We were not going
to play. We were not going to take their food. We were not going over there to
fraternize. By God, we were going over there to kill Germans. When we finish,
those of you who are living can go back home. He didn’t speak very long. That
was very near the time we sailed for Normandy.
We moved to a
British line of fortifications close to a port. I never did know exactly where.
There was a British barracks on a hill. The bombs fell nearly every night. I
don’t know if they were flying bombs, long range artillery, or just bombs. We
boarded the ship on the day before we shipped out.
Combat
Utah Beach in Normandy
Our battalion
boarded the Queen Mary for the channel crossing. We had to be at a certain
place in the channel before the tide went down, or we would have foundered. We
could see some ships leaning over a bit because they were sitting on the
bottom. One ship hit a mine, and the soldiers had to land without weapons.
The first wave
landed on Omaha Beach on D-Day. We landed at Utah Beach the second day. We climbed
down the ropes on the side of the Queen Mary into the landing crafts. The landing crafts took us as close to shore
as possible. When we left the barge, the water was about chest deep. The man in
front of me was carrying the tube to the mortar. He stepped off the barge and
into a shell hole. He went underwater and came up without the tube. No one said
a word. He took a breath, dove like a dew dapper duck, and came up with the
tube. Then he walked out on the beach.
The weather was
cool and the beach was calm. The Germans didn’t know we were coming, but we
quickly ran into static. A German unit
was on maneuvers in the area and began shelling our positions on the first day.
The training stopped and the war began.
That first
night, our leaders told us the Germans had left suicide men behind with razors.
They were going to hide in clumps of bushes and wait until we were asleep. They
caught one about 30 yards from my foxhole. No more sleeping. I hardly slept for
two weeks. I fell asleep once during the day and dreamed I was home with my
parents, brother, and sisters. It was a wonderful dream until the enemy sent in
a barrage of artillery and spoiled it all. It was like going from one world to
another.
Combat
The Hedgerows of the Cotentin
Another incident
happened during this time when the sergeant told me to go back and find the
ammunition dump and check on our ammo supply. We were about five miles from the
beach. The vegetation was heavy with a lot of little bushes. I looked and
looked but couldn’t find the ammo dump. I went back to our position and just as
I got there the Germans threw in an artillery barrage. I headed for my foxhole
but a big old guy from Arkansas named Elsy Johnson beat me to it. I was out of
luck until I noticed a muddy bank three or four feet high with a mud hole
behind it. I jumped into the mud hole only to find that it had no bottom. It
was a well so I just put my head underwater until the barrage let up. I never
did touch the bottom. I got out and started to my foxhole and another barrage
started. I dove back into the well and waited out the second barrage. When I
could finally get out I was soaked and freezing to death. I started to shake
from the cold and went back to the aid station to get some dry clothes. They
found me a pair of blood soaked pants. Then the medics gave me a tablet that
knocked me out and I got a good night’s sleep. I wore those bloody pants for a
week. They were officer’s clothes I think.
After things
had settled down, I asked Elsy why he got my foxhole and he said because
someone else was in his. He came up to me later and said, “Taylor, I want to
show you something.” His helmet had two holes in it about two inches from the
top. A piece of shrapnel had entered one side, hugged the helmet liner, and
came out the other side. It should have gone right through his head but it
didn’t. A miracle.
Sometimes we
would stay in the same foxhole for two or three days and then we would move up.
There was some rain but not a lot. We were not supposed to drink any water out
of the local wells. There were lots of little apples in France and we often had
to get moisture out of those apples until the water reached us.
Our first
objective was about ten miles from shore. It was hill 122. A spotter could see
the ships in the English Channel from the top of that hill on a clear day. We
began moving from hedgerow to hedgerow. France was made up of hedgerows and so
was part of Germany. The hedgerows were around small pastures and fields. Sometime
we could see through them and sometimes not. We had to deal with the hedgerows
all the way across Normandy. We never really knew which were defended and which
were not. Sometimes we had to go up the side of a hedgerow to avoid crossing an
open field.
We reached to
about 500 yards from the top of hill 122. Some soldiers continued to advance as
we set up our mortars. I got on the telephone and hooked up with our sergeant
at the forward observation post.
There was an
enemy observer in an old building out there in the woods. He directed in three
shells. The first one landed in the bank right in front of me and knocked dirt
all over me. I told the forward men over the phone to start digging in. Another
German shell landed right in the middle of our guns and blew out a four foot
hole. The mortar fell in the hole. Comillio Gonzalez was laying down in the
hole on his back yelling for help. A jeep just happened by and I called for
help to get him out of the hole and back to the aid station. That jeep being
there was another miracle.
Bill Dotson lay
on the side of the shell hole with a piece of shrapnel through his wrist. He
passed out on me and I took out my handkerchief, used water out of my canteen,
and wiped his face with it. I thought he might be dead but he came to. Then I
began to put a tourniquet on his arm. I took out my handkerchief and wrapped it
around his arm. We were always taught to use our spoon to tighten the
handkerchief but my spoon would not slide in the wet knot. The trainers didn’t
tell me you couldn’t slide a G.I. spoon through a wet handkerchief. I bruised
his arm and finally got the spoon in but he was still bleeding. I told him to
put his thumb over the hole and get on the jeep so that they could get him
help. Both men are still living. That’s
another miracle. Soon a Sergeant came by and told us that they had taken care
of the German observer.
When it came
time to advance to the top of the hill, our Sergeant told us to be careful to
watch on both sides and behind us because the Germans had dug their foxholes on
the downward slope of the hill and some were still there. All I had was an M1
rifle. I lost two rifles over there and two mortars. We lost one mortar taking
hill 122. We went to the top of the hill
but the Germans had captured some of our tanks and turned them on us. One
soldier named Daugherty got both arms shot off.
After we took
hill 122, we came across a place called the Isle of the White Witches. The
White Witches were snow troops in white uniforms and some of the vehicles were
white. There was only one road into the area. Two companies went down the road
and we had orders to move up. There was
only one way to get in there from our side and our battalion commander was
moving up and when he got about two companies in there, the Germans waylaid
them. The Germans had tanks in there. Our boys were in an old road bed and the
Germans were mowing them down. We were just about to follow them.
That night one
of our boys escaped the trap by crawling in the mud through a slew by the side
of the road. When they reached our lines, they told us that Major Ahern had
surrendered the battalion. Of course, the Major thought he had to do it. Apparently,
Major Ahern had not sent patrols out ahead of his troops. If he had done that,
he might not have walked into the trap. Another guy named Burt made it back and said
he threw a white phosphorous grenade into the Germans and escaped. Burt was
lucky that time but not so lucky later on.
A lot of
German soldiers surrendered. Usually when they did, they came out with white
flags. Once about 200 men near our position wanted to come out. Some were
wounded and some just wanted to surrender. Our regimental Chaplain always
stayed with our battalion. He was Chaplain Hamilton from Ft. Worth, Texas. He
was a heavy set fellow. The officer asked for volunteers to collect the
prisoners. Chaplain Hamilton volunteered, took some Red Cross Ambulances into
the German position, and brought back the wounded Germans. Other prisoners
followed them out and pitched their weapons into a pile. We took a 1.5 ton
truck full of weapons. On the first day
we surrounded the Germans, there was an old grey horse pulling a buggy going
around in circles. The next day, the old horse was still going around in
circles. When Chaplain Hamilton went down there to bring out the German
wounded, he turned the horse loose. The Chaplain died about five years ago. I
never did know whether they gave him a presidential citation for that or not
but they should have.
During this
time we were in our foxholes in a strawberry field just before we were going to
take St. Lo. We were waiting for the Eighth Air Force to bomb the town. We
waited and waited and finally, the field commander told us to just go ahead and
take the town without the bombs. We got in there about dusk dark and then the
Air Force came over and dropped about six bombs in the strawberry field where
we had just left. We quickly shot some identification flares and they stopped
bombing immediately. That particular wing of the Eighth Air Force was
temporarily grounded for making that mistake. I saw three or four bombers fall
out of the sky.
A vet here in
Greenville was a bombardier in that Wing. His name is Bob Sheaffer. I met him
in downtown Greenville one day and asked him if he remembered the incident. He
did. I can’t blame the Air Force people. Lots of mistakes were made and I won’t
cast the first stone.
(2400 planes
took part in the saturation and napalm bombing of St. Lo. 111 Allied soldiers
were killed and 490 wounded by friendly fire. ES)
One day we
were dug in our positions. I dug my foxhole in an apple orchard. The Germans
threw in a phosphorous shell and several soldiers yelled gas. The officers
didn’t like to carry their gas masks so one yelled, “No, no, it can’t be
because I don’t have a gas mask.” He wasn’t trying to be funny. Fortunately, it
was only smoke.
We had
suffered heavy casualties and we received some reinforcements at that time. One
of them was my future wife’s brother. I didn’t know either of them but he was
in my battalion. His name was Jesse Smith. He had a brother named D. Smith in
the service at the same time.
They brought
the new people together and gave them a lecture about not picking up things
that might be mined. They could look around but were warned not to touch
anything. There were some houses across the road and some of the new
replacements wanted to go over to take a look. I went with them and soon one of
the new guys ask what a shiny object was. I told him not to pick up anything
that it might be booby trapped. His curiosity got the better of him. He picked
up the shiny object and shook it. It blew his hand off. The lecture had been
about 30 minutes ago. He was sent to the hospital. His training was wasted.
Combat
Then we got
behind the German Seventh Army and met a French Moroccan tank unit near the
Seine River. We were told that we had
friendly troops on our right after the breakout but they weren’t. We didn’t
meet any friendly troops until we met the French Moroccans. The word was that
the Moroccan Troops were highly trained. We crossed the river, made the
breakthrough, and ran off from General Patton for a couple of days. We made 140
miles in three days. When we first
landed I was attached to General Omar Bradley’s First Army and we spearheaded
for his army for several weeks. After we broke out at St. Lo, we got into
General Patton’s Third Army officially on August 1, 1944.
That is where
we beat the German Seventh Army. We were up on a hill behind the Germans and
the British were on our left. The French were on our right. We bottled up the
Germans in the Falaise pocket and most couldn’t get out. Some made a
breakthrough and got out.
One day as we
were advancing, we passed a long car with a cloth top sitting by the side of the
road. Our officers told us that it belonged to Field Marshall Rommel but I
can’t be sure. About this time a German plane released what everyone thought
was a bomb. I yelled hit the deck but the bomb just bounced around and turned
out to be a belly tank.
We had to deal
with German aircraft. Sometimes they would shoot and sometimes not. We always
dove for our foxholes when one came over. We were in hedgerows during the early
part of the invasion and we didn’t think anyone could see us from the air. Two
planes came over. At first I thought one was a P-47. I raised up and waved. When
they saw us, they banked the plane and there was the swastika. I knew I had
made a mistake. I said, “Boys, they are
going to be back soon.” But they didn’t. I guess they were out of ammo.
The 90th
Division did not actually liberate Paris. Eisenhower allowed the French unit to
do that for political reasons. However, we marched through Paris on our way to
the new front. We went right by the Eiffel Tower and crossed the River Seine.
In the area of
Northern France as we were approaching the Rhine, the officers told us that
retreating Germans were hiding weapons so that they could infiltrate back and
attack from the rear. We were ordered to search out any likely hiding places. I
had a nose for hidden weapons.
Once we were
searching a farm and found some guns hidden in the barn. There was another
small outbuilding which was used for storing smaller farm implements. There was
a horse drawn hay rake stored against a wall in the building. I noticed that
the ground looked like it had been smoothed over under the rake. I told my men
to pull the hay rake out of the building. We only had to dig about eight inches
before we found a box of rifles.
Later, we set
up a command post in a farmhouse. There was a small garden near the house. I
was looking around a bit when I noticed that the surface of part of the garden
was different. I investigated and found a satchel of military maps. Even today,
I don’t know if the guns and maps were hidden by the Germans or the French.
Taking
prisoners was not an easy thing to do. Sometimes, Germans would want to
surrender and would come out with their hands up. Then other Germans would open
up on the men who went out to take charge of the prisoners. Once, we were
approaching some barracks and was in a heavy fire fight. We were walking
through some woods. (I didn’t see this but I passed the barracks a few
minutes later.) The Germans held up a white flag to surrender. Our soldiers
started walking across open ground to take charge of them and the Germans
opened up again. They hit one of our older soldiers. Our guys started shooting
their M1’s from the hip and proceeded to kill all of the Germans. It was over
by the time we got around the corner.
The commanding
officer came up and asked for some prisoners for interrogation. The sergeant
said, “Sir, there are no prisoners.” The officer said, “Do you mean with all of
that shooting, you don’t have any prisoners?” The sergeant repeated, “Sir,
there are no prisoners.” The officer started to walk away then he turned and
said, “That’s the way I like to see it.”
It was during
this time that a tank was crossing a small river on a log bridge. About half
way across, the bridge gave way the the tank fell about ten feet into the
river. It buried nose down in the water. I don’t know what happened to that
tank. It was not always a good idea to be around a tank. They drew a lot of
fire and a soldier wants to keep a low profile.
Soon the first
aid men took out our wounded Captain Jackson and another wounded soldier who
was a former deserter. He ran off while we were in the states and the sergeant
had to go find him. That was the way it worked. If a man ran off, his sergeant
was deputized and he had to go get him. He would take another solder with him
and the sheriff would hold the deserter until they got there. The wounded
solder was an ex convict from Missouri. As they were taking him out, he said,
“Boys, give them heck. I won’t be back.” When the former deserter got back to
the aid station, he wanted to know if the bullet was German or American. He was
afraid an American had shot him in the back.
Sometimes we
would stay in the same foxhole for two or three days and then we would move up.
There was some rain but not a lot. We were not supposed to drink any water out
of the local wells. There were lots of little apples in France and we often had
to get moisture out of those apples until the water reached us.
Combat
The Maginot Line
There were
many instances of bravery. One outfit was in a crossfire across the Moselle
River. They had a Colonel who drank a little but was more like a regular
soldier than most officers. He ordered the troops on our side of the Moselle
River to lay down covering fire and he swam across, rounded up the men on the
other side, and led them back across the river. His superiors tried to take
away his commission for doing that. They
told him he was not supposed to do things like that. He was supposed to send
somebody else to do things like that. He told his superiors that he only went
because he needed the information the other men had. I think he did it to save
the men.
I often had a
hard time getting things done but I always got it done. We crossed the Moselle
River to take Fort Koenigsmacher. It was the most important element in the Metz
Fortress. We went to the left of Metz. Another Battalion was on our left and
another was in reserve. Our Battalion had to cross at night in boats, one squad
to a boat. There was a gun turret in the Fort which covered the river. The plan
was for our combat engineers to set off satchel charges, throw them in the
Fort, and put the gun placement out of action. Everyone got across except my
squad. They failed to send the boat back for us. We were left in an open
pasture beside the river. We had to get across before daylight or be sitting
ducks for the German artillery from the high ground.
We had the
radio on our side of the river. I asked the radio operator if he was talking to
the sergeant. He said yes, so I asked to talk to the sergeant. I said,
“Sergeant, why don’t you send a boat back for us so that we can get across this
river?” He said, “I can’t. I’ve go to go with the captain to the company
Command Post.” I said, “As soon as it gets daylight, they are going to plaster
this side of the river. We are going to do something soon.” He said, “Wait
until I talk to the Captain.” I waited and soon he came back on. He said, “The
Captain said they are putting a pontoon bridge in about a half mile down the river.
They are building the bridge in the dark and should be about finished. You can
cross there.” I told our guys to move out and not to waste any time.
As we got
about half way to the bridge, the Germans dropped the first shell on the river
bank where we had been standing. Then they landed one near us and then one way
over us. We made it to the bridge but they lacked about two more sections to
complete the bridge. They said it would take about 30 minutes. When it was
finished, we crossed. I told the boys not to walk in the trails and to walk
single file so as to avoid mines. We didn’t stop until we reached our outfit
which was right under the muzzle of that gun turret.
There was a
large tunnel under the Fort to bring in railroad cars or mules to deliver
supplies and ammunition. After we threw the satchel charges in the Fort, about
200 of the enemy tried to escape through the tunnel. They threw their weapons
away and one of our Battalions captured them all without firing a shot. They
got a Presidential Citation. We lost a couple of men taking the Fort and we got
nothing. The entire Regiment should have shared in the citations.
The Germans
had barracks inside the fort near the guns. The guns themselves were in high
turrets. After we got in I noticed that there didn’t seem to be much of a
ladder to climb up there. I don’t know how they got up to shoot the guns. There
were tunnels going from one fort to another. I found some canned food where the
tunnels intersected. I think it was horsemeat
One of our
casualties in this battle was the soldier named Burt who escaped the German
trap in the Cherbourg Peninsula. He was machined gunned and had numerous
wounds. The medics were told not to give him any water because of the kinds of
wounds he had received. As they were boating him across the Moselle, he dipped
a handful of water and drank it. Then he died.
One night
while we were in the Metz area, I was on guard duty. During the wee hours of
the morning I saw a white, ghost-like apparition. It would come every so often.
I was determined to find out what it was and when it got daylight, I
investigated. It was a pile of rotten potatoes giving off some kind of gas. You
never know what you are going to run into during wartime.
The Battalion
interrogator was from Belgium. At one time he was in the German Army. He didn’t
like Hitler so he made his way to England and became an asset for the Allies. He
had a trick he played on the soldiers he was interrogating. Whatever rank they
held, he would assume the same rank. He kept a set of insignia for each rank
and changed them when needed. A German soldier would refuse to speak with
anyone under their rank.
Once when we
pulled back for a little breather, our leaders decided that we weren’t getting enough exercise so they had us
lay down our packs so we could do some calisthenics. I was carrying a 45 side
arm and an M1 rifle. An ammunition carrier was next to me and he was carrying a
carbine rifle. After we finished the calisthenics, he dropped his carbine and
it went off, hit the gas chamber on my M1, and then the bullet went through the
elbow of another solder and came out his face. The wounded soldier’s name was
Cashmere. He was severely wounded but lived through it. My rifle was ruined.
I once did
some poetry for the Stars and Stripes. Any soldier who wanted to compose a
piece and put it in the Stars and Stripes could do so. I can’t remember all of
it but here is some of it:
It was in the
month of early June.
When our ship anchored
to the ocean’s tune.
Off the rope
and into the barge.
Towards the
shore we pushed hard.
Contact with
Jerry was made.
Then the
digging of the spade.
The war of
Europe was on.
I wrote this
in October of 1944. We were on the front for 90 days and finally we got a
breathing spell. I used to compose a lot of stuff. I wrote some songs, but I
didn’t publish them.
Combat
The Siegfried Line
When we moved
through the Siegfried Line, we ran into the Screaming Mimis. Those were the
rockets with sirens on them. It would make the hair stand up on your head.
We crossed the
Rhine at the western edge of Cologne. We found one bridge that we could use. Just
before we crossed, we took a small town. There were two little roads that
entered the town. They joined and made a circle in the town. Then one road led
out of the town. We took the town one evening. My future wife’s brother was in
the same regiment but was in the anti-tank platoon.
There was
about 150 Germans hidden in the woods and we passed them by. We didn’t know
they were there. It was about 10:00 pm and it was dark. We had our guns pointed
toward the Rhine. The next morning, the Germans attacked from the rear. The
only American killed was my future wife’s brother. He was on an anti-tank gun.
The Germans
had a Tiger Tank leading about five half-tracks filled with infantry. They had
Red Cross markings. The Tiger Tank came around to our position and shot at my
buddy, Dick Langston, from Mt. Pleasant. The shot hit the side of the building.
Bricks fell on my buddy and knocked his helmet off. He put it back on and kept
fighting. We were pinned down in the garden by the tank but we had a shooting
battle with them. I told the men that it was every man for himself. There was
an iron fence around the garden and if we tried to go over the fence, we would
get shot and if we stayed in the garden, we had to deal with the tank. About
that time, the Tiger Tank came around the building about 20 feet from me. I
didn’t have anything that would knock it out.
One of the
half-tracks started down the road. We had a bazooka team behind a building on
our left and they knocked out the half-track. The whole thing only lasted about
20 minutes. I stepped through a window on the back of the building about the
same time a German soldier came in the front door and was shot by one of ours. We
went back outside and I went around to the anti-tank bazooka team that had
knocked out the half-track. There were two enemy soldiers dying and the half
track was on fire. Since the half-track blocked the road, we captured the rest
of the half-tracks and the Tiger Tank as well. We got the whole bunch.
We went on up
and took the buildings and one of them was a bank. On the second floor of the
bank were bedrooms. I was the forward observer and we needed for the radio
antenna to be clear of any obstruction. We took the radio to the second floor
so the antenna could stick out the window. It was dark by then and the
Lieutenant hit the bed and informed us that he was going to sleep.
During the
night, the Germans counterattacked. Since we were already zeroed in on the
road, I called for creeping fire with the mortars. I told them to be sure that
the gun settings were accurate since the Germans were right on us. They were
ready to take the buildings we were in. I creeped the fire until shrapnel was
hitting our building. I knew I couldn’t call our fire in any closer so I
reversed the creeping. That broke the back of the counterattack and things got
quiet again. The next morning we went out to check the situation. We found a
wounded German crawling down the road and we captured him.
We fought the
SS. They wore a brown uniform and many of them were very young. They were
probably Hitler Youth. Some were 15 or 16 years old. Some even younger were left
behind as rear guard to hold us back. We captured some kids who were no more
than 10 years old.
When the
Germans broke out in the Battle of the Bulge, we had just crossed the Saar
River at Dilligen, Germany. That was a manufacturing and meat packing town. We
didn’t have a bridge over the river but we got across. When I crossed the river
I had a high fever and a heavy cold. We stayed over there from the 8th of
December to the 16th of December without a bridge. The river flooded and snow
got over three feet deep. The creeks were frozen. The roads were frozen but
that was to our advantage. The German had mined the roads heavily but they
didn’t work because of the ice. We went
down one road that winter on jeeps because we were out of ammunition. The
combat engineers took out 40 mines after we used the road. That was the coldest
winter there in 50 years. Most of the time we were sleeping in our foxholes but
we would get inside when we could find a place.
One soldier
named John Smith got furloughed back to the states to see his family. He told
me and some more guys, “I already have my shipping orders but I am afraid I am
not going to get to use them. I sure do hate to cross this river.” John was a
nice looking fellow who resembled Randolf Scott.
After we crossed
the Saar River, the major problem was a pillbox that was giving us trouble. One
of our tank destroyers found a spot in a saddle between two hills. The range
was perfect and we knocked out the pillbox. A few German soldiers lived through
the barrage and were able to escape.
Next we took a
group of farm building on the edge of town. A few of us stayed in a house that
night. Me, John Smith, and another guy was in the bedroom next to the kitchen. I
sat down with my back against the wall. Another guy was sitting on the bed. John
Smith was leaning with his back against a chest of drawers. A German sneaked up
to the house and opened fire through the window with a burp gun. I heard John
Smith fall. He didn’t answer when I called his name. There was a medic in the
kitchen and I told him that John Smith was hit. It was pitch dark and we were
not allowed lights. The medic crawled in and checked him over with a little red
flashlight but could not find any blood or any wound. The only thing that made
sense was that he was shot in his open mouth or maybe had a heart attack. Also,
the Germans were using wooden bullets that splintered. He could have been hit
with one of those.
Eight days and
nights we held our side of the river with no bridge. The combat engineers threw
a rope bridge from one high point to another and that was our only way across
the River. Every night we had to go right by a pillbox to get food and
ammunition that had been brought from the other side of the river over the rope
bridge. We fired our weapons during the day and then worked all night carrying
our dead and wounded down to the river and bringing supplies and ammunition
back. I worked a litter every night and was put in charge of the transportation
because I was the only one who could find my way in the dark. Only once did I
know that my litter carried a live soldier and he died before crossing the
river. He had been machine gunned.
On the way to
the pick-up point was a stream. Sometimes the water was under your arms but it
might be over your head. After the third night of transporting people by
litter, I told my sergeant that when he chose my helpers to pick tall men so
that they could cross the stream. When we would get to the stream crossing, I
would stop and get on the back of the litter. The person’s head went first. When
my helper felt the bank on the other side, I would push him on up the bank. When
he reached firm ground, he would pull me up. One night we made 13 trips. Each
round trip was about a half mile over rough ground. We never knew if our load
was wounded or dead so we had to keep them out of the water. Even the wounded
were given pills to knock them out for the trip. That didn’t leave much time
for me to sleep. I was like a walking corpse and so was everyone else.
The Battle of
the Bulge was not going well so we got orders to pull back and defend Belgium.
When it came
time to leave our positions, our mortar was so hot we couldn’t take it down. We
took the gun sight off and left it behind. We had managed to get two tanks across
the river and had to set them on fire and leave them behind. We evacuated over
the rope bridge single file. We had to be very careful not to shake the bridge
or we would have all fallen into the river. We were all decorated with a Bronze
Star for heroic service for the Dilligen, Germany combat.
We fought a
lot at night. Half the time we didn’t know where we were. After we went back
across the Saar River and set up defensive positions we found a pillbox nearby.
After dark our objective was to take some men and one mortar and attempt to
capture the Germans in the pillbox. I went with the mortar. I don’t know why
since I couldn’t see to fire it. As we were making our way to the pillbox, one
soldier tripped a mine. He was wounded. Then we captured the pillbox.
One time in
Germany, we came upon a house sitting atop a hill. It became the company
command post. We put the radio in there. The radiomen swap out because the 300
radio is heavy and difficult to carry. A German civilian kept hanging around
the area. Someone called him to lunch but he didn’t go. While no one was paying
attention, the old German sneaked inside the building and stabbed the radioman
in the back with a pocket knife. The young radioman was not disabled so he took
the knife away from the old man and called for help. An MP Jeep drove up and
they arrested the German. If the German had just behaved himself, he would have
had no trouble.
While we were
still in our defensive positions, my Captain sent word that he was taking me to
Paris for Christmas. That was on the
23rd of December, 1944. I sent word back that I would just stay with my buddies
on the front. He sent word back that I was ordered to report for the trip to
Paris so I reported. We were on the front for 90 days before being relieved.
We were put on
a truck and driven to a tent camp where we would spend the first night. As we were putting up our gear, we were told
that we were going back to the front. They said that the Germans had dropped a
bunch of paratroopers in France. We got ready to go back to the front and then
they told us that the trip to Paris was on again.
We got to
Paris the next day about 1:00 pm. They put us in a nice hotel and we got a nice
bath for the first time in a long time. About bed time, we heard machine guns
firing. Of course we hit the floor. I looked at one of my buddies and said, “I
thought we were getting a break from the war. I thought we were 200 miles from
the front.” We didn’t know there was a 9:00 pm curfew in Paris and if you were
out after that you got shot.
We had a good
night’s sleep in a nice bed. I didn’t even get out on the streets of Paris. The
next morning, we were scheduled to return to the front without Christmas dinner
but one of the Red Cross ladies convinced the convoy commander to wait until
1:00 pm before leaving so that we could get Christmas dinner. We had dinner
with a large group of war orphans.
We were mostly
farm boys and knew nothing about how the French ate their food. The waiters
brought out dessert and we set it aside and waited for the real food. We waited
and waited. Finally, a waitress told us that we were supposed to eat the
dessert first in France. It didn’t take us long to eat the dessert. Then they
brought the real food.
Combat
The Battle of the Bulge
When we returned
to the front, We relieved the 36th Division and moved to an attack position
less than a mile from Belgium. They had been trying to retake Belgium for over
a week. We were in Bastoygn, Belgium in three days and relieved the
paratroopers there. The ground was frozen down to about eight inches but we had
to dig in to keep from freezing and to avoid the artillery.
One night we
were going to take a small town after dark. We had one company on one side of
the road and another company on the other side. A German horseman started
coming down the road toward us. We were instructed to be very quiet and allow
him to proceed. The guys in the other company must not have heard the order
because they opened fire and they were shooting at us as well as the German. I
had on a pair of army gloves and one of the bullets ripped a hole in my glove
and creased my thumb. That was close. We had to be careful not to get shot by
our own soldiers. Even though our leaders had information, there were still
situations that came up where people were in the wrong place and shooting at
the wrong people.
We were about
a mile from Reichsdorf one night. The road ran for about a half mile up to the
top of a hill. I was sent up as a forward observer and the guns were left in
town. About half way up, a German machine gun nest pinned us down. We were all on our bellies and I was next to
the radio man. He inched over toward me and I inched over toward me until I
could reach the radio. I told the gunners to fire a couple of rounds so that we
could zero in on the machine gun nest. They fired a couple of rounds and I gave
them firing orders. They knocked out the machine gun.
After we took
a building at the top of the hill we learned that it was a bank. In peacetime
people lived above the bank so there were beds. We found bales of 100,000
German Marks but we couldn’t spend them. They were made during Hitler’s time. I
brought six home with me but I lost them.
After we
captured the town, I was on guard on an outpost. We were warned that an enemy
patrol would be coming that night. The other guard was a guy named Clampett. He
had a terrible smoker’s cough. I would have rather stood guard by myself. After
we were in our position in the woods, he coughed constantly. I told him that if
he didn’t control his coughing, the Germans would spot us right away and go
around us. And sure enough, they did. When they entered the town, another set
of guards halted them. The Germans shot the gun out of the guards hand and got
on through. Their presence was known so everybody was on the lookout for the
infiltrators. The next morning they were found and captured.
We went
through the Ardennes Forest and the Bavarian Mountains. We went around
Frankfort and Cologne. When we reached Cologne, we approached from the North
and only found one bridge in our sector that wasn’t blown. We were about five
miles from Cologne and I went down to this bridge. The city was bombed to
pieces. We walked across the bridge and could still hear artillery shells
exploding in the distance.
We bypassed
Berlin because Roosevelt and Churchill had agreed to let the Russians take it. The
Germans had been to the gates of Stalingrad and the Russians wanted revenge.
That was a mistake. We should have taken it ourselves. Later on it was divided
into sections and the Berlin wall was built.
Combat
Austria
When we
reached Austria, there was a place called the Eagles Lair which had been
Hitler’s secret headquarters. We called it the Crow’s Nest. When we were in the
area, many of the men were transported up to the place so that they could see
it. I cared nothing about seeing anything that Hitler had so I didn’t choose to
go. Hitler was from Austria. A few months back a Nazi was elected to parliament
in Austria.
Combat
Czechoslovakia
Just before we
reached Czechoslovakia, we were moving up an overgrown country road and we were
in a column. Normally, we would spread out but this time we were in a column
and we were stopped for some reason. A jeep came up the road and stopped about
10 feet away. It was General Patton. He had on his pearl handled pistols. He
asked why the column was stopped. The soldier told him he didn’t know. The
General said he would Goddamned sure find out and ordered his driver to
continue. We were on the move in about five minutes. Soon the General came back
down the road.
After we
crossed over into Czechoslovakia, we were going up a road there and a machine
gun jeep pulling an ammunition trailer passed us and started around a curve in
the road. The jeep held about six machine gunners. We often used jeeps to move
our mortars and ammunition. They ran over an anti-tank mine and it cut the jeep
in half. The wheels were blown off and the trailer was blown loose. It fell in
the hole made by the explosion. The men were blown into pieces. I knew the
driver. His name was Simons. He told me earlier that his Daddy was in the First
World War and was killed on the last day of the war. Simon told me that he knew
if he made it until the last day, he would be killed. He didn’t make it until
the last day.
A little later
we were waiting for orders. There was a farm house nearby and some of our guys
heard hens cackling. When the hens would cackle, a soldier would head for the
hen house and get the egg. The Czechs depended on the eggs for their food so
when the hens cackled, they ran to the hen house before the soldiers could get
there.
We met the
Russians in Czechoslovakia close to Plzein. We took a general merchandise store
there. The store was filled with clothes and shoes. It was a nice store and had
a large picture of Hitler on a high wall. One of the rifle companies had freed
a Russian who appeared to be about 17 or 18 years old. He stayed with them
until the war was over. The Russian soldier was a husky man and the bottoms
were worn off his shoes. They asked him now that the war was over, what was he
going to do? He said, “I am Ruskie. I go back to Russia.” They told him that before he left, he could
get some nice clothes. He nodded his head but before he got any clothes, he
scaled the wall and took down every Hitler picture in the building. Then he got
a pair of shoes, new clothes, and headed out the door.
There were
some White Russians trapped between the Russian lines and ours with their
horses and buggies. Nobody wanted them. We wouldn’t let them through and they
were afraid to go back to Russia. If the Reds got them, they were sent to
Siberia.
There were
many battlefield commissions. We lost all of our officers early in the
campaign. Just before we left for Europe, a bunch of staff sergeants were added
to our ranks. Many of them became officers as our regular officers were killed
or wounded. One in our platoon led us and was given a battlefield commission. I
became platoon leader during our time in the Army of Occupation.
Army of Occupation
During camp in
the Army of Occupation, our platoon was housed quite a ways from the parade
ground. We had to run in order to get there for morning roll call. Most of the
outfits were housed right around the square and they were ready before we were
even notified. I complained to some of the officers but nothing changed. We had
to run for roll call for about three months.
During this
period while we were in the Army of Occupation, we were issued cigarettes about
twice each month. We had a ration card for cigarettes and other things. We
would put our stuff in our barracks and go to lunch on those days. When we
returned, the cigarettes would be gone. We noticed that two guys never showed
up for lunch on those days so we started watching them. We followed them and
found out that they were selling the cigarettes on the black market not more
than a block up the street. There was a German couple and an Italian couple
living there who bought the cigarettes.
I served in
the Army of Occupation after the war and one of the most difficult things I
ever had to encounter occurred then. We were in Germany and we were guarding a
hospital. It contained wounded German Soldiers. It was more or less a
convalescent home.
Even though I
was a non-com, I had to stand guard duty. One of us was on the gate and the
other was near the front door. The officers inspected us every day. One day a
sergeant gave me an oral order that no one was to enter or leave without a
pass. A woman passed out of the building without a pass and the guard at the
front door didn’t stop her. When she got to the outside gate, she was going to
walk right out. I challenged her and told her she needed a pass to leave. She
couldn’t understand what I said. Then the other guard ask me what was the
trouble. I told him anyone who came in or left needed a pass. The woman tried
to leave again and I fixed bayonet with the intention of stopping her. I didn’t
want to shoot her but orders were orders. She finally began to back up a bit. Then
the German Commandant sent a pass out for her to leave. I looked at the pass
which was in German and it didn’t mean a thing to me but I allowed her to
leave. The standing order for everyone to have a pass was quickly canceled.
One of our
outfit spoke Czech. We were approached by a couple of Czech girls, and they
made us an offer. They agreed to make a rhubarb cake if we would furnish the
sugar. Sugar was hard to come by, but we arranged to get our hands on some and
enjoyed the cake.
We eventually
lost about twenty-five percent of our company. During the early part of the
war, several of our officers and men, including my number one and number two
gunners, were wounded and sent back to a hospital. After they recuperated,
number one, Bill Dotson, came back to the platoon but number two, Camillio
Gonzalez, was sent back to the states on a plane. The plane never made it home. All aboard were
missing over the Atlantic. They started to send me back by plane but decided
that too many were going down. I am grateful for that.
We went home
on the ship New York Victory. It was laying on it’s side in the English Channel
and we had to wait for the high tide to board. That was the longest wait of my
life. We boarded and then went out before the tide went down. It took us eight
days to reach New York Harbor where a tugboat with a band met us. We went up
the Hudson River to Camp Shanks. Everyone who had a weapon had to register it
with the customs agent.
Legacy
These days I
sleep no more than two or three hours a night. I relive those days in my mind
and can’t sleep. I can’t get if off my mind. When I was raising a family, I got
away from it for awhile but it came back. I think about men right beside me
getting killed, explosions, fighting at night, the cold, the wet, and even
going without a weapon in a combat zone. But the United States is still free so
I guess it was worth it.
*****
The
United States Army awarded Sergeant Benjamin Weatherby Taylor an Honorable
Discharge on October 23, 1945 at Camp Chaffee Arkansas. He subsequently
married, produced a substantial family, and spent the majority of his life
working as a carpenter in Greenville, Texas, where he still resides at this
time.
The
horror of World War II, or any war, represents Satan's gift
to mankind. Deliberately taking the lives of fellow humans for the sake of power
and greed can only originate from the darkest angel and perpetrate through his misguided minions on earth...ES
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