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| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Orange County, CA
Posts: 10,281
| History Overlooked: Unsung Army Division Seeks Recognition History Overlooked: Unsung Army Division Seeks Recognition for Fighting to Within 40 Miles of Berlin in WWII's Waning Days 83rd Infantry Finds in National Archives Recommendation for Citation They Never Received WASHINGTON, Aug. 13 /PRNewswire/ -- They were known as the Ohio and, later, the Thunderbolt Division. In the waning months of the European Theater during World War II, the men of the U.S. Army's 83rd Infantry Division and several supporting units pulled off one of the most incredible and overlooked feats in the annals of that well-documented war. Positioned north of Germany's Ruhr River industrial complex at the close of March, 1945, the 83rd received orders originally intended for the 8th Armored Division. They were to turn east from the Ruhr and race toward Berlin. In a span of only 13 days, the Thunderbolts fought their way across 280 miles of northern Germany as unit after unit within the 83rd leap-frogged and flanked one another to continuously press the attack east. Commandeering anything with wheels or hooves to move infantry at a break-neck pace, the rolling menagerie of "organic transportation" was dubbed by one reporter in news accounts as "the rag-tag circus." The spectacular sweep across northern Germany proved to be one of the most rapid movements of troops in military history. The 83rd not only set new infantry speed records, but surpassed those of the best Allied armor units. Along the way, they liberated 42,000 U.S. and Allied prisoners of war. On April 13, 1945, the 83rd arrived at the west bank of Germany's Elbe River, the boundary where the Allied Supreme Commander, U.S. General Dwight Eisenhower, had ordered all Western allied armies to halt. But the U.S. Army's XIXth Corps commander, Major General Raymond S. McLain, wanted to prevent the enemy from using the Elbe as a natural boundary to re-organize and counter-attack. The 83rd and its support units were ordered to cross the Elbe and into territory assigned to the Soviet Red Army, and to prepare to advance east/northeast (in the direction toward Berlin). In a bitterly contested, house-to-house fight -- the subject of the book The Last Battle by Cornelius Ryan, author of The Longest Day and A Bridge Too Far -- the 83rd secured a bridgehead on the Elbe's east bank at Barby, Germany. Over the course of the next several days, they defended it from several vicious, Nazi counter-attacks. The 83rd pressed the fighting east to within 40 miles southwest of Berlin, and on April 30, the 113th Cavalry Group of the 83rd Division made contact with Russian troops at Apollonsdorf. Orders finally caught up with the 83rd juggernaut to return to the Elbe bridgehead. The only American incursion into the Eastern European Theater ground to a halt and, on May 6, 1945, turned back to the Elbe, crossing territory gained at the cost of over 1,000 American casualties. The incredible drive to the Elbe bridgehead, and its defense, earned Division members 289 Bronze Stars, 132 Silver Stars, 1 Distinguished Service Cross and 1 Legion of Merit, but ironically no Presidential Unit Citation. Since 1996, the 83rd Division Association' s historian, 82-year-old Lou Gomori of Butler, PA, has researched and documented the fighting at the Elbe River and points eastward and, in 2003, began his attempt to secure some lasting recognition for fallen comrades and to set the record straight: "I started researching this after watching the last episode of a series on TV, when the narrator stated: The Western Allies will stop on the west bank of the Elbe River; the eastern side will be left for the Russians." Gomori submitted an application for a Unit Citation two years ago to the Defense Department's Military Awards Branch, through the sponsorship of his U.S. Senator, Arlen Spector. It wasn't until earlier this year that he learned that his application had been rejected. Then, after 62 years, some unexpected evidence surfaced to bolster Gomori's case. Association President Rudy Zamula, 83, Potomac, MD, is a contractor at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA II) in College Park, MD. On his own time, he would sift through some of the 176 boxes of crumbling and yellowed after-action reports that record the Division's battlefield exploits. This spring, he found a copy of the original letter from Ninth Army Commander Lt. General W.H. Simpson recommending the Division for the Presidential Unit Citation for its lightning assault across northern Germany and the Elbe to within the outskirts of Berlin. Included in the recommendation were the comments of Army Lt. General Raymond S. McLain: "The advance of the XIXth Corps across Germany was an operation, the speed of which, has seldom, if ever, been equaled. The original planning contemplated the use of two armored divisions abreast, each to be backed up by one infantry division. Because of the necessity of compressing the Ruhr pocket, the 8th Armored Division was unavailable, so the 83rd Infantry Division was ... given the whole mission. The performance of the (83rd) Division in keeping up with the 2nd Armored Division on its left was magnificent and played an important role not only in broadening the Corps spearhead, but also in protecting the exceedingly long exposed Corps right flank ... The speed and dispatch with which the Division moved was of particular importance in the crossing of the Elbe, making possible the crossing of the river on a broad front and the exploitation of the successful bridgehead. This was of the greatest importance because the enemy resisted the crossings fiercely as shown by the fact that father north ... the enemy was able to throw back the crossing attempt (of the 2nd Armored)." "After over 60 years, we finally had proof that our commanders had indeed recognized what we had achieved in that campaign," said Zamula. "As to why the recommendation was never acted upon is probably lost to history." Gomori believes publicity about the Elbe crossing, back in April, 1945, was downplayed because of the political sensitivities of an American army crossing into territory assigned to the Soviet Red Army. The recently discovered document gives Gomori new hope that the Military Awards Unit will take a second look at a new application he intends to file soon, seeking a Presidential Unit Citation. The division also seeks a sixth battle star for being the only American military outfit to fight in the Eastern European Theater, the boundary of which was -- the Elbe River. Previous battle stars were awarded the 83rd for its role in the Normandy, Brittany, Ardennes (Battle of the Bulge), Rhineland, and Central Europe campaigns. Zamula is not optimistic despite the new-found proof that supports their claim. There have been only a couple of rare examples when the military has gone back to commemorate a unit. Despite Gomori having accumulated eyewitness accounts from German newspapers and German military veterans of the ferocity of the battles along the Elbe, the general perception today may be that the Division was merely fighting the last remnants of a German army that was already defeated. Or it may simply be the public has no desire to re-visit a little-known episode in a story outshone by more dramatic turning points in the European theater, such as D-Day, Anzio, and the Battle of the Bulge. The veterans of the 83rd Division, which was headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, and de-activated only a few years ago, know time is not on their side. When the Association holds its annual Division reunion in Arlington, VA, on August 22-26, about 300 veterans and their families are expected to attend. Despite advancing age that prohibits travel by many of its members, the group isn't calling its reunion in DC its last. In fact, plans are already being made for their 2008 reunion in Carlisle, PA. "My dream is to stage in Carlisle next year a re-enactment of the Rag Tag Circus convoy as I experienced it," said Zamula. ABOUT THE 83rd DIVISION: The 83rd Division has its roots in Ohio, where most of its soldiers were from when the division was organized for World War I. The Division's insignia remains a graphic layout of the letters O-H-I-O. The Division engaged in 270 days of combat and ranks ninth among all Army divisions in the number of casualties suffered during World War II with 3,850 killed and 15,013 wounded in action. The Division was best known for rapidly being uprooted in the days immediately before Christmas, 1944, at the close of the Hurtgen Forest campaign in Germany, to race back into Belgium to become part of the spearhead that blunted the German offensive known as the "bulge" in the Ardennes Forest. It then assisted the 3rd Armored Division in bisecting the St. Vith-Houffalize Highway to block the easterly retreat of the German Army. The 83rd Infantry Division Association is a non-profit organization, now based in Alton Bay, NH, dedicated to honoring the men who served in the division during World War II. The organization has 680 members. Known as the Thunderbolt Division, the 83rd Infantry was first deployed in World War I and was deactivated after World War II. The company's insignia, a graphic representation of the word O-H-I-O, reflects the home state from where the Division's original ranks were raised. Source: The 83rd Division
__________________ "Pilot to copilot..... what are those mountain goats doing up here in the clouds?" |
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| | #2 |
| Older Than Dirt ![]() Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: Virginia Beach, Virginia
Posts: 7,309
| That's a damn shame..... these vets should be recognized for what they did, even if the German army was in retreat and "defeated" on paper. Charles
__________________ ![]() I can only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow doesn't look good either.... |
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| | #3 |
| Der Crewchief ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Ansbach, Germany
Posts: 33,152
| I agree Charles. My
__________________ ![]() fly boy:"isnt that the first jet bomber becasue i have flown one in a flight sim before and i know how it handles"[/I] |
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| | #4 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: A Swede living in Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 15,144
| 62 years too late. I sincerely hope that they get what they so rightfully deserve this time....
__________________ ![]() JAN "Felicis Tredecim" "I´m going back to the front to relax" "THE BLACK CATS FLIES TONIGHT" "Find your enemy and shoot him down - everything else is unimportant!" "When you're out of F-8's... You're out of fighters!" ![]() |
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