Forgotten Fights of the A. E. F.
by Irving Edwin Pugh and William F. Thayer
1921
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.
The preparation of any historical work is fraught with many
and great difficulties, at best, and
this work has proved itself exceptionally so. The greatest difficulty
was, of necessity,
encountered in the bringing together of the material from official
sources which could be relied
upon for the making of the work absolutely authentic and trust-worthy,
and so it was that the
majority of the material and information which is embodied in this work
was gathered personally
by the authors, while in active service with the American forces in
France and Germany. The
outstanding points of the battles mentioned are absolutely accurate and
a matter of official
record, and have been woven into the fabric of the story by the
interspersion of personal details
and impressions as to make the whole readable as well as authentic.
In the preparation of this work, we have of necessity, called
in several others, who have rendered
us highly valuable services both in the writing and preparation of the
work for the press, and it is
to those persons that we extend, herewith, our sincere thanks for their
part in the making of the
series a success thus far.
We find ourselves indebted to several former soldiers who
rendered valuable aid in the gathering
of the details; to official sources for operation reports of the
divisions mentioned; to " The Stars
and Stripes" for poems quoted; and more especially, to Miss Elizabeth
Mary Ellingham, who has
given untiringly of her time and experience in the technical
preparation and the corrections of the
structure of the original manuscripts, and to whom we feet especially
indebted, as this work was
both tedious and arduous.
THE AUTHORS.
DEDICATORY.
Throughout the preparation of this work, I have felt myself
under the constant influence of one
who has never failed to give me the unstinted aid and encouragement
without which it would
have been well nigh the impossible to attempt setting forth the story
of our operations overseas.
The writing of any historical work is very tedious and exacting to say
the least, much more so,
that of history so recent as that of 1918, and it was only by the
constant careful attention and
tender solicitude that the work has reached its consummation in the
present volume.
This one has ever been present at my side in the re-reading
and corrections of the text; the tedious
and boresome duties of getting the touch of the soldier into the tale
of the historian; the tramping
again through the forest wastes of Villers-Cotterets or the storming of
the Bellicourt tunnel; ever
assisting, just at the opportune moment with some little touch of
realism or pathos or the
description of some bit of French country-side, which had lost its
individuality in the maze of
history notes, for she has likewise been to La Patrie and has lent the
artist touch to the bare tale of
the soldier-historian. She it is who has been the inspiration and guide
through the otherwise
boresome tangle of official details and piles of communiques and maps.
She is sitting at my side
as I write these words, and to my wife I dedicate the story which she
has helped me prepare.
IRVING EDWIN PUGH.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
I. Cantigny: America's First Chance.
II. With the Second Division on the
Paris-Metz Highway.
III. When the Yanks Came.
IV. Beginning of the Great July Counter.
V. The Second Division at Vierzy and in the
Foret de Villers-Cotteret.
VI. The "Yankee" Division Holds the Pivot at
Bouresches.
VII. With Our Second Corps at the Hindenburg
Line.
VIII. The Yankee Soldier.
IX. To Our Dead!
FORGOTTON FIGHTS OF THE A. E. F.
INTRODUCTORY.
The annals of the Great European War are so replete with the
tales of heroism of the fighting
men of the several Allied Nations that there seems nothing left to add,
although the true story of
how these several million or more heroes died may, perhaps, never be
fully known, for each one
of them died with his story untold, and the same shell-burst that
snuffed out his life ended forever
the probability of the world,-to say nothing of his comrades,-ever
knowing just what impelled
him to the Great Adventure. Every crater upon the shell-torn fields of
Flanders; every tree whose
withered arms moan in the winds that sweep across those desolate wastes
of Picardy; every
muddy stream and rivulet that winds between the poplars and vineyards
of Champagne; every
solitary cross that marks the final " Blighty" of some unknown and
unsung hero, all these things
serve but as grim reminders of the mighty conflict, and as the
"Footprints on the Sands of Time,"
that point the way that the martyrs of Humanity and Democracy
have trod, torn and bleeding,
weary and worn, starving and delirious.
These are only passing landmarks, as it were, of the great
epic of Freedom; the milestones along
the desolate and barren way along which the Armies of Justice and
Liberty and Freedom have
marched to Victory; the second Calvary, upon which the Prince of Peace,
once more reviled and
scourged by his oppressors, has passed, to His Golgotha, to be sure,
but, beyond the pain and
anguish of the cross; beyond the sting of the blows of the scourge;
beyond the darkness and
gloom of the tomb, like the Man of Sorrows, the Martyrs of Freedom have
caught the vision of
the Holy City; have realized that their sacrifice will be rewarded, and
their anguish and pain have
not been suffered in vain. just as the Master, riding triumphantly into
the Jerusalem of old, caught
there the vision of Gethsemane and dark shadow of Calvary, just so have
the heroes of Flanders
and Picardy, of the Marne and of the Aisne, of Saint Mihiel and of the
Argonne caught the
vision of the Holy City where they shall be once more united with those
for whom they died;
shall pass in review before the King of Kings and Lord of the Ages,-the
Great Commander, their
White Comrade, and hear Him say, "Well done, enter into rest."
Such is the vision that we who have come safely through the
hell of the trenches and have been
spared to fulfill our mission in the world of Peace, have caught as the
star-shells of the Boche
burst in the midnight air, and flooded the narrow trenches with their
effulgency; and as we
emerge again from the great maelstrom of fighting and death, we feel
the greatest blessing that a
soldier can feel,-the knowledge of a duty well done.
It has been a really wonderful Adventure for us, and we hope
only to prove ourselves worthy of
the brave laddies that we have left sleeping on the distant shores of
France, where:
"In Flanders Fields the poppies blow,
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place, and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing fly."
Their voices are calling to us, even now, as we return to the
land for which they died; to the land
that shelters and protects those they loved; to the land that gave them
birth, and like a mother
cuddled them to her bosom, that in her hour of direst need, they might
be strong and fit to take up
her quarrel, and to protect her; to the land for which they so manfully
went forth to die, and so
bravely laid down their lives upon the shell-swept plains of Flanders
and through the trackless
wastes of the Argonne. Their voices call to us:
If ye break faith with we who die,
We shall not sleep, tho' poppies grow
In Flanders Fields."
Many are the paeans of victory and the shouts of the
multitude of free voices that are raised to
acclaim the heroes and the victors, as they come marching proudly home,
with their
battle-honored banners waving in the summer breezes of their native
land; hark to the loud
acclamations of love and joy as "those who waited" welcome the returned
boy-veterans of the
greatest war the world has ever seen! See the manly pride and youthful
fervor and enthusiasm
of the laddies, as they swing along down the broad avenue to the
martial music of the bands.
There are triumphal arches erected all along the line of march, bearing
witness to the pride and
love of the Nation for her valiant sons; the papers are full of the
praises of the heroes of the
fighting armies, which have covered themselves with glory in the great
conflict.
And, to-day, friends, if you were to enter the town of
Coblenz on the Rhine, you would be
thrilled with pride as your eyes fell upon the flash of color that
fitfully waves from the heights of
castle-crowned Ehrenbreitstein. Ehrenbreitstein the proud;
Ehrenbreitstein the haughty;
Ehrenbreitstein the impregnable; Ehrenbreitstein the symbolic
crystallization of Prussia's boasted
security and brute strength; Ehrenbreitstein, the mightiest of all that
"watch on the Rhine!" It was
indeed the embodiment of all that the proud Germans could boast and say
to all the world:
"Ehrenbreitstein shall stand forever,-as shall also our mighty German
Empire!"
But, to-day, in solemn pride and grandeur, high up on the
lofty sides of the rock-bound shores of
the Rhine; high above the highest towers of the mighty fortress;
flinging its folds triumphantly
and majestically over the Rhineland valleys and vine-clad hillsides;
telling the world, in accents
that cannot be mistaken, that the days of monarchies are indeed
slipping as the sands of the seas,
flies the glorious folds of your flag and my flag. And it is a
different flag, to many of us, too,
for its shining stars and its field of blue are drawn from the highest
heavens, symbolizing that our
guidance is Divine, and that its stars shall shine, in undiminished
luster until the stars in heaven
fade and cease to shine; its stripes of white are the symbolization of
the purity and fidelity of our
sacred American womanhood, which so many of our heroes have died to
keep unsullied by
the lawless and ruthless march of the violators of Belgium and France;
and its red stripes, are no
longer red only, for they are dyed a deeper crimson by the sacred
life-blood of seventy-thousands'
of our immortals, who silently keep their watch in Flanders fields.
We cannot forget! We must not forget! We will never forget
that the German armies stand
defenseless before the supreme bar of Justice, and that there is no one
who will besmirch his
honor or good name in their defense! Their hands are red with the blood
of murdered and
maimed and broken childhood of Belgium and France! Childish hands,
which they, in their mad
greed for power and their place in the sun, have cut off, still cry
aloud for vengeance! Woman-
hood, that most sacred of all estates, which they have ruthlessly
trampled in the mire and filth of
bestiality which only a Hun could dare think of, cries aloud against
its oppressors. Ruined towns
and peasant cots, torn and bruised and crushed by the heel of the
invader, raise their black ruins
to heaven and pray that Heaven shall send the grasses and flowers to
cover the scars left
behind in the path of the vandals. No! No! We shall NEVER forget that
the German nation is
defenselessly guilty of these and other crimes too vulgar to mention;
and we who have witnessed
their works and have seen with our own eyes the great Hun machine at
its worst, grinding out its
grist of death and destruction and suffering, shall never forget what
they have done! We have
not come through the fires of hell and the surging of the mighty hosts
locked in deadly conflict,
to put our flag on Ehrenbreitstein for a few short hours of "tinselled
triumph, but to see to it, that,
from this day forth,' NEVER shall the German nation be trusted as she
has been in the past! She
has forfeited every right to consideration among the councils of the
civilized nations of the
world; she has proved herself a wolf and a roaring lion, running wild
throughout the earth
"seeking whom she may devour." She has set up her standard as the
murderer of children, the
despoiler of womanhood, the scourge of all that is high and holy and
pure and good. She has
broken her faith with those who considered her their friend, and has
boasted that all agreements
between nations are but "scraps of paper" which she shall destroy at
her own will and pleasure,
in order that she may carry out her plan of world dominion! NO! NEVER
more will Germany
stand within the circle of civilized nations! We cannot forget! We must
not forget! We WILL not
forget!
Between its crag-ribbed summits
And ruined castles gray,
Between its clambering vineyards
And orchards white with May,
The rushing Rhine rolls seaward,
And hard by Coblenz town,
A flag on Ehrenbreitstein
Upon that tide looks down.
We have not brought that banner
Thro' storms of gas and lead,
Thro' your shell-swept leagues of trenches
That are mounded with our dead
For a tinsel hour of triumph
Above the ancient Rhine,
But to leave you for the future
A warning and a sign.
You may bask you in your legends
Of Niebelungen lore;
Of the mighty strokes of Siegfried
And the hammer strokes of Thor:
But drink no more the potion
Of gods and super-men,
Or the flag on Ehrenbreitstein
Will cross the seas again."
IRVING EDWIN PUGH
WILLIAM F. THAYER
CHAPTER 1
AMERICA's FIRST CHANCE: THE
FIGHT AT CANTIGNY.
It is possible that in those
ancient years when Rome was crumbling before the attacks of the
barbarians from beyond the Rhine, or when western Gaul was trembling
beneath the armies of
Attila, the civilized world of the time may have felt itself as gravely
threatened with destruction
as did modern civilization during the months of April, May and June,
1918, when once again the
Huns, as always through the ages, the assailants of the higher types of
human development, were
making their supreme effort to crush the armies of the Allies upon the
soil of France. But never
in past eras, certainly, was the stake involved for humanity so vast,
so world-embracing, and
never did the outcome of a supreme struggle seem to hang more
perilously in the balance."
So has written a historian of the
recent war, an sure y no more truly has anyone ever before
written!
Things were hanging in the balance
during those three fateful months of 1918, for the German
Army on the Western Front, now almost twice its former size, due to
reinforcement from the
collapsed Russian front; its troops armed and trained to perfection,
and animated by the
assurance of speedy and glorious success, opposing the armies of France
and England, "doggedly
determined still, but sorely worn and tried through nearly four years
of ceaseless battle and
cruelly battered by the plunges of the enemy in his spring offensive."
The gravity of the crisis was
startingly apparent-something must be done, and that quickly! There
was but one factor, which, although there was an element of
uncertainty, might serve to throw the
scales in favor of the Allies, and that factor was as yet wholly
untried. The enemy was driving a
wedge between the British and French armies, and were attempting to
smash their way through to
the Channel ports, striking through the lines just west of Amiens, as
well as another operation
against the British in the vicinity of Kemmel Hill, in Belgium. The
enemy smash was completely
overrunning all weight of resistance which the war-worn Allies could
throw in in their vain effort
to stem the tide of invasion. Within eight short days after launching
their mighty attack, the
enemy had completely enveloped the Somme battle-fields, and had smashed
through the lines of
the Allied armies for a gain of about fifty or more kilometers. It
seemed as if the fall of Amiens
was imminent, and, with that city, the railway facilities centered
there. Then, too, the gigantic
proportions of the enemy offensive was tearing great gaping holes in
the ranks of the Allied
reserves, and the battle that was fast developing gave promise of soon
placing the Allied armies
in a very grave Position. Accordingly, the Allies turned to America.
The advancing hordes of the enemy
were everywhere victorious. In numbers of fighting men,
guns, experience and morale, they had the edge on the Allies. Their
forces had been constantly
assembling in the Western theatre for the great attack that should end
the war before America
could bring her power and fresh reserves of men to bear upon their
blows. Germany's pick of
men, coupled with a choice selection of her best bets in generalship,
and the whole machine
backed with an experience extending over more than three years of such
warfare, had been
assembled for one last supreme spurt for the goal.
The enemy's initial blow had fallen
powerfully at the point of junction of the French and British
forces, and, somewhat late in the great struggle that had torn Europe
to shreds for over three
years, the Allies saw clearly, and for the first time, that there must
be built up a more co-ordinate
working of their armies if they should hope to gain the victory. The
gravity of this situation
resulted in a conference being called at Abbeville, on May 2, 1918,
and, after much discussion,
Marshal Foch was chosen as Allied Commander-in-Chief, the terms of this
conference being
stated as follows:
"General Foch is charged by the
British, French and American Governments with the
co-ordination of the action of the Allied armies on the western front:
to this end there is
conferred on him all the powers necessary for its effective
realization. To the same end the
British, French and American Governments confide in General Foch the
strategic direction of
militarv operations.
"The Commander-in-Chief of the
British, French and American armies will exercise to the fullest
extent the tactical direction of their armies. Each Commander-in-Chief
will have the right to
appeal to his Government, if in his opinion his army is placed in
danger by the instructions
received from General Foch.
(Signed')G. CLEMENCEAU
PETAIN
F. FOCH
LLOYD GEORGE
D. HAIG, F. M.
HENRY WILSON
TASKER H. BLISS
JOHN J. PERSHING."
There were, at the time of the
Great German Offensive of March 21st, 1918, in France,
approximately 300,000 American troops, of which number, only a force of
about four combat
divisions could be available in the crisis. These four were: the 1st
and 2nd, who were then in line,
and the 26th and 42nd, who had just recently finished their first
month's trench training. As a
necessary part of their training in the trenches, Some of these
divisions had taken part in local
combats,-the most notable being at Seicheprey, on April 20th, by the
26th Division,-but as yet,
not one of them had been in battle as an integral fighting unit.
Accordingly, the 26th and 42nd
Divisions at once took over quiet sectors to release veteran
divisions for the great battle; the 26th relieving the 1st Division,
which was ordered to the sector
northwest of Paris, to take up reserve positions; the 42nd relieving
two French divisions from
their quiet sectors in Lorraine.
On April 25th, 1918, the 1st
American Division received orders to relieve two French divisions
before the town of Cantigny, lying in a sector, slightly northwest of
Montdidier and about
twenty-five kilometers southeast of Amiens,-in other words, at the very
apex of the gigantic
enemy wedge, driven there by their March Offensive, nearly severing the
Allied lines. Amiens
was still in danger, and there could be but one question uppermost in
the minds of all of the
Allied forces,-could the Americans hold? If they did not, all was lost;
if they did, as the Allies
firmly believed they would, then the dawn of the day of glory had begun
to break.
Immediately upon entering the
sector fronting Cantigny, the 1st Division was subjected to more
intense defensive operations and raids than they had ever yet
experienced. Atillery fire was
thrown upon them in deluges, night and day, while the enemy maintained
frequent and annoying
raiding tactics. But the Yankee doughboys came back, with all the vim
and vigor and tenacity of
their race, and it was not long until they had recognized the presence
in their front of the 271st
and 272nd Regiments of German infantry, with average strengths per
company of about 150
men,-some of the best troops of the enemy forces at this time.
It soon developed that to hold the
sector at this point would not suffice, for the strongly
fortified and well-organized town of Cantigny, standing on rising
ground ahead of the 1st
Division, was affording the enemy admirable observation points which
overlooked the
American lines and rear areas. Furthermore, it presented a highly
favorable position from which
the enemy might advance in any further assaults he might send forward.
Cantigny faced the
Yanks, out there across No Man's Land, and, in order to make the Allied
positions safe and to
afford a favorable "jumping-off" place for a possible Allied
counter-offensive, should the chance
come, Cantigny must be taken. Accordingly, preparations were begun at
once.
For this attack, the 28th Infantry
was chosen, with the 26th Infantry furnishing one battalion for
the support, and a number of French tanks and flame-projectors.
Officially, the preparations for
this operation are stated as follows: A section of terrain behind the
American lines very similar in
natural features to that occupied by Cantigny and its defenses, was
selected for maneuvering, and
trenches in replica of the enemy trenches were dug upon it. Sand tables
showing the topography,
woods, lines of change of the barrage, objectives, strong points, and
all houses in Cantigny which
might be expected to be organized as machine gun nests were prepared
and carefully
studied. Exact and detailed orders were prepared by the staff and the
artillery arranged,
accurately, time tables for the preliminary bombardment and the rolling
barrage. "
So much for the preliminary
preparation for the attack.
And then came the night of May
27th- 28th; and morning saw the enemy going over the top along
the Chemin des Dames, in what was later destined to prove itself the
last of their great
offensives, and which carried their lines down to the Marne at
Chateau-Thierry and threatened
Paris with imminent attack.
Zero hour for the Cantigny attack
came on the morning of May 28th, at the usual time,- 5.30, just
as the first faint streaks of coming day lighted up the flaming front
lines. The attacking units were
accompanied by a dozen French tanks and the flame-throwers were in
position, the flying units
were ready for their part in the observation, and the engineers, were
likewise ready for their
pioneer work. Furthermore, approximately 250 pieces of artillery (75 mm
to 280 mm) were ready
to open the show at the appointed second.
The night was calm and starlit, and
promptly at the zero hour, the artillery barrage began its work
with a roar, and a hail of missiles crashed down upon Cantigny. Great,
jagged, painful, and
gaping holes began to appear in its walls and roofs, and its buildings
flew into jagged splinters,
and clouds of flying brick and stone-dust. This terrific fire paralyzed
the enemy, and when, at
half-past six, the fire ceased as drum-fire, and became the rolling
barrage, for the infantry attack,
advancing at the rate of 100 meters every two minutes, with the
infantry following at the distance
of fifty meters behind the barrage, the enemy was so bewildered that he
could put up but
comparatively little resistance.
"Mastered by the bayonets of the
American infantry and terrified by the tanks and
flame-throwers, the enemy surrendered in clusters, those who attempted
to fight being
shot down or taken, as the rush of assaulting troops mopped up the town
and its covering
trenches." That is the way one of those who was upon the ground at the
time put the story of the
fight.
Shortly after the launching of the
attack the objective line beyond Cantigny was reached and this
with only slight losses. It then, of course, became necessary to
consolidate and hold the gains,
against severe enemy counter-battery fire, which was beginning to fall
upon our newly-won
positions, in a devastating and withering barrage. It also developed
that the enemy would at-
tempt a counter-attack at once, and in order to hold the positions it
was necessary to secure them
at once, this work being accomplished by connecting a series of
shell-holes by a system of
shallow trenches. These systems were to be defended by the use of the
Chauchat automatic rifles.
This is the method of consolidation which was most generally employed
during the series of
brilliant American operations which so materially aided the Allied
progress, during these critical
months of midsummer, 1918.
Wire entanglements were constucted
by the men of the engineer corps, under a galling and
withering artillery fire and a constant machine gun barrage, while the
third wave of the assault
was employed in the construction of several strong points in the
immediate rear of the front line,
one of these points being in the edge of the woods east of the town of
Cantigny, another in the
little patch of woodland northeast of the town, and one in the cemetery
north of the town.
Having completed these hasty
preliminary works, the Yankee doughboys awaited the coming
enemy counter, undergoing, for two hours, the unabated intensity of the
enemy artillery fire,
which was responsible for a large number of our casualties, and which
was responded to by our
own artillery as well as that of the French batteries which had been
assigned to our attacking
troops.
Naturally, the enemy was supremely
confident that they could retake the lost positions from the
"green" American troops, and, about two hours after the town had been
taken from them, they
attacked from the reserve trenches in the vicinity of Lalval Wood,
covered by a carefully checked
and prepared barrage. This attack was launched against the 2nd and 3rd
Battalions of the
28th Infantry.
One of the lessons which the enemy
seemed never to have really learned was that they usually
followed their barrage at too great a distance,-usually about two
hundred meters. Our custom was
to follow up the barrage at a distance of from fifty to one hundred
meters, otherwise the artillery
fire would have passed over the line to be attacked and, if followed at
a distance of such
magnitude as that employed by the enemy, would have given the infantry
a chance to get
reorganized and waiting for the attacking waves to come upon them. Our
tactical employment of
the barrage, in synchronization with the infantry attacks, was to
follow the barrage at such short
distance as to throw the bayonets into the enemy before they could have
even partially recovered
from the effects of the shell-fire, as they would then present a
disorganized and confused mass
rather than efficient fighting units.
Accordingly, the Yankee doughboys
waited until the enemy waves were scarcely a hundred yards
from them and then a burst of flame swept down the line, which sent the
enemy reeling
backwards towards Framecourt Wood, leaving at least 500 killed and
wounded upon the
ground.
This was the first of six enemy
counterattacks that came upon our lines, within forty-eight hours,
each successive attack being more desperate than the preceding, and the
enemy became more and
more chagrined at their inability to retake the lost positions.
One military critic puts the
situation in this manner: " It was not only that they were of value to
him in themselves; the accumulating evidence of the dash and doggedness
of the American
troops as they continued to maintain themselves triumphantly against
the utmost efforts that their
adversaries could make was giving the lie so plainly to the German
thesis that the American
troops were no good and never could be made good; that it was
impossible for the American
effort ever to become a decisive factor in the war, that the enemy
dared not let them retain their
advantage. If they did retain it, the news was sure to leak out to the
German army and people and
to strike a chill of terror and foreboding to their hearts, as they
thought of the millions of other
equally sturdy Americans who were on their way to France, in fact or
potentiality."
This was the reason that the enemy
continued to hurl a devastating deluge of shell-fire and gas
into the crumbling ruins of the town, and throw forward the best of
their troops in a vain effort to
crush the thin but stubborn American line. But, in these same thinly
held positions at Cantigny,
they encountered the same strains of patriotic blood and determination
never to yield, that had
flowed through the veins of the ancestors of the defenders of that thin
line, the blood of the sons
of those who had beaten back the British at Concord and Lexington, the
blood of men who "had
come three thousand miles across the sea to fight for human freedom and
their own outraged
rights, upon a foreign soil, and they now stood firmly to their task."
Finally, the enemy attacks were
relaxed, after they had suffered the loss of nearly one thousand
killed, half that number wounded and two hundred or more prisoners,
together with several
pieces of heavy and light artillery and many machine guns, rifles and
munitions. Now it was that,
seeing no sacrifice, however bloody, could ever recover their lost
positions; that the moral
effect of the fight must be balanced elsewhere, and that American blood
had come at last to tip
the scales in favor of the forces of Right and justice and Liberty,
they withdrew and settled down
to their new positions. Here, also, the men of the 1st Division, held
to their lines until relieved
by French troops during the night of July 8th-9th, when they received
their well-deserved rest,
short though it was, before they moved down to win new laurels for
themselves on the fields of
the Marne salient, southeast of Soissons.
"At Cantigny," says one military
critic, "the 1st Division had taught the world the significance of
the lesson that the American soldier was fully equal to the soldier of
any other nation on the field
of battle. Who can estimate the extent of the subtle influence which
this proof exerted upon the
gigantic armies locked in battle along the Western front, heartening
the warriors of the Allies,
dismaying those of the Central Powers, as they struggled literally for
the mastery of the world
upon the fields of the Marne and Picardy and Flanders, through the
weeks of June and July, 1918,
perhaps the most momentous weeks in all history." Small wonder, is it
not, that we men of the A.
E. F., on meeting mud-bedraggled buddies, slowly and wearily tramping
along the "long, long
trail" in the Argonne, and hailing them with the inevitable question of
the fighting man: "What
outfit, buddy?" and upon receiving, in reply: " First Division," could
simply gasp out, "Oh!" and
plod along on our weary way to the lines!
CHAPTER II
WITH THE SECOND DIVISION ON
THE PARIS-METZ HIGHWAY.
When the German Armies launched
their great Aisne Offensive, on May 27th, 1918, the Allies
found themselves as gravely threatened here as they had been in
Picardy, in March.
The German Army, between Reims and
Coucy-le-Chateau, at this time was able to inflict some
of the greatest surprises, if not the greatest surprise of their third
great offensive of 1918. They
were able to do this on account of their rapid Concentration of their
forces which they had
brought into this sector.
The Seventh German Army, under the
command of General von Boehn, and which was now
operating along the plateau of the Chemin des Dames in the direction of
Soissons and to the east
and south of that city, and, in conjunction with the First German Army,
under General F. von
Below; operating to the east of the Seventh Army, with its left
attacking Reims, had broken
the Allied lines, and were advancing swiftly southward, driving
backward the weary and inferior
forces of the French and British, already worn out by their severe
fighting in Picardy and
Flanders.
Little wonder, then, that the face
of the entire situation at this time looked exceedingly black and
gloomy for the Allies. The enemy waves were forever advancing, toward
the Marne, which was
the coveted prize of their efforts, the attacking forces being
constantly replenished by fresh troops
from the Rhenish depots. To stop, or at least to check, these advances,
the allied forces sent
forward many frantic and heroic attacks,-all of them in vain,--for
their forces were depleted and
nearly exhausted.
Then came the later days of May,
and the gray hosts were overrunning Soissons and
Fere-en-Tardenois, and leaving the already devastated city of
Reims,-"la Grande Blessee," as the
good French peasants call it,-in a pocketed salient which was becoming
daily more and more
difficult for the allied troops to hold. And, furthermore, by the
greatly increasing and constantly
maintained pressure of the enemy masses, the wedge which they had
driven into the allied
lines was bulging dangerously in the direction of the French capital.
This bulge was more
apparent in the open and level country between the Ourcq and Marne
rivers. The allied forces
threw every available reserve against the advancing masses of Prussian
infantry, and succeeded
in slackening the momentum of the enemy machine. Nevertheless, the
enemy still possessed the
decided advantage of having the initiative in their hands, and could
therefore select almost any
point, from which, using this advantage, they could drive another
smaller wedge into the allied
lines. The most likely place for such an attempt would therefore be at
a point between Soissons
and Chateau-Thierry, for it was at this face of the salient that they
would then create a western
face for their salient.
For the third time in a few short
weeks, the French people saw their enemy succeed in driving
backward their worn and weary poilus; they knew that the situation was
one of extreme gravity;
they knew that the hosts of the enemy must be stopped now, or all would
be lost; but they set
their teeth and refused to yield an inch more of their precious French
soil to the desecrating feet
of the invader! How sublime and heroic was the courage and the
self-forgetting resolution
of the French people in such dark days as those that preceded the
battle of Chateau-Thierry!
The problem was very simple, on its
face, for the allied command. They must halt the enemy
attacks actually under way, and, at the same time, hold enough reserves
at hand to meet attacks
elsewhere. In doing this they must employ only just so much of their
available strength as was
necessary keeping the remainder always well at hand for shifting to
other points to meet the
enemy attacks which might develop elsewhere.
Such was the task that confronted
Marshal Foch during the dark days that came before the
ever-memorable fighting of midsummer, 1918, and the fact that the
forces available for him to
accomplish this feat, were wholly, inadequate, only enhances the
brilliancy of the success with
which he met the crisis.
The Commander-in-Chief of the
American Forces in France, General Pershing, had said: "All
that we have is yours, " at the time of the great German offensive of
March 21st. Therefore. "with
faith in the valor of the Americans, Marshal Foch ordered them to a
place of the greatest danger,
and therefore of the greatest honor,-to the banks of the Marne near
Chateau-Thierry and to the
great Paris-Metz Highway, where it crosses rolling hills to the
northwest of Chateau-Thierry,
there to throw themselves across the apex of the German invasion and
bar the road to Paris."
Accordingly, the 2nd American
Division, under General Omar Bundy, was ordered from its area,
near Chaumont-en-Vexin, northwest of Paris, to the vicinity of
Chateau-Thierry. They entrained
at once, on May 30th, and moved to Montreiul-aux-Lions, establishing a
divisional P. C. there.
This is a little town on the Paris-Metz Highway, about ten kilometers
west of Chateau-Thierry
and on the main line of enemy advance.
As they advanced, the news from the
front became steadily darker. The enemy was advancing
always, and although the valiant French poilus were fighting bravely
and heroically, they were
greatly outnumbered and exhausted by their long fighting and marching.
The enemy was pushing
forward steadily,-so steadily in fact, that it would become necessary
for the Americans to take
up and establish a defensive position at once.
Accordingly, this was done, with
the 9th Infantry in line between Bonneil (near the Marne,
southwest of Chateau-Thierry) and Le Thiolet, which was on the
Paris-Metz road; the 6th
Marines, extending from Le Thiolet to Lucy-le-Bocage; and the 23rd
Infantry, which was
operating temporarily under command of the 43rd French Division,
continued the line to the Bois
de Veuilly.
Looking northeast from these
positions, one's vision encounters a series of crests and
slopes of a low ridge of hills, for the most part rather heavily
wooded. Further along, the silvery
thread of the little creek,-the Ru Gobert, so soon to become a part of
America's great history,
forever,-ran windingly, between the green and brown of its banks,
through its valley, turning,
serpent-like, in and out between the little scattered villages of
Belleau, Torcy, Bussiares, and
Bouresches. Still further on, one encountered the more steeply rising
slopes of the opposite
side of this valley, where the enemy lines had been established
already, with his artillery
sweeping the positions which the Yanks had but recently taken over.
After the Americans had organized
their defensive lines, the French were to fall back through
them, from their own indefensible and only temporary positions. This
was the cause of much
unjust criticism by people who have claimed to know that our valiant
allies, the French poilus,
had been in full retreat and that the Americans, advancing bravely to
meet the enemy, had pushed
through their disorganized ranks and stopped the Boche in a
characteristic dashing Yankee
manner. Such was not the case, and the War Department at Washington can
furnish any careful
investigator with the truth of the whole matter.
The falling back of the French at
the Paris-Metz road was just as much a planned part of the
operation as was the formation of the defensive line by the men of the
2nd American Division.
Let us try to play fair with the brave men who fought with our noble
allies, for they, the poilus of
France, had already won the battle before our men got there, for they
had held the Boche during
the highly critical time that the Americans were organizing the
defensive positions where the
enemy advance was to be stopped.
Friends, do not be prone to
underestimate the aid which our valiant allies of all nationalities
gave
us, for we must remember that we were fresh, while they had been worn
out by four years of
fighting before we ever came into it at all; they had lost whole
families and had had their towns
in scores wiped from the face of the earth by the devastating hand of
war; our homes were safe
and far from the destructive hand of the enemy; and for every American
grave upon the soil of
France, there are a thousand French and English graves, beside those of
the heroic Belgians. They
were fighting and suffering and dying, while we were trying to find out
whether or not we ought
to fight, and whether or not we should stay out of it, and take the
position of the passive neutral.
Ask the men who fought beside him what they think of the poilu of
France, and they will tell you
that he was just as good and, perhaps, a lot better than they were. If
the fighters think well of
them, why not those who stayed at home?
Shall we ever forget the blue-clad
poilus of France? Funny fellows, they were, to many of us,
with their queer little caps, tilted gayly on one side of their heads,
and their war-worn,' and
rain-faded horizon-blue uniforms. And what a multitude of little
"musettes,"-every last one of
them, bulging like an Arabian water-skin,-filled with the little
trinkets they loved so well, and
with their rations for the long weary marches, or vigils of
trench-life. And, over all, was slung his
rifle, nearly as long as himself, ' but carried almost tenderly, it
seemed, as one would carry a child
one loved!
It seemed to many of us that these
sturdy souls of France were made rather for love
and laughter,-for the associations of the tiny gardens where red wine
and white wine of the
southern vintage was wont to flow, and where men were wont to gather,
of an evening, and pass
the gossip of the day over the flowing glasses. One could almost
picture them, sitting there, in the
reddening sunlight of southern France or in Languedoc, or Burgundy,
sipping their wines, while
the maidens danced gayly in the open space between the tables; not born
for the stern and awful
realities of war, where the rough and weary road stretches red and lone
and long, and desolate.
But they surely trod its blighted and broken pathway, with a singing
heart,-bravely and gayly!
ever dismissing the pain and sorrow and pathos of it all with their
heroic little: "C'est la guerre!"
and a shrug of their shoulders.
We have seen them, treading the
pathway down into the Valley of the Shadows, worn and
weary, and hungry,-racked and worn by the long days and nights in the
lines,-yet forever smiling,
that heroic and almost sublime smile, which it seemed, nothing under
heaven could wipe away!
Tender as women, always, when the little children came wonderingly to
look at their sturdy
forms, or glance over their rifles and ask them for: "Un cigarette,
s'il vous plait, M'sieur." And
yet, leaping with a snarl of rage and anger, upon the enemy, with his
long, slender "Rosalie" at
their throats!
Such is but a poor attempt to
portray the poilu.
Returning once again to the day of
June 3rd, 1918, we find that the enemy was already sounding
out the front that was interposed across his advance to the Paris-Metz
road, and was finding it
solid. But he only put off his attacks until the next day, when he
attempted to dislodge both the
2nd American and 43rd French Divisions, by launching an attack against
the line from Montcourt,
near the Marne, to Chezy-en-Orxois, about five kilometers northwest of
the Bois de Veuilly. But
his attacks were everywhere checked, due,to the arrival of the other
units of the 2nd Division,-the
5th Marines and a part of the 2nd Field Artillery Brigade, which had
been reinforced by six
groupments of French field artillery.
The enemy lines had already been
stopped in the valley of the Ru Gobert, opposite the
Americans, and the same evening, the French outposts retired through
the American lines, thus
completing the movement of taking over the sector.
About dusk, on June 4th, the enemy
launched a concerted attack on Veuilly-la-Poterie, which
was at the junction of the 2nd American and the 43rd French Divisions.
This attack was repulsed
to the north of the, village, and, later on, a renewal of the attack
suffered the same fate, with
losses of about two hundred, although they gained a slight advantage on
Hill 123, which,
however, they lost to the French on the following day. Our artillery
very effectively broke up an
enemy attack which was launched against Hill 142, just south of
Bussiares, on June 5th.
The American lines were everywhere
holding tenaciously, although the fighting in this vicinity
had been violent and severe in the extreme. For this reason, if no
other, the force of the enemy
attacks may be said to have reached their culmination on the night of
the 5th of June, and thus
ended for all time the tactical importance of the enemy drive for
Paris, just as the repulse further
eastward had stopped their advance through the bulge of Chateau-Thierry.
Here, having been terribly worn
down and depleted by its harrowing fighting, the 43rd French
Division was relieved by the 167th French Division, which took its
positions on the left of the 2nd
American Division, while the 164th French was likewise relieved by the
4th French Cavalry
Division, on the right.
Then, too, the 2nd American
Division was realligned, and now presented the following order of
battle, from right to left; 9th Infantry, 23rd Infantry, of the 3rd
Infantry Brigade; the 6th Marines
and 5th Marines of the 4th Infantry Brigade, or, as it was later
called, the famous "Marine
Brigade." Likewise, the front of the 2nd Division was strengthened by
drawing in its left flank,
from the Bois de Veuilly to the road between Bussiares and Champillon.
Deluge after deluge of artillery
fire was thrown upon our newly taken positions by the enemy
artillery, which was now employing high explosive and yperite shells.
This fire greatly
endangered the main artery of the American system of supply, viz., the
road to la
Ferte-sous-Jouarre.
As a new line of defense had been
taken and established, it was therefore necessary to drive the
enemy from their observation and dominating points in the valley of the
creek, in order to make
the American positions more tenable, and to remove the danger of
accurate enemy artillery fire,
which might paralyze the service of our supply.
Was the time now propitious for the
attempting of a direct break by the Yanks? or would it be
better to hold the enemy where they now were, until such time as they
were in condition?
The 2nd American Division
accordingly set about the making of the plans for the taking of this
valley, in order that they might dominate the positions there.
Therefore, in conjunction with the
167th French Division, on its left, the 1st and 2nd Battalions of
the 5th Marines swept forward through the broken woodlands, in the
mists of the morning, with
their objectives set as the edges of the crests north of Champillon, as
well as those looking down
into the open valley about Torcy and Bussiares.
This attack was met by intense
machine gun and rifle fire, but the Yankee " Leathernecks"
pushed onward, and at seven in the morning had taken all objectives and
commanded the valley
at this point. Now the advance of the 167th French Division became
successful, and they
established themselves on the dominating heights just west of the
Marines.
With the object of pushing forward
its center so as to take the villages of Belleau and
Bouresches, and so as to align the center with the left, the 2d
Division set its objectives on a line
which ran along the valley from a point east of Bussiares to the
eastern edge of Bouresches.
Then, the 5th and 6th Marines and the 23rd Infantry Regiments were sent
forward, on the morning
of June 6th. These attacks were sent forward against the tangled
woodlands of the Bois de
Triangle and the Bois de Belleau (Belleau Wood), and, as the lines
surged backward and forward,
among the tumbled and tangled thickets, one of the most ferocious
battles ever staged was fought
by the determined and maddened men of the contending hosts.
Time and time again, the surging
lines enveloped enemy nests, where the spiteful flame of the
spitting machine guns, tore their ranks to bits and scattered the
shrieking wounded about the
shell-swept ground before them. Again and again, they flew at each
others' throats cursing
inwardly, as they swayed to and fro in the deadly grapple of maddened
men; torn and bleeding
and half frenzied with pain, they fought desperately, driving their
shining little trench-daggers
deep into the loins of their opponents, then letting the limp, still
bodies slip noiselessly to the
ground, and dashing forward again to seek out another. And all of the
time, the ground all about
them was being torn by shells, which were bursting everywhere, throwing
bits of stone and dirt
and bodies, and all of the debris of battle about in every direction
while making the earth tremble
beneath the feet of the warriors.
The following day, although the
left had been able to add hardly anything to their advance of the
preceding day, the right of the 2d Division was now in possession of
Bouresches. Likewise, it
had advanced into the Bois de Belleau as far as Hill 181, where they
had dug in on the summit. In
doing this, the American lines now lay on advantageous ground for
observation of the enemy
lines and positions further in the woodland.
But the enemy machine gun nests in
the village and woods had taken a terrible toll, and in these
two battles the Marine Brigade had sustained losses of 24 officers and
390 men killed or
wounded, and the 9th and 23rd Infantries had lost 377 officers and men.
From this point, for several weeks,
a battle almost without respite continued along the front,
more especially near Bouresches and southeast of that town, toward
Vaux, as well as in the Bois
de Belleau. As one authority puts it: "The ability of the Americans to
advance at these points, or
of the enemy to prevent them from advancing, became so obviously a
test, before the whole
world, of the relative moral stamina of the two races, that the contest
took on the importance of
one far greater than that represented by the mere tactical value of the
territory involved." And,
although the lines swayed backward and forward many times, always the
Americans maintained
the supremacy.
Then the 9th Infantry, advancing
north of the Bois de la Morette, with the French troops and
companies E and F of the 30th Infantry, 3d Division, took the southern
slope of Hill 204 and the
village of Monneaux.
On June 11th, the Marine Brigade
advanced, covered by a rolling barrage, and took all of the
remainder of the Bois de Belleau, with the exception of a few spurs
which ran northward,-with
over 300 prisoners and 39 machine guns and light trench mortars.
Finally, on June 25th, all these
places were cleared out by the superb advance which did not halt until
it was far out of the valley
toward Torcy and had netted 300 prisoners and 24 machine guns.
Many enemy counter-attacks went
astray during these days, one of them launched on the
positions of the 9th and 23d Infantries, in the vicinity of Bouresches
and north of the Bois de La
Morette. This counter failed to retake any of the lost ground from
these regiments. Still another
of the more important enemy counters was an especially violent one
which was launched against
Bouresches and the Bois de Belleau, but was hurled back by the combined
efforts of the
doughboys and marines. During these weeks of fighting, the only relief
of the 2d Division was
that of three battalions of Marines, whose places were taken for five
days (June 16-21) by three
battalions of the 7th Infantry of the 3d Division. Then, too, during
these operations, there had
been opposed to this division, on various points of its front: 197th
(relieved June 9th);
237th (relieved June 11th); 10th (relieved June 15th); 28th (relieved
June 21st); and the 5th
Prussian Guard; 231st and 87th enemy divisions.
One noted authority, in speaking of
the wonderful fight of the 2d Division in the valley of the Ru
Gobert, and their repulse of the enemy masses, says: "And this at a
time when the German
Command was exultantly proclaiming to all the world the impending
overthrow and dissolution
of the Allied Armies! As a matter of fact, it was precisely at this
time and on account of this
fighting that the German High Command had borne in upon it the iron
fact that the scales were
swinging against them, slowly but none the less surely."
However, there still remained one
important task for the 2d division to perform before its history
in this theatre of operations should be called complete. Vaux must be
taken.
"In the creek valley between Hill
204 (taken by the French and Americans on June 7th-8th), and
the positions north of the Bois de la Morette (taken by the 9th
Infantry at the same time), lay the
village of Vaux,-tiny but deadly. Its stone houses were fortresses
armed with German machine
guns; its cellars were bomb-proofs, sheltering hidden swarms of
infantry; its streets were covered
ways filled with ghastly surprises for the attackers. It thrust out a
menacing salient into the
American lines, sweeping with its fire Monneaux and the communications
of Hill 204. It had to
be taken!"
That is the way a correspondent saw
the situation. Having established liaison near Monneaux, the
9th infantry prepared to take Vaux, with the aid of the 3d Division.
"Accordingly, every bit of
available material of any kind on the subject of Vaux was brought
together and carefully studied.
Maps and old post-cards were gone over and refugees described in minute
detail the construction
of its cellars and the intricacies of its streets. Every platoon and
squad leader who was going into
Vaux had a map showing in red ink the particular cellar he was to take
and how to get to it." So
writes an early A. E. F. writer.
Then, on the morning of July 1st,
after intense artillery preparation, the attack went forward, with
the 9th Infantry, supported by the advance of the 23d Infantry on the
left, and the 3d Division on
the right. About fifteen minutes after the attack went over, the first
wave was in the town, and in
less than half an hour it had been taken.
Northwest of Vaux lay the Bois de
la Roche, which position was taken by the 23d Infantry,
which also improved its positions on Hill 204. But the enemy drove
forward a counter against the
Bois de la Roche, the next day, which was repulsed, many of the
attackers being cut off and taken
prisoners.
Vaux was never re-taken by the
enemy.
"Summing up the situation," says
one authority of A. E. F. history, "in Chateau-Thierry, in the
Bois de Belleau, in Bouresches and Vaux and on Hill 204, the Germans
had now faced the men
from across the seas in fair combat; before the audience of the world
they had met with them the
moral test, and the result was a foretaste of what was soon to come. By
the Ist day of July, 1918,
men of discernment in Germany, could trace the word "defeat" written
across the setting
sun of "Der Tag."
CHAPTER III
WHEN THE YANKS CAME.
"Over There, Over There,
Send the word, send the word over there,
That the Yanks are coming,
The Yanks are coming.............."
Those were the words of a rather
popular song that came into its own during the infancy of the A.
E. F. and was sung up and down the land, from cantonments in the
"States" to Seicheprey, away
up on that almost forgotten sector "northwest of Toul," where the
handful of A. E. F.'ers had been
first introduced to "friend Jerry."
And it was true, too, for the Yanks
were coming with every ship that touched the shores of
France, and they were coming with the determination that they wouldn't
"come back till it was
over, Over There! "
Then came the month of June, 1918,
when the whole of the civilized world was scarcely
breathing, or rather, seemingly dared not breathe, while the gray-clad
hosts of Prussian Autocracy
were dashing forward, in an avalanche of brute power and militaristic
domination, down through
Fere-en-Tardenois to the banks of the already historic Marne. And,
following this period of
deepest darkness for the allied cause, came the startling and
breath-taking news that the full
avalanche of the enemy hordes had been met and stopped on the banks of
the Marne by a mere
handful of Yankees,-"With the Help of God and a few Marines!"
Ask those who were there at the
bridge-head of Chateau-Thierry,-those weary and bedraggled
men of the 7th Machine Gun Battalion, Third Division, who, with the
wear and tear of over a
hundred and eighty weary kilometers of hiking behind them, to say
nothing of their thirty-six
hours or more without sleep, even for a few moments, plodded wearily
into the battered little
town on the banks of the Marne, in the sunset of that June evening,
with the white and gray puffs
of the exploding enemy shells dotting the twilight skies of summer.
When, on the 27th of May,
1918, the enemy smashed through the thinly-held French positions on the
plateau of the Chemin
des Dames and dashed forward towards the Marne, only two American
divisions were available
for Marshal Foch to throw into the breach in a mad attempt to stop or,
at least, to stem for the
moment, the onrushing enemy tide.
And so it was, that the first to
get into the apex of the great battle which was fast developing
here,-and, according to the official reports of the operations, the
only "men who fought in
Chateau-Thierry itself,"-were the men of the 7th Machine Gun Battalion,
of the Third Division.
Nevertheless, it stands also as a matter of official history, that the
majority of the fighting in
this area,-that is, the area to the north of the town of
Chateau-Thierry,-fell to the men of the
Second Division, who were destined to make a name for themselves and
for American arms such
as has scarcely ever been equaled in our entire history, in their fight
in the Bois de Belleau,
Torcy, Bussiares, and Bouresches, and in the valley of the little
creek, the Ru Gobert.
Perhaps it might be well to quote
the words of one of the members of the historical section of the
Great Headquarters, A. E. F., staff as setting forth in the fewest and
most pointed words, the crux
of the whole matter. He says: "The Third Division was the first to
reach the banks of the Marne;
and those were Third Division machine gunners, who, racing across
country in their little
hommes 40, Chevaux 8,' reached the river in time to fight for four days
and nights that gallant
fight at the Chateau-Thierry bridges, of which the thrill ran around
the world."
And, let it here be said that the
Third Division was at this time making at Chateau-Thierry a
name that shall stand for all time as equal to any other that has ever
been blazoned upon the
tablets of America's glorious history.
The Third Division had, as yet,
completed only part of its period of training in the vicinity of
Chateauvillain and La Ferte sur Aube when it received orders, on May
30th, 1918, to move at
once to the front. This order stated that: "The 5th Infantry Brigade,
consisting of the 4th and 7th
infantries and the 8th Machine Gun Battalion, will be attached to the
6th French Army, under
General Degoutte, and assigned to the defense of the passage of the
Marne from Chateau-Thierry
to Dormans. That part of the 6th Infantry Brigade, consisting of the
38th Infantry and half of the
9th Machine Gun Battalion, will hold the crossings of the Marne from
Dormans eastward to
Damery, under direction of the 10th Colonial French Division of the 5th
French Army. The
remainder of the 6th Infantry Brigade, viz., the 30th Infantry and the
remaining half of the 9th
Machine Gun Battalion, will be the support of the 5th Brigade. The
Divisional Machine Gun
Battalion,-the 7th -will march at once for Chateau-Thierry; the
remaining troops will go bv rail
May 31st, for their respective destinations."
Of these various assignments, none
proved so urgent as that of the Divisional Machine Gun
Battalion, the 7th, which was in the fighting from the first time they
entered the little town of
Chateau-Thierry, until its final relief, ninety-six hours later. The
remainder of the 3rd Division
suffered very slightly, with the exception of some severe fighting in
the jaulgonne Bend of the
Marne, where the enemy attempted a crossing, but was halted.
And so it was that, with the
horizon-blue-clad poilus of France, worn and weary and
mud-bedraggled, and torn and bleeding, fighting a seemingly hopeless
battle with the advancing
enemy waves in the shell-torn streets ahead of them, the men of the 7th
Machine Gun Battalion,
hastily getting their guns into position so as to play along the main
bridge in the center of the
town, and likewise up and down the banks of the Marne on both sides,
went into battle which
was to continue for ninety-six hours more!
Wave after wave of the enemy hosts
swept forward towards the coveted goal, determined to
either take the bridge or to make possible a crossing at some other
point which would enable
them to deploy into the open and almost level country beyond the banks
of the Marne. But,
across the stream, was the indomitable barrier of Yankee gunners, and
"once again, for the
second time in four years, they made the Marne the high tide of the Hun
invasion!"
Thousands of shells of all calibres
flew overhead; some of them with their sinister whistle, many
of them seemingly howling, but all of them uniting in one great rising
crescendo, and the fortunes
of battle ebbed and flowed beneath them. Great enemy shells dropped
with crash and roar into
the thin line of stubborn American doughboys, throwing debris of every
description high into the
air, and filling the spaces between the great rising chant and
crescendo of battle with the moans
and shrieks of the dying and wounded. Beyond, through the battered
streets of the town,
gray-clad masses began to move forward, down to the banks of the Marne.
It was the enemy infantry,
advancing in their packed formation, resembling a great gray monster
crawling down to devour the men who were standing their ground at the
bridges of
Chateau-Thierry. They soon deploy, fresh troops filling the gaps and
then they advance again
towards the goal of Prussian ambition;-the Marne. Low, sinister shrieks
and whistles come
from above, and the shells from the allied batteries begin to fall in
the midst of the advancing
enemy masses. Men, covered with blood and mud, crawling over one
another, and rushing about
in a dazed state, writhing in agony or pushing doggedly forward,
attempt to advance again to the
river banks. The ground and streets are dotted with the huddled forms
of the dead and dying, but
the second wave is already pressing forward, and once again the Yankee
machine guns tear great
gaping holes in their advancing ranks; and still they hurl themselves
against the American
positions among the shell-holes and ruins along the river.
All the time, the uncanny whistle
of the flying bullets, with their s-s-s-s-s-s-s!" came from the
advancing hosts across the river, and then, once again the Yanks turned
the muzzles of their
deadly guns full on this onward rushing wave of humanity, poured forth
a steady stream of steel,
as the guns rat-tat-tat their message of death and hate. Shrieks,
curses and groans rise from the
ranks across the river, which was now running with the blood of the
contending hosts, and time
and again the whole mad drama of war is deepened by the boom of the
batteries in the
rear,-adding their finishing touch to the ghastliness of the scene.
But the 7th Machine Gun Battalion
stuck! and behind them and the barrier formed by their
comrades, clad in the immortal blue of long-suffering France, the
allied forces were able to
dispose more fresh troops, of the 164th French and 3rd United States
Divisions. These new
troops took up strong defensive positions along the Marne on both sides
of the town, and
effecting, by the 30th Infantry, liaison with the 9th Infantry, of the
2nd Division, on the right of
that division, near Mountcourt, west of the river.
Finally, came the morning of the
4th of June, and with it relief for the weary 7th Machine Gun
Battalion! But, as they filed out of their positions, and plodded
backward from the line of the
river, they seemed to wear the faint semblance of a smile of victory,
for behind them were the
men of two other regiments of their own division, the 3rd, as well as
an entire French division.
Why did they smile even though those smiles were the smiles of the
exhausted and weary men
who have stood face to face with death for ninety-six long hours?
Because they knew that victory
was theirs; that the setting sun of that day should bring into being
the birth of that new power
which was destined, even then, to spell defeat and ruin for the proud
banners of Prussian
autocracy! They were supremely confident that the enemy never would
break through the line
of heroes who they had left in charge of their blood-bought lines along
the Marne banks,
and in the streets of Chateau-Thierry.
It is true the operation had been
costly, but had it been even more costly, it surely would have
been worth the price. When it is considered what effect the fighting of
the untried American
troops had upon the morale of the allied armies, perhaps never before
had any like number of
men in so short a time contributed as much to the final victory as did
the 2nd and 3rd Divisions at
and near Chateau-Thierry.
As one writer, whose name I have
forgotten for the time being, puts it: "The mother of every boy
who was killed there can say that no soldier's life ever was given more
effectively during the
whole war."
How brave and self-sacrificing and
altogether noble have been our mothers and all of our noble
American women during these stirring times! And still all of their care
and devotion had for its
ending a grave in France!
There, where poppies bloom, and
fields are scarred
With unknown heroes' graves, remorseless, numb,
And swifter than the lightning it may come
From unknown depths where earthly joys are barred,
Where Love is lost, the quickening pulse is still
And Death's rhythmical beat is audible.
Or in the trench where golden hearted Truth,
Clad in the panoply of grace and right,
Sublimely pours the sweet red wine of youth
A surf of blood upon the sea of Might."
And still has there been no
agonizing cry of revolt from the mother or wife or sweetheart, no
furious imprecations, no bitterness of soul.
And so America stoops and kisses
the cold, still lips of her martyred sons, covering them with
her starry banner of Liberty; placing them,-her supreme sacrifice of
honor and love,-upon the
Altar of God's throne, that Liberty and Justice and Freedom from
Oppression may not be forever
lost amidst the crushing and brutal blows of the Mailed Fist and Iron
Heel of the Autocrat.
Returning to the discussion of the
relative importance of the fight at Chateau-Thierry, let us
consider for a few moments, what it meant to the allied cause and
morale, at this stage of the
great game of chess which was being waged on the western frontier of
civilization. Perhaps it
would be best to quote several noted authorities.
The first one at hand, written by a
staff officer of the A. E. F. Headquarters, states:
"The effect on the French was
immediate, visible and startling. The drooping French morale
revived as a midsummer flower lifts its head after a cooling shower."
The same authority, later adds:
"The American morale had also been sagging. It could not have
been otherwise. Our troops had had to wait around too long, and it had
taken all the heart out of
them. Homesick beyond words, they had to prepare themselves slowly for
trench warfare, a
deadly thing, the while the world told them that the war would last for
years and years. They
began to wonder whether they were going to be so darned good after all.
Then suddenly the
whole face of the matter changed. News came from the Marne valley that
Americans were
pitching into the fight, that it was old-fashioned,
paste-'em-one-in-the-eye fighting of their own
sort, that they were getting away with murder. And every American from
Camp Lewis to Toul,
said: 'Gee, we're pretty good,' and became so by thinking it."
And you can readily see what sort
of effect this would have on the troops in France. Of course,
every division, either on ship or already landing, began to feel that,
after everything was said and
done, the stories of enemy prowess were idle tales of the billets, and
that there would really be
nothing to it, when they would be given the chance to get into the game
for good. They began to
think that all of these weary months of training was all "bunk" and
unnecessary; that all they
needed was the chance to take "a paste at that Big German Rifle Range,"
and they would show
what sort of stuff they were made of.
Accordingly, General Pershing
became commander of a bunch of real fighting units, scarcely
more than raw recruits, of only a few short months' training.
Transformed, almost over night, into
units fit to put into immediate use at the fighting lines, should the
necessity arise for throwing
them into the breach at once.
And, then and there, the policy of
sending them into the fight at once was adopted, and, as one of
our army men puts it: "All that happened from July 18th to November
11th followed as a natural
though unforeseen consequence of what happened in June northwest of
Chateau-Thierry. just as
an electric spark will, in a flash, take a jar of properly proportioned
hydrogen and oxygen and
turn it into water, so the current which, spitting blue flame and
setting the whole world a tingle,
ran forth from Belleau Wood in June, 1918, took that miscellaneous
assortment of dubious
Americans known as the A. E. F. and turned it into an army."
Let us get the true perspective of
the fight at the Chateau-Thierry area and see just what it means
and really amounted to, from the purely military standpoint. After all,
it was not so much of a
miracle as we have been told it was.
It is true that the Americans, with
the aid of their almost exhausted allies, the French, did stop the
German drive at the banks of the Marne, and, when the lines moved
again, their direction was
towards Germany. But let us also remember that, when the Germans
smashed through the
Chemin des Dames plateau area on May 27th, the allied troops had
already established a new
defensive line and system of well chosen positions, manned by men who
were thoroughly
schooled in their calling and highly capable of withstanding anything
that the enemy would
probably bring against them. And this line of defenses was in a
position which met and, as
history already recounts, turned the tide of German invasion. But that
tide of invasion consisted
of a German army which was almost already exhausted by its incredibly
successful advance--an
advance which carried it across the Aisne, through Tardenois and the
Ourcq, and down to the
very banks of the historic Marne. The enemy troops had already out-run
even its own
expectations and was tired out by its drive, and almost unsupported, on
account of the inability of
its supplies and reserves to keep pace with the rapidity of its advance.
There has existed a sort of popular
notion in this country, that our valiant allies, the French, were
at this time, in full retreat through the advancing lines of American
troops, and that our men were
therefore forced to stand alone and meet the Hun hordes, bearing the
brunt of the fray and
finally pushing the invaders backward as their victorious waves swept
forward in
counter-attack.
This notion is not at all true, and
furthermore mightily unfair to our valiant allies and friends,-the
horizon-blue-clad poilus of France.
From sources that are official,
and, therefore, of much more value as authoritative than would be
even the works of the most highly credited correspondents or officers,
the story of what really
took place comes to me in this manner. The Americans were now operating
under command of
the French General Degoutte, who was commanding the corps in whose
sector they were
operating. Opposing the German advance were two French divisions, which
were already sadly
depleted, and weary from their constant fighting of five days'
duration, disheartened, and nearly
having reached the limit of their physical endurance. Yet they were
ordered to hold their ground
until the Americans could get into line behind them. And hold they did,
as best they could, and
with the determination with which only the poilus of France can fight!
After the Americans had
formed their defensive lines, the French troops were to fall back
through these lines and
withdrew for a much-needed rest.
Everything that took place after
this time was strictly according to orders that had been issued to
the commanders of the several divisions engaged, as well as to the
corps commander, General
Degoutte, Therefore, the withdrawal of the exhausted French was no
reflection upon their already
proved indomitable spirit and stoicism, for in holding as they did just
long enough for the
resistance lines to be formed, they had already done their full share.
As these facts were, of course,
known to only those of high command or at least to only those
who were entitled to know, the troops and also the correspondents,
construed it faultily, and we
find them continually spreading this false impression abroad throughout
the land. Certainly,
these men have never lived and fought beside those same French poilus,
or else they would never
have even so much as dreamed of him yielding a precious inch of his
beloved France to the
foe.
The spirit of the Yanks, as they
advanced to the battlefront, through roads streaming with worn
and weary and battered French troops, swarming to the rear in an almost
bewildered and dazed
sort of way, was little short of wonderful, for they continued their
advance with spirits unbroken
and nerves unshaken. And to most of them it surely must have seemed as
if they alone were
holding firm, when all about them was crumbling before the gigantic Hun
battering ram. And sb
the sunset of June 5th, 1918, brought to the battered and shell-torn
streets of Chateau-Thierry, the
light of victory and the promise of deliverance, as the rat-tat-tat of
the guns resounded through
the ruins of what had once been busy streets, and down along the banks
of the river that divides
the town into sections. The crumbling ruins of the bridges, turned red
and dusty yellow in
the slanting rays of the setting sun, the red-tiled roofs of the houses
across the river, now scarred
and torn by the incessant rain of shells and the spatter of shrapnel
and machine gun fire, lent a
sort of colorful touch to the plaster walls of the houses, whose
smoking ruins stood, looking it
seemed, with pitying and wistful windows calling to the spitting fire
of the guns to win them
back again to the folds of the tricolor of France. The bridge of the
Marne, a crumpled ruin,-a pile
of stones, now-with here and there the huddled form of some brave Yank
or poilu, locked in
death-grip with his opponent, in the blue-gray uniform of the guard,
over whose silent forms sang
the ominous song of the machine guns and the whine of the shells
bursting beyond, in the further
end of the town.
And further on, from the Chateau
garden, surrounded by its great stone wall, with its massive
wooden gates, and with its courtyard and gardens strewn with the bodies
of the slain; its flowers
and plants trampled under foot of the surging hosts which, only a short
time previous had been
locked in deadly conflict; its well and lattice porticoes torn and
twisted by the bursting shells,
looked out and beyond to the tall tower of the cathedral, which now
reflected the glory of the
sunset, as if a new halo of glory had crowned its lofty spire. All was
peaceful now, except for the
patter of the distant machine guns, and the great round moon rose over
soil redeemed for France!
The Yanks had come!
CHAPTER IV.
BEGINNING OF THE GREAT JULY
COUNTER.
Perhaps a changing from the
defensive to the offensive is the most difficult and delicate
operation in the science of warfare. Yet that was precisely what
Marshal Foch did when he took
the initiative from the hands of von Ludendorff, and began to work the
lines of battle backward,
in that magnificent series of victories that marked the great July
counter-stroke of 1918. And,
furthermore, this operation was destined to carry the allied armies
forward in one continuous
sweep of victory that would have its ending only when the
representatives of the German
republic should meet to conclude an armistice on November l1th.
Let us, therefore, examine the
whole situation that confronted the allied command, as well as the
method employed in the conversion of the enemy attacks into allied
advantages. By doing this we
shall bring into the proper perspective the part that was played in
these operations by the
American units engaged.
It had always been the policy of
the enemy to follow up each and every one of his major
offensives by a short breathing spell, in order that his troops might
be reformed and consolidated
in their new positions, before launching out again in other operations.
Accordingly, it was
nothing out of the ordinary when he brought his offensive of May and
June, 1918, to a halt,-or
rather, had it halted for him,-at the Marne about the 5th or 6th of
June.
Let us now divert our attention to
the strength of the enemy forces which were massed along the
section of front, known as the Argonne-Chateau-Thierry front. By the
second week of July, the
enemy had massed a total of sixty-three divisions, every one of them
refitted, reinforceed and
rested,-in this vicinity. A great number of the enemy reserves were
placed opposite the British in
the Amiens salient; very few on the front from the Argonne forest to
the Swiss border; and a
large number to the rear, in position to be rushed to any sector.
Allied intelligence located eleven
divisions behind General F. von Below's First Army and General von
Einem's Third Army, both
of the group of the German Crown Prince; in addition to the eighteen
divisions already in
the battle front.
The German press was blatantly
announcing that the allied armies could never again assume
offensive tactics, as their reserves had already all been used up in
resisting the German at tacks.
But, due to the increasing rapidity of transportation, American troops
had been coming over so
rapidly that the allies had a mass of reserves amounting to not less
than seventy-two
divisions.
Knowing the time, place and
strength of the enemy attack, which was delivered on the
Champagne-Chateau-Thierry front on July 15th, the allied command was
able to dispose just
enough of their forces along these lines to meet and hold the attack
firmly. Then, two days after
the attack was delivered, the armies of von Below and von Mudra (who
had replaced von Einem)
had engaged thirty-eight divisions, was holding eleven divisions in
close support, and thereby
reducing their reserves to about fifty-one divisions. They had gained
but a few miles and were
now being repulsed everywhere. This fact was because the twenty-seven
allied divisions in front
lines and nineteen in close reserve (part of the 6th, 5th and 4th
French Armies), were able to
reduce the power of the enemy to nothing while inflicting upon him
terrible losses.
On July 18th, when the enemy had
involved about fifty divisions-or nearly one-fourth of his total
forces on the western front, -in his hopeless drive in Champagne and
the eastern side of the
Marne salient, Marshal Foch struck. The blow was intended to fall upon
the west side of this
salient, thereby striking at the system of enemy communications which
were necessary to the
enemy troops fighting on the opposite side of the salient. He could
then crush the enemy forces
between the closing wings of his armies or oblige them to break off the
fighting. This would
mean retreat under the most adverse conditions.
And the French and American troops
engaged in this maneuver carried it through with the
precision and gallantry that proved them worthy of the best traditions
of both nations. At the
opening of the counter-offensive, the enemy was holding the western
face of their salient,
between Chateau-Thierry and the Aisne River with eleven divisions,
without any support; while
the allies had twelve divisions in line and ten more in reserve, ready
to take their places for the
assault early the next morning,-July 18th.
In order that the surprise effect
of the advance might not be diminished, the attack went over
without any artillery preparation. The advance was made along the front
from the Aisne
northwest of Soissons to Chateau-Thierry. Fire for accompaniment was
laid down, and along the
whole line a withering barrage tore the ground in front of our
advancing infantry. By nightfall the
Yanks had smashed through the enemy trench systems to an average depth
of four miles. In
this first day's battle, 17,000 prisoners and 250 guns were taken. From
this day forth, with
undiminished vigor, the allied attacks continued to gain, sometimes
greater and sometimes lesser
distances, but always going forward, and the direct result of it all
was the withering of the enemy
initiative once and for all.
There were three American divisions
which took part in the offensive operations which began on
the morning of July 18th, 1918,-- viz., the 1st, 2d and 26th Divisions.
Of these, the 1st, lying a
short distance south of the Aisne, with the 2d Division on its right,
was a part of the 20th Corps
of the 10th French Army. The remaining units of the corps were: the
58th, 69th French Divisions
and the 1st Moroccan Division. North of the 20th Corps, four divisions
of the 1st French Army
carried the lines to the Aisne, and formed the extreme left of the
attack. Accordingly, the 20th
Corps was disposed for action with the lst American Division on the
left, the 1st Moroccan
Division in the center, and the 2d American Division on the right,
covering a front of about six
miles, and having the 58th and 69th French Divisions in reserve.
Then came two divisions of the 30th
French Corps, three divisions of the 11th, two divisions of
the 2d, and two divisions of the 7th Corps. Then the First American
Corps, under General Hunter
Liggett and consisting of: the 167th French Division on the left and
the 26th American Division
on the right. To the right of this corps, was the 38th French Corps,
with the 39th French and the
3d American Divisions, from left to right, followed by the four
divisions of the 3d Corps,
three divisions of the 1st Colonial, four divisions of the 5th, three
divisions of the 2d Italian, and
four divisions of the 1st African Colonial Corps. These dispositions
would carry the line beyond
the city of Reims.
Thus it was seen that the Americans
were once again given the post of greatest danger, and
therefore of greatest honor, for they were to drive into the center of
the salient, capture
the highlands southwest of Soissons, and then the front would naturally
pivot upon these
highlands in swinging northeast and north toward the Vesle River. This
task was given to the 1st
and 2d American Divisions and the 1st Moroccan Division.
The 26th Division was entrusted
with a most delicate and tedious operation, viz., that of marking
time and acting as a pivot for the troops operating around the Foret de
Villers-Cotterets, while
these troops were hammering in the western bulge of the front and
straightening it out to swing
northward like a gate closing on the Vesle. Then, after the
straightening process was completed,
the 26th was to become the swinging edge of the gate, advancing to the
Vesle with longer gains
than those troops to the west of it.
The 3d American Division could,
therefore, not begin its part of the work until all of this attack
to the westward was well under way, and the enemy attack was stopped
and driven backward.
Then they too, pivoting on Reims, were likewise to close on the Vesle.
Accordingly, the 1st Division went
over the top on the morning of July 18th, into the gray dawn
of the plateau between Curty and Missy-aux-Bois. The 18th and 16th
Infantries of the 1st
Brigade, and the 26th and 28th Infantries of the 2d Brigade, were sent
forward for the attack.
Before them and across the lines of the German 6th, 11th Bavarian and
42d Divisions, part of von
Boehn's Seventh German Army, swept the barrage from the batteries of
the 5th, 6th and 7th Field
Artillery Regiments, supported by a number of French batteries.
The country was level, open
stretches which ran to the east and southeast, devoid of cover,
except for the tree fringes which marked the deep ravine of
Missy-aux-Bois, and, further on, the
poplar-lined roadway that lay between Soissons and Paris. Just at the
edge of the woodland was
the little village of Missy; while still further on, was Berzy-le- Sec.
Behind the charging doughboys, lay
the deep-cut ravine between the villages of St. Pierre-Aigle
and Laversine, on the eastern edge of which were the trenches which
they had taken over from a
brigade of the Moroccans the night before.
Within two hours from the time of
the jumping-off, the men of the 1st Division had overrun
more than two miles of the tangle of enemy trenches and wire, and had
covered more than half
the distance across the open tableland to Missy. Then, two hours later,
the second objective from
Crevancon Farm to the eastern edge of the Missy Ravine, was reached,
after a sharp and bloody
struggle by the 26th and 28th Infantries in the Missy Ravine.
The Yanks charged in the face of
terrific machine gun fire, taking a series of enemy nests along
the ridge and then moving slowly down the ravine. Meanwhile the Boche
gunners were filling
this ravine with shells. A strongly fortified post at St. Amand Farm,
near Missy Ravine, held up
the advance for a time, sweeping the western slope of the valley, until
a direct frontal attack was
sent forward with bombing parties, to "mop it up."
It was mopped! Later, strong
resistance was encountered in a group of buildings, just as the sun
peeped through the low hanging clouds. Here the enemy had installed
machine guns, behind
stone garden walls and the foundations of the houses. The Yanks began
methodically mopping
up these nests, the men creeping toward the guns, whose fire was so
high as to cause but few
casualties. Then, suddenly, they leaped to their feet and rushed
forward with a shower of
grenades, thus escaping fairly well.
By this time, the enemy had
recovered from his initial surprise, and, the 18th Infantry having
pushed on to its third objective, Chaudun,-the 26th and 28th infantries
were unable to push
across the Soissons-Paris road, on the plateau between Missy and
Ploisy. This was largely
because of the intense machine gun fire from the flank, sweeping their
rear from the ravine of
Missy, which the 153d French Division had been unable to take.
Missy Ravine was a thickly-grown
tangle of trees and underbrush, laced with barbed-wire, so as
to make it almost entirely impassable. Masked machine guns enfiladed
every inch of the ground,
which was likewise swampy. It was therefore useless for tanks to attack
the enemy positions.
From the ravine, the open, level country, devoid of cover or buildings,
and cut only by the
Soissons-Paris roadway, sloped away, finally dropping suddenly into
Ploisy Ravine. This
plateau was cut by many sunken roads, which afforded admirable
concealment for the enemy
machine gunners.
The enemy, during the night of July
18th, threw his 34th Division into line between Missy and
Ploisy, between the 11th Bavarian and the 42d Divisions, and also put
his 28th Division into the
head of the Chazelle Ravine, before Chaudun. This was done to prevent
the cutting of the
Soissons-Paris road.
The 1st Division's objective line
was set between Berzy-le-Sec, on the heights of the Crise Valley
and the important railways and roads within its valley, and extending
south-eastward to Buzancy.
This division therefore sent the 16th and 18th Infantries forward to
Chazelle, half way between
Chadun and the Soissons-Paris railway. The attack began at four o'clock
of the l9th of July.
Meantime, the 26th and 28th Infantries, half-crazed by thirst, galled
by a frontal fire from Ploisy
Ravine and by the rearward fire from the Missy Ravine, could not cross
the Paris-Soissons
roadway. A section of French tanks waddled forward to support them, but
these were shot to
pieces on the edge of the Ploisy Ravine,-reminding one of the famous
light brigade at
Balaklava:
"Their's not to reason why,
Their's not to make reply,
Their's but to do or die,
Into the Valley of death,
Into the mouth of hell,
Rode the six hundred."
As the front lay almost at right
angles to the lines of the sector at this time, it was clearly
necessary to re-align the front. Therefore, a savage attack was driven
forward at 5.30 in the
evening, by the 2d Brigade, for the clearing of the head of Ploisy
Ravine. The ranks were torn by
shells and machine gun fire, but they reached the ravine, leaping at
the flaming- guns and tearing
their way through the enemy lines, taking Ploisy Village and the ravine
head. During the night, in
pitchy blackness, in the vicinity of the stonewalled Courmelles Farm, a
bitter struggle was
waged. "A struggle of squads and little knots of men creeping and
listening for one another; of
quick, snarling rushes and dull blows; of sudden, blinding flashes of
machine gun or rifle,
through the Stygian blackness."So relates Captain Hanson, of the A. E.
F. historical section.
But the Yanks maintained their
advance through Courmelles Farm, to the rim of Ploisy
Ravine,-the last barrier between them and the battered heights of
Berzy-le-Sec.
And beyond lay the Crise Valley,
with its steep slopes, covered with pine trees, and the road
which ran parallel to the railway line through Soissons, past
Courmelles Farm, in the 153d
French Division's sector, and about 2 miles northeast by north of
Berzy-le-Sec.
Set on a hillside is Berzy-le-Sec,
with a broken forest nestling close at the foot of the hilli-a
battered village, silhouetted azainst the sunset. And below it were
wheat-fields, dotted with those
blood-red poppies of France! All a bit of typical French countryside.
If one will carefully examine the
map and apply what little knowledge of military science that he
may possess, combined with a slight knowledge of tactical problems, it
is easily seen that, should
the Americans succeed in taking Berzy, it would mean that the
Soissons-Oulchy le Chateau
railway and the Soissons-Chateau Thierry highway could no longer be
used for transport into the
Marne salient from Soissonsi-the railhead. In short, the salient would
be lost, as Berzy was the
key to it, as well as the salient between the Vesle and Marne Rivers,
and which would now
become untenable.
Therefore, the enemy threw into the
line protecting this village and its important heights another
division-the 46th Reserve. Knowing that the 153d French Division was
still too far from the
village to strike, being still engaged on the far side of the Ploisy
Ravine, the staff of the 20th
Corps, accordingly, ordered the 1st Division to take Berzy-le-Sec at 2
P.M. on July 20th. The
2d Brigade was designated, plus one battalion from the divisional
reserve, for the operation.
After a furious barrage of two
hours' duration, noon until 2 P.M., the lines moved forward,
striking at Berzy and the spur north of it. As our lines advanced, the
ruins of Berzy, the hill and
roadways literally spat fire in our faces, while shrapnel burst with
its sinister and spiteful crack
above our heads. Time after time, throughout the afternoon and night,
the lines surged back
and forth in attack and counter-attack. Machine gun nests were taken
and retaken, and the
opposing infantry grappled with one another with bayonets and
trench-knives, grenades and
clubbed rifles.
Berzy was still in the possession
of the enemy at sunset of July 20fh. "Through the night its guns,
like those of a beleagued fortress, continued to flame. In it stood at
bay the last German garrison
of that plateau south of Soissons, with the whole western front of the
Marne salient pinned upon
it, which had been for so long a black menace over Paris."
Finally, early on the morning of
the 21st, after artillery preparation of three hours or more, and
which reduced Berzy practically to ruins,-heaps of ruins,-the Yanks
advanced again. This was to
be their supreme effort and the first wave rose up and rolled toward,
into and over the ruins of the
village. Machine guns spat in their faces from the ruins ahead; yet
they drove through the village,
past the ruined church and along the flaming street to the Crise
Valley. Here they looked down
along the Chateau-Thierry road, parallel to the stream for a distance,
to Soissons, in the midst of
its hills.
The victory was won!
The 1st Brigade had already
advanced across the Soissons-Chateau Thierry road, and was
advancing down the valley of the Crise, the city and yards of Soissons
were open to artillery fire,
while the 26th Infantry lay on the plateau in a maze of sunken roads.
Then, during the night of
July 22d, in the Crise Valley beyond Berzy-le-Sec, the 1st Division was
relieved by the 15th
Scottish Division of the British forces, and sent backward to
Dommartin, northeast of Paris, for
a rest. The 1st Division had suffered 7,000 casualties, 1,816 by the
28th Infantry alone, not a
single man being taken by the enemy; sixty per cent. of its infantry
officers were killed or
wounded; in addition to the killed and wounded enemy, it had taken
3,500 Prisoners, 86 field
guns, numbers of machine guns, munitions and other material of war, and
had advanced eleven
kilometers in four days, against the untiring efforts of parts of seven
enemy divisions, and broke
the hinge of the enemy's defensive line between the Aisne and the Marne.
We shall now see how the 2d
Division fought its way forward in the great July attack, past the
Foret de Villers-Cotterets, Vaux-castille Ravine, Bois de Leonore, the
village of Vierzy,
Beaurepaire Farm, Chevigny Farm, and also find out how it was that the
2d Division did so much
toward giving the Marne salient so prominent a place in the history of
the war.
CHAPTER V.
THE SECOND DIVISION AT VIERZY
AND IN THE FORET DE
VILLERS-COTTERETS.
If the reader could journey to the
stretch of countryside that lies southwest of Soissons he would
find himself standing in the midst of a land that has been mutilated
almost beyond belief.
Everywhere are trenches, pillboxes and observation posts, but hardly
any signs of human
habitation,-mere shells of homes that have long since been pounded into
shapeless masses of
stone and mortar,- for he would be standing in a part of the
battle-fields which have witnessed
some of the most terrific fighting of the whole conflict.
Upon this tortured land, where once
throbbed the life of industry and echoed the laughter of
children, armies have struggled, staggered, died as the reeling and
bending lines, like waves of
the sea, swept back and forth under the smashing charges and
counter-attacks of desperate,
maddened men. Silence now reigns over the fearful wilderness where only
a few short months
ago the roar of artillery, the whine of shells, and the crack of
rifles, mingled with the shrieks of
the mangled and the moans of the dying in an inferno of destruction. A
tree, here and
there, shattered and broken, with branches torn and twisted, still
stands,-gaunt specter of death
which had swept across the plains.
Such is the setting for the theatre
of fighting of the 2d Division during the initial stage
of the July counter attack of 1918.
Fresh from the terrible and bloody
fighting in its sector northwest of Chateau-Thierry, with the
proud record of its fight at Bouresches and in the Bois de Belleau, the
2d Division was relieved
from its support positions on the night of July 16th-17th, being
conveyed in motor lorries to a
point near Marcilly, on the western side of the Foret de
Villers-Cotterets.
Shortly after its arrival there,
orders were received for an attack that was to be delivered at 4.35
on the morning of July 18th. This attack was to be delivered on the
front which lay along the
eastern edge of the Foret de Villers-Cotterets, an immense stretch of
forest about ten or more
square miles in area, and which lay in the front of the 2d Division.
This forest was cut by a
network of main and farm roads, which was later the cause of a great
deal of trouble and
confusion in carrying out the plans of the attack.
Night had fallen, and with it a
driving rain, making the pitchy blackness doubly impenetrable,-in
fact so much so that one could not even see the man ahead of him,
though he was only a pace or
so away. The hour for the advance was rapidly drawing near, and yet the
troops were seemingly
so much confused that it would be next to the impossible to have them
reach their positions
in time for the attack. But they were there.
The artillery barrage fell with a
roar and crash on the enemy positions, as day was breaking. The
first line battalions of the 23d Infantry on the right and the 9th
Infantry and 5th Marines on the
left, went over behind it. Breathless and staggering from over a mile
and a half of double-time,
they reached their places at the appointed minute, and then hurled
themselves upon the first
line enemy trenches,-like great gray specters coming out of the dawn.
Lying on the edge of the forest
near Chavigny Farm, on the right, and Carrefour des Fourneaux
on the left, the 2d Division sector ran northeast for one and a half
miles over open, rolling
country, across Verte Feuille and Beaurepaire Farms. Then it swung to
the right, using the hill
west of Vauxcastille as a pivot, and narrowing gradually, ran eastward
and a bit south across the
ravine of Vauxcastille and the Bois de Leonore north of it; then on to
the ravine and village
of Vierzy, where it crossed the Paris-Soissons railway tunnel. From
this point, crossing a high,
flat ridge, devoid of buildings but intersected by some farm roads, it
crossed the main
Soissons-Chateau Thierry road between the villages of Taux and
Hartennes, ending in the Bois
d'Hartennes.
The enemy counter-barrage fire
opened at once, but the 2d Battalion of the 23d Infantry, using
rifles only as weapons, was on their first objective line,-Beaurepaire
Farm, less than a quarter of
an hour after going over the top. The 9th Infantry and the 5th Marines
had also reached their
line.
Having reached this line, the 2d
Division now plunged into the ravine of the Bois Leonore and
Vauxcastille, fought its way across the marshy woods and up over the
embankment of the
Paris-Soissons railway. Then, after a brief but sanguinary battle with
enemy infantry and machine
guns, pushed onward to the plateau overlooking Vierzy.
Advancing in sectors parallel to
that of the 2d Division, the lst Moroccan Division, on the left,
advancing toward Lachelle and the ravines beyond, and the 38th French
Division, on the right,
striking in the direction of Montremboeuf Farm, fought their way
forward-as the 2d Division
(American) was advancing in its own sector.
As the 2d Division had already
entered the western side of the village of Vierzy, and although it
was practically surrounded, north, west, and a bit on the south sides,
the enemy still clung
determinedly to the rest of the village. They also put up stiff machine
gun resistance from
dugouts and in the Vauxcastille Ravine, where our troops of the support
waves encountered
determined resistance. Our casualties were, therefore, quite severe.
Nevertheless, although the men had
been without food or water for over a day, the advance was
pushed forward at once in the direction of the Bois d'Hartennes. At the
same time, a renewed
attack was made upon Vierzy. In this attack, the 9th and 23d Infantries
went forward, being later
supported by the French tanks and one battalion of the Moroccans. At
eight in the evening our
advance again encountered very stubborn resistance, more especially
from the intensity of the
enemy artillery and machine gun fire.
Our lines pushed on about two
miles, until the 9th Infantry was on the plateau south of
Charantigny and the 23d Infantry half-way between Vierzy and Tigny. Our
right wing was bent
southwest, presenting its whole front a pronounced salient across open
ground, with the enemy
on the south and east of it.
Vierzy was taken, but the ground
was covered with wounded, and it was deemed impossible to
further advance. Accordingly, those who remained dug-in, and then the
men of the 102d
Engineers, following their prerogative as engineers of digging all
night and fighting all day,
advanced through the remnants of the 9th Infantry and 6th Marines, and
began to drive forward
again. This advance reached Tigny, where, on the edge of the Bois
d'Hartennes and about three-
fourths of a mile from the Soissons-Chateau Thierry road, the remnants
of the engineers
were brought to a stop. They entrenched themselves, and, with machine
guns, held every inch of
their gains.
That is the kind of stuff the men
of the engineer regiments were made of,-they could construct,
destruct or fight with equal ability;-and most of the time, they were
working all night and then
sent in to fight all day!
The 2d Division's casualties had
now reached such numbers as to almost exhaust even their
wonderful driving power. It had been reduced to about half its
strength; the 23d Infantry having
37 officers and 1,478 men left out of 99 officers and 3,400 men. Here
the 2d Division was
relieved by the 58th French Division during the night of the 19th-20th,
resting till noon the next
day, in the forest.
The 2d Division had advanced 7
miles in 26 hours,-one of its regiments, the 23d Infantry, took
2,175 prisoners from 11 different enemy divisions. This regiment also
took two batteries of
150mm guns, five batteries of 77mm guns, one battery of 210mm, about
100 machine guns and
15,000 rounds of 77mm ammunition.
And that sort of fighting with the
Boche learned from the Yanks of the 2d Division in the Foret
de Villers-Cotterets, in July, 1918, was the thing that scared the
Germans to death.
CHAPTER VI.
THE "YANKEE" DIVISION HOLDS
THE PIVOT AT BOURESCHES.
As has already been brought out in
the preceding chapter, the 26th or "Yankee" Division had
been entrusted with a most delicate and tedious part of the operations
during the counter-stroke
of July, 1918. This operation consisted of marking time and acting as
the pivot for the troops
which were operating around the Foret de Villers-Cotterets, while those
troops were hammering
in the western bulge of the front and straightening it out for the
swing northward like a gate
closing on the Vesle.
The Yankee Division was under the
command of Major General C. R. Edwards, at this time, and
consisted of the 51st Infantry Brigade, consisting of the 101st and
102d Infantries and 102d
Machine Gun Battalion; the 52d Infantry Brigade, with the 103d and
104th Infantries and the
103d Machine Gun Battalion; the 51st Field Artillery Brigade, with the
101st, 102d and 103d
Field Artillery Regiments, and the 101st Engineers and other divisional
troops.
The "Yankee" Division had already
become highly veteran in all of the various departments and
branches of trench warfare, for it had been in the line, during the
preceding winter along the
historic Chemin des Dames, entering that sector on February 6th, 1917,
and remaining there for
fifty days. Then, too, it had spent eighty-six more days in the
American "Old Home Sector,"
northwest of Toul. It was the first American division, not regular
army, to take part in a rear
offensive operation, and it also took art in every other great
offensive operation until the ending
of hostilities. A record, indeed, to be proud of, and one which placed
the 26th Division in the
first place among the National Guard units that took part in our
history overseas.
To say the least, the country
northwest of Chateau-Thierry was not a very pleasant sort of place
to be during those ever-memorable days of mid-July, 1918. It was a
series of shallow and
incomplete trenches, extending from near Vaux and Bouresches, around
east and the northern
edges of the Bois de Belleau (Belleau Wood), to a point near Bussiares.
These positions were
under constant harassing fire from enemy batteries, and likewise many
enemy machine guns and
snipers were comfortably installed all along the edges of the woods,
banks of the Ru Gobert
Creek, and in the ruined villages of Torcy and Belleau, close to our
front lines.
The 26th Division took over these
lines during the night of July 16th, and immediately that
ever-present and necessary phase of trench-life known as "raiding" set
in.
As the majority of my readers have
never been out there in the darkness of the trench areas,
where the lights that come and go are only the fitful brilliancy of the
flares and signals or the
sputter of the angry little hidden machine guns; where the slightest
unguarded move means
almost certain death, perhaps it would be well to try to picture to
them just what a raid is like.
With the lengthening of the
shadows, and the setting of the sun behind the purple crests of the
torn hillsides of Picardy, the whole face of the fighting is changed,
for now the men creep out
through the mists and shadows into No Man's Land, there to meet other
men, face to face and
hand to hand, and then, occur the slight patrol engagements of the
raiding parties. Quite
naturally, these raids, for the most part, are never mentioned in the
communiques of the day, but
they nevertheless form an important part of the intelligence work of
the fighting forces, for
it is during these raids that prisoners are taken and much useful
information obtained.
Night life along the front is both
weird and at the same time very picturesque. There are flares,
flares, flares, as far as the eye can see, bursting into brief
brilliance and then leaving the night
blacker than ever. The slightest unusual movement or suggested alarm
sets vari-colored signal
rockets hissing from the trenches. Then comes the shattering voice of
the vicious machine guns,
spraying steel-jacketed pellets of death with reckless fury. Small
parties of men now creep
snake-like out through No Man's Land, cut their way through the lines
of tangled wire, and then
lie in wait just behind the enemy parapets, where they can hear all
that is said and all that is going
on within the enemy lines. The slightest noise or the grating of a
pebble will bring down the fury
of the machine guns that are hidden behind the mounds of earth or in
the edge of the thickets
before you. You lie there, scarcely daring to breathe for fear of being
heard by the enemy, and
never daring to move until the signal comes. A chain of Verey lights
flash upward to the right,
lighting up the surrounding countrv and its maze of trenches and
tangled wire with almost the
brilliance of broad daylight. Then comes the signal. You throw yourself
forward into the enemy
line; clean the section of trenches alloted to your section, taking
prisoners and then dashing
backward across the shell-torn and tangled debris of No Man's Land to
your own lines. You drop
safely into your own trenches again just as the inevitable retaliatory
fire can come from the
enemy positions.
Then comes the first faint streak
of the coming dawn, and the face of the front is gradually
changed, as the heavy mists lift their clinging curtain from the torn
and tangled masses of earth
and wire that have so lately seen so much feverish activity and such
bloody struggling of
desperate men.
Such is a raiding party, and many
are the tales that the boys of the A. E. F. Combat Divisions can
tell of these "parties" too. After a week of this sort of life, the
whole thing quite naturally
resolved itself into the same continuous round of monotonous duties,
and the men of the 26th
Division were eager to have things happen.
And happen they did, and rather
rapidly, too, for they received orders on the night of July 17th,
calling for an advance the next morning.
The problem which faced the
Americans was rather a difficult one, if considered from purely
tactical viewpoints, for the "Yankee" Division was to perform the
tedious and difficult operation
of acting as the pivot, upon which should swing the entire fortunes of
the whole series of
operations which were to be undertaken by the First Corps in the great
battle. This is a most
exacting tactical problem, and, in this instance, it was solved as
follows: (1) the left of the 26th
Division was to attack north and northeast, pivoting on the village of
Bouresches, and guiding on
the 167th French Division, on its left, but never getting ahead of the
167th, while swinging
gradually northeast, until the whole front of the left should have been
straightened; (2) having
accomplished this maneuver, the 26th was now to attack with the right
wing of the division,-half
of it eastward and half northward, taking the woods in front, then
executing a half-turn to the
northeast, to bring the front into alignment with the general front;
(3) from this point the advance
was to be carried straight-away.
The division had already been
disposed as follows: (1) the 101st Infantry was on the extreme
right, near Vaux, and facing northward; (2) the 102d, facing eastward,
extending a trifle beyond
the village of Bouresches; (3) the 104th, from its position in the Bois
de Belleau, faced eastward
and northeastward; and (4) the 103d, on the extreme left of the line,
facing northeast and
north.
Accordingly, at 4.35 o'clock on the
morning of July 18th, and under the cover of the
neutralization fire laid down by the 101st Field Artillery, the 52d
Brigade, advancing three
battalions, went through the mists of the morning toward the enemy. The
2d Battalion of the
103d Infantry was advanced in a northeasterly direction from its
position in the Bois de Belleau,
with the objective of taking the railway line in the creek valley
between Bouresches and Belleau
villages; the 3d Battalion of the 104th, advancing northward, with
objectives set as Belleau
village and Givry, as well as the railway line that ran between them;
the remaining battalion, the
3d Battalion of the 103d Infantry, on the left of the brigade sector,
was to attack northward, with
objectives at Torcy and the railway beyond that village.
The 201st Division of von Boehn's
Seventh German Army was encountered and surprised,
putting the 3d Battalion of the 103d Infantry inside of Torcy and
pushing forward, taking the
grade of the railroad and the creek bank. Here the positions were
consolidated. The center
battalion, the 3d Battalion of the 104th, had already become so
confused in inky blackness of the
Bois de Belleau that the advance was delayed somewhat. But, when they
finally started out of the
forest, the enemy, now thoroughly aroused, was pushed backward, as the
Yanks cleaned up
Belleau and then Givry, with their shining bayonets. Then, having
advanced their flanks up the
slopes of Hill 193, north of Givry, they continued onward, reaching a
point half-way up that hill
before they could be stopped.
Hill 193 was found to be untenable,
and our troops there were recalled, the enemy gunners
re-occupying it, and its commanding positions, from which they poured a
withering fire in
enfilade westward along the front of the 167th French Division, as well
as enfilading our entire
front in the creek valley or the hills east of it, as far as
Bouresches. This forced the 2d Battalion
of the 103d, which had advanced to the railroad and the creek beyond,
to retire from the creek
line and to cling with the utmost difficulty to the grade of the
railroad. Here they dug their
fox-holes and stuck!
But, across the fire-swept belt in
their rear, it was impossible to bring supplies and ammunition,
and after dark, they withdrew to the edge of the woods. However, a
detachment of the 102d,
which had advanced with them, still managed to retain possession of the
slightly less-exposed
point of the Bouresches railway station. As for the battalions in Torcy
and those in Belleau and
Givry, they had not fared so badly where they now lay, although the
ground between them and
the woods was an inferno. As for the troops which were being torn to
bits by the enfilade fire
from Hill 193, there was nothing to do now, that is, nothing except to
await the arrival of the
French division on the Givry-Monthiers line.
Then, assuming that the French
would attack with them, a general advance of the 26th Division
was ordered for 3 o'clock of the afternoon of the 20th, with the object
of aligning the front facing
northeast on the line of crests beyond the valley of the creek and
running from Les Brusses Farm
(one kilometer west of Belleau), through Hill 190, to La Goneterie Farm.
No preparatory fire was employed,
except for an accompanying barrage, and the attack was made
with the 51st brigade sending forward the 3d Battalion of the 102d
Infantry, northeastward into
the Bois de Bouresches. These woods were cleared, then, the 3d
Battalion of the 101st, on the
right, attacked the Bois de la Halmardiere, north of them, echeloning
on left, and thus swinging
itself facing northeast also.
In the left sector, the 52d Brigade
had a much harder fight, due to the shifting of battalions under
enemy fire from their north front in order to send forward their attack
eastward. This involved
cautious maneuvering. They advanced, however, from Belleau, up the
railway, across the creek
and took Les Brusses Farm. At the same time the 1st Battalion of the
103d advanced from Bois
de Belleau until they had dug themselves in firmly in possession of
Hill 190, as well as being in
liaison with troops in the Bois de Bouresches, by six o'clock that
evening.
The French, however, could not take
Hill 193, in spite of the fact that they made several
magnificent attacks, and therefore, all during the night, the enemy
guns swept the American
lines, isolating the battalion at Les Brusses Farm.
But the main part of the problem
had been worked out, and, July 21st, the enemy, repulsed on a
front of about sixty miles, and fearing that they might be pocketed in
the Chateau-Thierry salient,
was in full retreat. "Now it was that, leaving behind them at last the
woods and the fields in
which for more than seven weeks, while the wheat ripened and the
poppies bloomed and faded,
the doggedness of America had been pitted against the stubbornness of
Germany, the 26th swept
forward in pursuit."
Shall we men of the A. E. F. ever
forget those multitudes of blood-red waving poppies of Picardy
and Artois and Flanders? Poppies in those broad French wheat-fields, on
those pleasant slopes of
France; poppies which every day became a deeper blood-red, nodding and
dancing in the soft
breezes of summer, while above them the skylarks sang lilting, liquid
tunes, during that
wonderful and most beautiful month of all the year, in any country and
in any clime,-June!
Poppies reddening in the fields along the roadway that led over that
rolling French countryside
toward the little town of Monthiers, seemingly unmindful of the
spiteful rattle as the machine
guns played from their masked coverts! Over those same poppies, too,
rang the sharp and singing
song of the shrapnel, as it greets the coming morning, among the
bruised and shell-torn fields of
Artois.
And oh, how those stalwart and
brave Yankee lads used to love those tiny bloodred poppies of
Flanders! And how they used to press them in their letters to the
homefolks, or else place them
gently within the sacred little folder where they kept those pictures
of the loved ones! And how
they used to wear them next their hearts as they leaped to the big
advance, down through the
poppied wheatfields to the flaming woods ahead. And, then, as the
sunset with its mellow light,
came to bathe the torn and tortured world of their existence, broken
and bruised and trampled,
the tiny poppies had likewise shared in the day of victory, broken and
bruished and dead as were
their brave knights in khaki whose helms they had decorated in the
fray! And, yonder in the
woodland, where the flashing rifles and bayonets shine in the sunset
glow, still other "Knights of
the Poppies" were holding the line with their files.
"Poppies in the wheatfields;
How still beside them lie
Scattered forms that stir not
When the star-shells burst on high,
Gently o'er them bending
Beneath the moon's soft glance,
Poppies in the wheatfields
On the ransomed hills of France."
(Author unknown.)
All day long on July 21st, the
Yankee Division marched across country in columns, headed by
advance guards, as the old I. D. R. required, and not until evening,
after a match of nearly nine
kilometers had led the advance far across the Soissons-Chateau Thierry
highway, that heavy
machine gun fire stopped the forward movement and brought the warning
that the enemy had
made a stand in the broad, shallow creek valley in which lie the tiny
villages of Trugny and, one
kilometer north of it, Epieds.
East of these villages, up the
gently sloping fields, stood the Bois de Trugny, filled
with enemy machine guns.
In the heavy mists of the gray
morning of July 22d, the 26th Division attacked, driving forward
one battalion each of the 103d and 104th toward Epieds, two and
one-half battalions of the 102d
against Trugny, and two battalions of the 101st moving along the Bois
de Barbillon, to flank
those villages. Our batteries, further to the rear, did not know very
definitely where the front was,
and could not, therefore, deliver a very effective barrage, while the
enemy artillery, adjusted by
their planes, deluged our lines with gas and high explosives. An enemy
strong point at La
Gouttiere Farm, in the 167th French sector, which galled our troops on
the left flank and rear,
proved highly annoying to the advance, but on they went, on the left
and center, into the edges of
the villages before they were turned back. The 101st Machine Gun
Battalion, skirting with its
infantry, the Bois de Barbillon, penetrated the Bois de Trugny, and
when finally forced backward
by concentrated fire, stopped defiantly directly south of Trugny and
stayed there, a thorn in the
enemy flank.
Three battalions of the 52d Brigade
repeated the attack on the left during the afternoon, but La
Gouttiere Farm was still in the hands of the enemy. The French division
was being engaged
bitterly beating off enemy counters, with the assistance of the 26th
American Division Artillery,
which had extended its zone of fire entirely across the French sector.
On the morning of July 23d, our
artillery dropped destructive fire on the enemy positions, in
preparation for an attack on the Bois de Trugny. The 101st Infantry,
working with the 101st
Engineers, made the advance, and although slow progress was made at
first, the line was pushed
into the edge of the woods. Then our positions encountered heavy
machine gun concentration in
front and on both flanks, which was highly destructive. The attackers,
accordingly suffered
heavily, being forced to fall back to the other edge of the woods.
The 56th Infantry Brigade, of the
28th Division, was now placed under the command of the 26th,
by the Corps command, in order that the driving forward of the attack
should not stop.
Intelligence headquarters now reported a further enemy withdrawal, and
once again the allied
forces swept majestically forward across the hills of Artois. The
advance of the 26th Division
was pushed forward in the direction of the Jaulgonne-Fere en Tardenois
highway, northeast of
the Bois de Trugny, through the Foret de Fere. Here it was held up by
machine gun fire,
just west of the road, and which came from the direction of the Croix
Rouge Farm, forcing them
to dig-in along this line for the night.
Here the 26th Division was relieved
by the 42d Division, and the weary " Yankee" Division left
the 51st Brigade Artillery and the 101st Engineers to go on with the
men of the " Rainbow." The
remainder of the 26th were drawn back to the area of Entrepilly, on
July 26th.
In its eight days of battle, the
"Yankee" Division had advanced eighteen and one-half kilometers,
had taken about 250 prisoners, 4 field pieces, numerous machine guns,
and great quantities of
ammunition. Its losses were 5,300 men, of whom 600 were killed.
Where the lads of the "Yankee"
Division have fallen upon the battle-fields there would they rest,
for, to them, there could be no holier hills found than those hills of
France to hold the soldier's
clay. Deep in the hearts of their fellow-countrymen their fast, firm
and immortal sepulcher shall
ever be, greater than all the tombs of ancient kings. They have served
their country overseas, and
loved her,-dying with a heart that sings!
CHAPTER VII.
WITH OUR SECOND CORPS AT THE
HINDENBURG LINE.
If my readers could be dropped down
into the stretch of French countryside that lies along the
Canal du Nord, which runs between Saint Quentin and Cambrai, he would
see that, after all, for
the most part the battle fronts are pretty much alike along the entire
line from Switzerland to the
turbulent waters of the North Sea. Unnumbered dugouts, many of them
made of concrete, still
line the roadsides or honeycomb the slopes of the hills. At commanding
points, machine gun
emplacements and observation posts, constructed alike of masonry, with
steel beams and
reinforced concrete, stand as lonely sentinels over the desolation they
helped to create. Wire
entanglements, broken wagons, pieces of artillery, cartridge cases, and
fragments of weapons
bear mute testimony to the frightfulness of which they were a part.
The devastated area in France and
Belgium extends for over three hundred miles. Its average
breadth is probably ten miles, and in all this region there is hardly a
house but has been either
totally destroyed or badly damaged. The gifts of nature and the
products of man alike are ravaged
by the holocaust of war. Think of the tragedy of it all! Remember that
most of this area was
not the scene of one battle alone, but was the cauldron in which, for
four years, had been
brewed the pottage of the most destructive warfare known to history.
But the rains of the French
springtime were coaxing the grasses and daisies forth from their
winter coverts,-covering the great gaping scars of war. Daisies nodded
their heads in the winds,
and masses of poppies, those poppies of song and story,-gorgeous in
their brilliant red, gave
warmth and color to the somber scene.
If the reader could have entered
the lines with the men of the 27th Division before Le Catelet, on
that memorable September morning, 1918, he would have been looking
across the rolling French
countryside toward perhaps the strongest point in that iron-bound
position, behind which the
enemy were standing and declaring to the Allied forces: "Thus far you
will come, and no
farther!"
From a position within the confines
of Guillemont Ferme, one looks down across a succession of
rolling valleys toward Le Catelet, the objective of some of the units
of the 27th Division. To the
right of Guillemont Ferme is Claymore Valley, with Dirk Valley at its
right, down which the road
runs from Malakoff and Quennemont Farms to Bony, which lay just inside
of the great bands
of wire and trenches of the Hindenburg Line. Quennemont Ferme lies
about five or six hundred
yards northwest by north of Malakoff Wood, a tiny patch of woodland,
interraced with the enemy
lines of trenches and bands of wire entanglements. Further on, within
the enemy positions, one
could see the point of the hillside, overlooking the valley of the
Escaut River, and likewise the
extreme northern end of the great Canal Tunnel, where it begins its
three-mile journey under the
hillsides that lie before the town of Le Catelet. Such is but a
fleeting glance at the terrain over
which the men of our own 27th Division were to advance in their attack
of September 29th,
against the so-called impregnable positions of the Hindenburg Line.
Perhaps it would be well to correct
another erroneous impression which has been pretty much
broadcast since the ending of the great conflict, viz., that the
Hindenburg Line was nothing but a
sort of local feature of the sector occupied by the 27th and 30th
American Divisions, and some
few Australians. Such was not the case, for the Hindenburg Line, which
was the enemy's best bet
in defensive positions, ran from the seacoast near the Belgian border,
the entire length of the
western front and ended in the Vosges country near epinal. It had been
constructed with the same
care and impregnability throughout its entire length, and was to have
been the greatest depth of
Allied penetration.
And so it was that, while the
majority of our troops were madly fighting through drenching rains,
and knee deep in mud of the Argonne; through swampy ground and deepest
forest tangles;
driving their lines forward through every conceivable sort of an
obstacle, up the slopes of
shell-torn hills, only to meet another just beyond,-inch by inch, foot
by foot-as the indomitable
Yanks hacked and tore their way through thousands of enemy machine
guns,-slogging along
through acres of sticky and clinging mud; the others, further north,
with the British, were driving
forward only because, in the Argonne, the main body of the American
Forces were drawing and
riveting there the best divisions that badgered Ludendorff could muster.
As one authority puts it "While the
Americans, in their own offensive, were nosing their way
through the enemy defenses northwest of Verdun, other American units,
fighting side by side
with the Australians, for the first time in this war that Yanks and
Aussies had lined up together in
a major operation, took part in the victorious British advance in
Picardy."
To these two divisions went the
distinction of playing an important role in fighting which pierced
the main defenses of the Hindenburg Line, at a point where that line
and barrier of freedom was
especially strong and where the enemy was prepared to resist with
desperation.
These men fought their way, on the
right of the British advance, north of Cambrai and Saint
Quentin, with their objectives set at points beyond the line of the
Saint Quentin Canal, on a
stretch of front where that waterway, running underground for three
miles, passes through what is
known as the Bellicourt Tunnel.
The hillcrest just above the
tunnel, the only stretch between Saint Quentin and Cambrai where
this waterway protection did not exist and where an attack by tanks
could be expected, had been
fortified with all the care of the German General Staff. The Hindenburg
Line in this vicinity was
based upon the line of this tunnel, and its steep sides and stone
embankments offered a most
formidable line of defense. Here the Germans had concentrated troops
and machine guns, with
strongly defended lines protecting the hill in front.
On entering the tunnel, one found
the waterway to be thirty feet wide, with a broad towpath on
each side. Caverns had been dug out of the side walls and food and
munitions were stored there,
while the canal channel was filled with barges, which had been fitted
up for troop quarters. In
addition to this, there were galleries leading off in several
directions and also another gallery
above the tunnel itself. Having fitted these numerous barges with bunks
and kitchens, the enemy
had floated them into the tunnel, and had thus made the hill a literal
fortress. Electric lights,
telephones, and a water system had been installed. Protected from the
heaviest artillery fire by the
earth and masonry above them, with each end of the tunnel blocked by
concrete walls, the enemy
was secure from all attack. Openings in the roof of the tunnel, through
which stairways ran, gave
exits for the men when ordered to take the offensive or relieve those
in the out-lying trenches. At
the mouth of the tunnel, lying close together, a correspondent picked
up two battered
helmets,-one an American, the other a German. What was their story?
Where were the men who
wore them? Did they meet here on alien soil, far from home, to grapple
in a hand-to-hand
conflict for supremacy until death sealed the verdict of their fate?
Perhaps the answer lies buried
in some unknown grave.
The Americans started their attack
at 5.50 o'clock on the morning of September 29th, having
previously fought their way to their jumping-off places, taking, a few
days before, Guillemont
Ferme, Quennemont Ferme, and a little hill known merely as "The Knoll,"
all outpost positions
of the Hindenburg Line. That arrogant system of defenses was regarded
by the enemy as
impregnable for it was constructed over miles and miles of hills and
valleys, thorny with machine
guns, honeycombed with mines and all sorts of enemy traps, and
symbolizing all the pride,
arrogance, treachery and invulnerability of the German war-lords. "Look
at our Hindenburg Line
it stands-it is unconquered! Deutschland uber alles! Gott strafe
Amerika! " Such was no doubt
the cry of many of the enemy press agents, but you will all very well
remember that this hue and
cry was done before the 29th of September, 1918.
Let us realize fully that Marshal
Foch absolutely knew the possibility or possibilities of this
system of defenses; knew their value to the enemy spirit in the homes
of the peasants beyond the
Rhine. Therefore it became his great object during the later months of
the war, to bring this
ever-increasing strain that had been telling so terribly on the spirit
of the German people to such
a point that it could not hold out any longer. Accordingly, we can
recall how Foch drove forward
his invincible Allied drive during the summer months of 1918, beginning
with the great
counterstroke of July 18th, when he drove his legions against
Ludendorff and smashed up his
flanks and center quite badly. Then, on September 12th, he had sent
forward the First American
Army, under General Pershing, in its first entirely American offensive,
in Saint Mihiel, with such
results as the Allied chiefs themselves had never dreamed of.
One authority had put the situation
and also endeavoured to place the part played by our boys at
the Hindenburg Line in a quite enlarged and highly magnified aspect,
which I am sure even the
boys themselves of our 27th Division will smile at and pass by as the
prattle of one who was
rather high-spirited and over-enthusiastic. He says:
"The British, Canadians, and
Australians, with the American troops called upon to carry the ball
across Hindy's goal line were entrusted with the most considerable
thrust between the Meuse and
the North Sea."
Such was not the case at all, and,
as my mission in this work is to tell the story of the American
forces, with impartiality and accuracy, sticking closely to the
official reports and accounts of
these operations, I shall place the breaking of the Hindenburg Line in
its true historical
perspective, as set forth in official circles, by men who know far more
about its relation to the
great Allied smash than anv other men in the whole world, the men who
planned and executed
that smash.
These men, under the unified
leadership system which Marshal Foch had organized under his
command, planned the great Allied smash which was to be thrown against
the enemy at strategic
points in the long-drawn battle-line. As the official report of this
phase of allied operations puts
it: "Every army performing its part as an intermeshing cog, without
whose action the whole
might stop."
On September 21st, General Franchet
d'Esprey's allied forces struck a smashing and final blow to
Bulgaria on the Macedonian front, and on the 24th of September, General
Allenby's British Army
broke through in Palestinei-thus putting Bulgaria and Turkey out of it.
Then, on the 24th of
October, the Italians battered the Austrian defenses to pieces along
the Piave and in the Trentino,
binding the enemy by a dictated armistice.
On the extreme left of the western
front in France and Belgium, the Belgian and British armies
were instructed to keep up their pressure against the German right,
that section of the Armies of
the Central Powers that was under the command of the Crown Prince of
Bavaria. The French, in
the center, were to keep on hammering against the Armies of the German
Crown Prince,
consisting of the First, Second, Seventh and Eighteenth Armies, which
made up his Gruppen.
Now let us quote again from the official sources: "But the real blows
were to be struck on the
right, where the entire force of the American machine was to be pitted
against the German Third
Army, under von Einem and the right of the Fifth Army under the command
of von der Marwitz,
these blows being intended to smash their way through the lines of the
German Armies and cut
the communications from the vicinity of Montmedy on through to Sedan."
Thus it can be clearly seen that,
contrary to the ideas of historians who were entirely unfamiliar
with the workings and plannings of the allied commands, the really
great fight,-and, as a matter
of fact, the greatest fight that American troops ever have engaged in
during the entire history of
our country, was planned and fought in the mud of the Argonne, and that
section which lies
between the Meuse River line and the western extremity of the Argonne
plateau.
This does not detract one whit,
however, from the wonderful work which was accomplished by
our men of the 27th and 30th Divisions, who were operating with our
Second Corps, with the
British, in the vicinity of the Bellicourt -tunnel of the Hindenburg
system. These facts that I have
enumerated above, serve only to set us right in regard to the place
that this fight held in the great
allied offensive that led finally to victory, in the last few months of
1918. For the sake of getting
things well in mind, it might be well to enumerate the construction of
the 27th Division, as it
fought in France. The 27th Division consisted of the following units:
The io5th, 106th, 107th
and 108th Infantry Regiments; the 104th, 105th and 106th Machine Gun
Battalions; the 104th,
105th and 106th Regiments of Field Artillery; the 102d Trench Mortar
Battery; the 102d
Engineers, and other divisional and staff troops.
These were the troops of the 27th
Division which faced that impregnable system of enemy
defenses, as they entered the line on that September evening in 1918.
The allied staffs already
had in their possession a German staff book which went into minutest
detail in regard to the
construction of the boasted Hindenburg Line, and which made bold to
state that the section in the
vicinity of Bellicourt tunnel was the hardest for any attacking force
to assault.
The outer defenses, as we have
mentioned before, consisted of several lines of trenches,
protected by masses of wire, as well as three strong points,-the Knoll,
Quennemont Farm and
Guillemont Farm, to say nothing of light Ind heavy machine guns,
minenwerfer of all sizes, and
concealed batteries everywhere. Likewise, at Guillemont Farm, the enemy
had installed a most
powerful flamenwerfer or flame-projector system. Such was the main part
of the construction of
the ground, which the enemy had extended to a depth of six miles,
gullied and harrowed and
literally strewn with hidden machine guns, which only spoke when our
waves were at their
mouths.
Major General O'Ryan, commanding,
set up his divisional P. C. in a chalk quarry at Saint Emilie,
some few thousand yards behind the front, and, in accordance with the
usual Flanders weather,
rain which is one of the greatest products of that part of France -had
turned the roads into
quagmires of slippery and clinging mud. And always and seemingly
forever, roared the snarling
and growling British guns, wiping out enemy works and pulverizing enemy
defenses.
No one who has never been at the
battle area, under wartime conditions, can appreciate how
pulsingly filled with restrained eagerness the men of these units were,
that unconquerable
Yankee spirit that even the drenching rains of France could not dampen!
Then is the time, when
man talks to man confidentially of little secrets; of the bright lights
of the little old town back
there among the hills of the Empire State; of familiar places around
Times Square or Herald
Square, and how they know their friends were back there enjoying the
light and warmth, and then
it is that they begin to talk of their chances of getting back there
once more to "carry on" there
with the same vigor and dash that they were "carrying on" that night in
Picardy mud and rain!
Out across No Man's Land, some four
thousand yards ahead of them, lay the formidable system
of the Canal Tunnel, while on their right lay the men of the 30th
American Division, flanked by
the French 10th Army, while the 3d British Corps was on their left.
The operations which were destined
to end in the breaking of the Canal Tunnel line, began with a
machine gun barrage by companies A, C and D of the 105th Machine Gun
Battalion, with
Company B covering Tombois Road. The 104th Machine Gun Battalion was
held in reserve to
take over the support positions at the critical time. This machine gun
preparation was followed
by the artillery preparation, which fell upon the enemy positions at
5.20 on the morning of
September 27th, and at which time the 106th Infantry, composing the
attacking party, in
conjunction with flank protection by one battalion of the 105th
Infantry, on their left, affording
flank protection against the enemy positions in the vicinity of
Vendhuile.
The enemy tank traps took a heavy
toll--out of some forty tanks going forward in the attack, only
a dozen came back. Scores of men of the 106th Infantry fell before the
withering fire of the
enemy machine guns, which presented a veritable net-work of cross-fire
in their front. But the
advance was maintained, and the lines, though torn and rent by a
tornado of exploding enemy
shells, kept moving. At points in the immediate vicinity of Knoll Farm,
the struggle for the
mastery was particularly severe and bloody, and the shell-torn and
crumbling ruins of the
farm changed hands four times before the enclosure was finally strewn
with the dead and dying
of both sides, although the enemy dead outnumbered our own by dozens.
The fighting continued
all day, with the combating lines of bloody and snarling and vicious
men continually at each
other's throats, and, when the darkness finally settled down over the
country sides of Picardy,
the 106th Infantry had been reduced to a small body of worn and weary,
bloodstained and
gasping humans, who continued to cling with the bull-dog tenacity of
the Yanks to the
gains which the sanguinary struggle of the day had netted them.
On the morning of the 28th of
September, having planned the taking of the enemy strong points
at Quennemont and Guillemont Farms and The Knoll, which were necessary
for jumping-off
points for the main attack, the divisional command sent forward the
107th and 108th Infantry
Regiments, to the relief of the weary 106th, and the struggle for these
positions was continued.
All day long the seething lines of steel and battling humanity surged
backward and forward in
deadly combat, men dying in tens and scores in the vicinity of the
strong points at Guillemont
and Quennemont Farms. But the positions were taken as planned, and
night saw the men of the
27th Division consolidating their positions in these points.
At 5.50 o'clock, on the morning of
September 29th, thirty-five guns of the 105th Machine Gun
Battalion opened a deadly barrage over the heads of the infantry, with
the Tunnel as its target,
firing for one-half hour, at the rate of two hundred rounds per minute.
Then, as the first streaks of the
coming dawn began to filter over the torn and bruised French
hillsides, came the greatest barrage of the entire war from the British
guns. A veritable cataract of
steel and fire leaped from the muzzles of our guns and fell upon the
enemy positions of " Hindy;"
over went the men of the 27th, fighting like demons every inch of the
way; snarling, growling,
frenzied Huns forced into the most desperate fighting of their
lives,-the fight to hold their
oft-boasted Hindenbur Line,-fought fiercely, and held tenaciously to
their positions, until the
dash and unbeatable spirit of the men of the 27th pushed their waves
forward and made the
positions untenable.
The attack was synchronized with
those of the French and British on the south and north flanks,
and a squadron of forty tanks lumbered noisily forward toward the
fire-spitting nests ahead, but
were soon put out of the fighting by traps. Some of the enemy wire had
escaped the preparatory
fire of our batteries, and accordingly, the 102d Engineers moved
forward, in advance of the in-
fantry, and placed rolls of wire similar to chicken-wire" over the
enemy entanglements, and
allowed the infantry to advance over these bands of wire and into the
"impregnable" positions
beyond. Heavy mists and smoke entirely over-spread the country-side, as
the men of the 107th
and 108th Infantries swept forward against the frowning positions of
"Hindy" that seemed to
scowl menacingly upon them just ahead. But they continued their
advance, in face of strong
enemy flank fire, as well as fierce enemy attacks on their front, rear
and flank, and a terrible
counter by enemy reserves from Vendhuile, against the left of their
sector, with the purpose of
rolling up and crushing the American attack. These counters were met by
the 105th Infantry,
whose duty it was to shatter them, the enemy, nevertheless, Operating
on this flank, holding back
the 27th Division's left, and delivering repeated hurricanes of fire
and men against our
positions.
Concrete pill-boxes had been strewn
throughout the enemy positions in great quantities, and
these were put out of action by the tanks, or, more often, encircled by
the men of the 107th and
108th Infantries, and the defenders slain with grenades. It happened,
too, that many times, after
the initial attacking waves had advanced over some of the tunnel
terrain, enemy reserves would
emerge from hidden air-shafts behind them and pour a withering fire
upon them as they
advanced. These underground shafts were of great importance to the
enemy, as they of necessity
prolonged their fight and increased the major casualties of the
attackers.
By two o'clock inthe afternoon, our
troops had taken the southern entrance of the tunnel, were in
possession of Bellicourt, Nauroy and Cabaret Wood Farm, and before four
o'clock they had
entered Gouy, with the fields in their rear strewn with their valiant
dead.
Every road that led from the
vicinity of the fighting to the rear, and more especially to the
dressing stations, was trod by weary and worn and bruised and bleeding
sons of the Empire State,
who had come three thousand miles to show the Boche that pride and
arrogance could not aspire
to rule the affairs of men. Quennemont and Guillemont Farms had lost
their peace-time quietude
and had been turned into veritable hells-on-earth; their farmyards
carpeted with the dead and
dying; their great flagstones stained with the reddening stains of
newly-spilled blood; their great
walls torn and crumbling, and emitting the odors of battle, and the
smell of human blood and
scorching flesh and gas, and everywhere-the dead. Here men had died in
scores, silencing the
enemy guns.
Evening came, and the reddening
glow of the setting sun, as it fell behind the hills to the west,
found the doughboys established in Bony, while one battalion, having
advanced far beyond its
objective, had entered Gouy; and then the Australians "leap-frogged"
through them, and carried
on.
The battalion in Gouy was cut off
and entirely surrounded, but clung steadily to their positions, in
spite of the fact that the rear was combed by shell-fire and machine
gun bullets, and across this
area no communication could be established. They were attacked from the
front, rear, and both
flanks, to say nothing of being fired on from the airplanes of the
enemy which were constantly
circling overhead, but they held their positions for eight hours.
However, rumors began to reach
Saint Emilie that this battalion had been lost, and those seemed to be
borne out by the statement
of a German officer who said that his men alone had taken prisoner over
one hundred men in the
vicinity of Guillemont Farm. General O'Ryan dismissed him with the
words: "Take him
away, he lies!"
Some of the stories of this
battalion were to the effect that they had attempted to surrender and
had been ambushed; that they had all been killed outright, and finally,
that they had been taken.
The fact was that, as they advanced, the enemy had poured from
concealed passages in their rear
and shot down scores of them. Finally, they were discovered by a bunch
of Australians, and,
with a cry for revenge in their hearts, the men of this " lost
battalion" dashed forward again with
the "Aussies" and stuck with them.
Some idea of the severity of the
fighting can be realized when the authentic statement is made
that one company of the 107th Infantry went into the fight with 212 men
and came out with only
12 men unwounded. When some of the 107th units had been torn to shreds,
they had to retire to
support positions and the 108th advanced, bombing out dugouts and
positions in the main system
and taking more than their own strength in prisoners, keeping these men
with them, and at the
same time fighting off severe enemy counters.
Then came the Australians, bringing
relief to the weary men of the 27th Division, many of whom
went forward with them, refusing to get out of the fighting, although
many of their outfits had
been torn to shreds. And so it is that our pledge has been kept "on
Flanders Fields!" It has been
kept as our lines leaped forward over the top, as the faint streaks of
coming day tinged the roseate
east, as the lines of stalwart youths advanced to do or die-determined
that no price, however high,
should be deemed too great to insure the people of bleeding France that
Poppies should bloom and keep their
place On Flanders Fields."
Under the lilies of France they
lie, silently sleeping their last long sleep, as the soft breezes of
coming spring murmur a soothing lullaby as they pass over the scarred
fields - fields scarred by
the shell-craters of the fighting hosts, and scarred, too, with the
graves of heroes.
Having accomplished the seemingly
impossible, the 27th Division was relieved, and sent to the
rear areas for a brief rest, before being returned to the line for the
dash of October.
The enemy had taken up prepared
positions along the line of the Selle River, and were
completing preparations for determined resistance. The 27th and 30th
Divisions, returning, took
over the front and immediately made careful reconnaissances. On October
8th, the 30th Division,
from its positions just east of Montbrehain, between Cambrai and Saint
Quetin, stood ready to
beg n a new drive which should carry it across the Selle River and in
the direction of the Canal de
Sambre. The direction of this advance must, of necessity, be toward the
northeast, across rolling
country.
The enemy put up strong machine gun
resistance at the villages and farms that lay scattered
through the countryside, and it was therefore considered highly
probable that strong resistance
and also the most bitterly-fought defense could be looked for beyond
the Selle River line.
Accordingly, a general attack was made by the 1st French Army, and the
4th British Army, of
which the 2d American Corps was a part. This army was disposed with the
9th British Corps
on the right, the 2d American Corps in the center, and the 13th British
Corps on the left. Then
came the 3d British Army, on the extreme left.
The attack was accompanied with a
rolling barrage and tanks, the 30th Division attacking with
the 117th Infantry on its right, the 118th Infantry on the left. The
enemy put down a strong
counter-barrage, but the heavy mists of the morning favored the
attackers, and except for heavy
fighting on the villages and farms and bits of woodland, the advance
was across open country
against only slight enemy resistance.
By noon, Brancourt and Premont were
in our hands, and the line was running diagonally across
the Bohain-Premont-Cambrai road, with the enemy retiring rapidly, and
putting up only rear
guard actions with machine guns, burning buildings and supply and
ammunition dumps.
At five in the evening, the 6th
British Division had taken Bohain; the 30th American Division
was occupying Busigny and Becquigny, while, to the west of Busigny, the
30th was astride the
western circuit of the enemy's most important railway line,-that which
ran from Metz to Mezieres
and Hirson to Valenciennes and Lille. By October 10th, the 25th British
Division was advancing
on the left, the 6th British Division was a slight distance behind on
the right, and the attack was
resumed. Escaufourt on the left, the western edges of Saint Souplet in
the center, and
Vaux-Andigny on the right were taken in this attack. Saint Souplet is
situated on the west of the
Selle River, and, on account of the favorable terrain in its vicinity,
the enemy had established a
resistance line on the hills east of the river, at which point their
reinforcements held up our
advance.
However, on the 11th of October,
Saint Souplet, Vaux-Andigny and Saint Benin were cleared,
and the advance along the river continued. This advance would command
the railway line
parallel to the Selle, from St. Souplet to Le Cateau. Here the 27th
Division relieved the 30th.
The 4th Army front had now
penetrated far to the east of the desolate Somme Valley, and was
now in the midst of scenes untouched by the devastating hands of war.
There was green in
abundance here. Green things grew in the fields and gardens, where the
houses still had roofs on
them, and windows, and where the civilians lived the lives of normal
human beings.
In this peaceful valley, the 27th
lay still for a couple of days, waiting for guns, supplies and
ammunition, which had been lost in the dash, to come up. Then, on
October 16th, having rested
for a few days, and having reorganized its forces, the 30th Division
returned to the line, taking
over the right half of the 27th Division's sector. This gave each
division a frontage of only about
2,000 yards, thereby giving the driving power of each division a
decidedly greater punch. It was
evidenced that here the enemy would resist stubbornly, for there was
disposed in line, five
complete divisions, as well as elements of six others in reserve areas.
On October 17th, at 5.25 A.M.,
through a drizzling rain and heavy, low-hanging mists, under
cover of their barrage, the attack was resumed by the two American
divisions. Heavy
counter-barrage fire was laid down by the enemy, as well as greatly
increased machine gun fire.
Despite resistance, however, and the slippery, chalky soil, the men of
the 27th Division waded
through the river, climbed the opposite bank and pushed doggedly
forward into the mists. As
practically 11 of the bridges had been destroyed by the enemy, the 102d
Engineers, advancing
just behind the first wave of the attack, threw hastily-constructed
bridges across the river,
and the 105th and 108th Infantry Regiments soon were successfully
assaulting the heights
beyond .
The enemy losses were heavy, and
fourteen hundred prisoners, large quantities of munitions and
railroad stock were taken.
The feat of fording the stream,
climbing the slippery banks on the opposite side, and scaling the
embankment of the railway, just beyond St. Souplet, in the face of the
galling enemy fire, was
almost unbelievable. Yet it was done.
Fourteen tanks, part of the 301st
American Tank Battalion, having crossed the river to the north
of St. Souplet, preceded the attacking waves of the 27th Division,
whose left ad been held up by
the difficulty experienced by the 25th British Division in breaking
through the little triangle
formed by the railway line south of Le Cateau. But, nevertheless, the
front of the 27th Division
was pushed over the ridge, taking Molain on the right and establishing
their lines through the
positions in Arbre de Guise. And this in spite of the fact that both
their flanks were drawn back-
ward for liaison with the other divisions.
The advancing forces were now
encountering especially heavy artillery fire and the enemy were
launching several strong counters, which evidenced that they were
forced to resist strongly to
cover their further withdrawal of their heavy artillery. They had been
surprised by the resumption
of the attacks.
On the 18th of October, the 27th
Division again attacked, with the 13th Corps (British),
encountering heavy machine gun resistance from the farms on the slopes
ahead, as well as
counter-attacks supported by enemy artillery. But, at noon, the 30th
Division, after obstinate
fighting for Ribeauville, took that town, after heavy artillery
preparation, and, by mid-afternoon,
the enemy resistance had so far weakened as to allow the whole front to
push forward to the next
line of hills, which lay about two miles from the Canal de Sambre, and
in the vicinity of the town
of Catillon. As the moonlight, cold and clear, came to throw its
lengthening shades over the
battle-fields, it looked down upon the men of the 30th Division
occupying Mazingheim (between
Ribeauville and Catillon) assisted by flank attacks by the 27th
Division from the north. The 27th
took Jonc de Mer Farm and La Roux Farm, crossing Jonc de Mer brook and
the ridge and
pushing forward almost to the ridge west of the St. Maurice River.
On October 19th patrols were pushed
forward toward the Canal de Sambre, all along the front,
those of the 27th Division, reaching the western bank of the St.
Maurice River, while those of the
30th Division reached the last ridge west of Catillon and the Canal.
Artillery and other necessary
preparations were now begun for the next great organized attack, which
had for its purpose the
crossing of the Canal de Sambre and the St. Maurice River. But, as the
27th and 30th American
Divisions were not in condition to be used longer without a rest, and
having become critically
reduced by losses and fatigue they were relieved, on the 21st of
October, by the 6th British
Division, which took over the sector of the 27th, and the 1st British
Division, taking over that of
the 30th, during the night. The 27th and 30th Divisions now were drawn
back to the vicinity of
Amiens for a rest.
In its battle from September 29th
to October 21st, the Second American Corps had advanced a
total of about twenty miles, taken about one-tenth of the prisoners of
the A. E. F.
From this point the British forces
of the 6th and lst Division pushed the enemy forward for a
distance of about twenty-five miles beyond the Sambre, and, when the
signing of the armistice
called a halt to the hostilities all along the front, it found them
just within the frontier of
Belgium.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE YANKEE SOLDIER.
And so it was that the American
doughboy in France, "came, saw, and conquered" everything
before him. And, then, when his work was done, he was compelled to stay
in France
many weary months, while others argued and made speeches on Leagues of
Nations and peace
conferences and the like seemingly having forgotten the men who made
those things
possible.
And the Yankee soldier did some
kicking, and no one on earth could blame him for doing so
either. He was entitled to grumble. Of his deeds, they are already
history. Of himself, on the line
or in the rest areas, he was an American;-that is all-a big, reliant,
fearless, splendid American. He
did every job that was asked of him and did it right. He played hard
and he fought hard. He
went into a fight with as brave a heart as God ever placed in human
breast, and with a smile on
his face he passed down into the Valley of the Shadow. He was the
finest soldier in Europe, and
there are scores of great soldiers of all nations who will attest the
veracity of this statement, and
have done so already. Sam Browne belts were not popular with him. Some
of his officers, newly
come to their rank, were not equal to their tasks, but he always was.
He was always and
simply,-the little old fighting private!
By his sublime courage, his
unfailing optimism and his abiding faith that nothing could
withstand the United States of America, he smashed through every
obstacle, and would have
gone to Berlin, had not the Armistice stopped his victorious advance.
As one "scrap of paper"
had been Germany's downfall, so another scrap of paper saved her from
reaping the whirlwind
she had started.
Of this we are certain. Never again
will any nation which saw the American soldier in action,
challenge him without a realization of what the challenge means.
If you had been with him, lived
with him and fought beside him, and been through hell with him,
and had seen him turn up at every turn with a grin, then you would have
come to know him, as I
have known him. Have you ever stopped to think that he has faced the
Great Unknown so much
that it holds no fear for him? That he knows what glory means, when it
is mixed with mud and
blood and the suffering and death and fighting of the nerve-wracking
days and nights in the line?
Do you know that he has slept in the slush and mud and rain and still
sang or whistled a tune of
rag-time as the great guns barked and tore the heavens with their
flashes? Do you know that he
has lived upon a single meal a day, and kept on singing the lilting
tunes of the home-town
cabaret? Do you know that, perhaps, he has fallen many times in the
dark with limp, still things
all around him? And then, at the hospital, called the nurse "kid" and
begged her to help him get
back to that sort of life again? Did you ever hike a hundred miles and
carry your house on your
back, while your feet were blistered and sore, and your shoulders were
cut by the pack-straps?
Did you ever live in the rain and snow and the cold, and eat your meals
with your plate in
your lap? I have marched along dusty French roads,-only one of a
million American lads,-all so
very much alike after all, spirits as keen as a fresh flash of flame,-
ready to strike whenever the
chance might come to them, as come it would. Just a bunch of lads, with
boyish I grins, waiting
the chance to hustle into the fight,-thrilled by the battle and the din
and crash of the guns.
Tramping along through the darkness; splashing along through the mud
and rain, with a pack
chafing our backs,-bound for the trenches again! Watching the flashes
of light in the distance and
the splotches of red in the sky; hearing now and then the scream of a
shell bursting in a convoy
creeping along the road to the right. Tramping along,-rain in our faces
and running icy
cold down our backs,-silent and thoughtful, forever moving
forward--bound for the lines
again!
The first crimson streaks of coming
dawn appear in the eastern heavens; and the pockmarked
fields begin to come out of the misty morning, that chills one to the
very bone. Like a silvery
thread the river cuts a winding course through the green and brown of
its banks.
And yet, how very quiet and lonely
the whole land is! Only the dead men whose distorted bodies
lie along the roadways or hang upon the great tangles of the wire
before the old battered trenches,
live in this beautiful land. And what a multitude of shallow graves are
in the fields some of them
are marked by crosses, others only by a single stick with its tiny
metal tag upon it, and still
others by the owner's rifle, its bayonet driven point down into the
soil, and its occupant's
bloodstained helmet hanging from its bolt. Graves, singly or in twos or
threes or clusters,-as they
fell.
And yet we pass thousands of human
beings,-clad in blue,-the immortal horizon-blue of heroic
France. And we think of his long vigil-we try to place our few short
days of fighting and hell
beside his four years and more; and we fall to wondering whether his
home has been destroyed as
those are before us, and thank God that the fighting and destruction
and suffering and death and
sacrifice is all so far away from our own dear homes and the loved ones
back there; that our little
cottage,-a cosy, snug little affair, with its roses and gardens and the
children and mother and dad,
and perhaps the wife or sweetheart,-is still there,-just as cosy and
warm, and the folks just as
sweet as when we left them, in the budding springtime. And we wonder if
we, too, shall be
returning to them all once again, after this terrible nightmare of
fighting is all over,-or,-or
whether we shall soon be nestled snugly in one of those little green
mounds of sacred French soil,
like those in the field nearby?
And then, almost as if by some sort
of a pre-arranged plan, someone in the column strikes up the
familiar tune, and we all sing as we tramp onward:
"Keep your head down, Fritzie boy,
Keep your head down, Fritzie boy.
Last night, by the star-shell light
We saw you, we saw you.
You were mending your broken wire,
When we opened our rapid fire.
If you want to see your father in your Fatherland,
Keep your head down, Fritzie boy."
Shall we ever forget those scenes
we saw, as we slogged along the weary miles that led to the
front? Loud spitting motor trucks and great trains of wagons, and
caissons and guns, and weary
tramping men,-all jammed into one seemingly conglomerate mass,-
plodding along in the
darkness and mud and rain of France, moving toward the front.
And night after night, always came
the same sights,-nights of hard and never- ceasing work and
marching,-days of toil over maps and battle plans; one or two hours'
sleep,-at least we called it
sleep,-in every twenty-four, just a wink now and then, as chance or
circumstance permitted,-until
we lost all trace or semblance of time-reckoning. Day meant nothing but
toil and working over
maps and plans again, and night meant nothing but dull tramping onward
through seas of mud
and tangled masses of humans and guns and caissons and rain, pushed
here and there by the
passing of the huge camions and lorries laden with the food for the
great guns that were flashing
out just ahead of us,-calling us onward to the land of heroes, fighting
and death, perhaps. Life
had resolved itself into nothing but mud and rain and weary men and
guns.
Weary, did I say? Well, some weary
too! but nevertheless, always singing. And what did we
sing?-" Dixie" and "Where Do We Go from Here........ The Last Long
Mile," and many of those
weary, muddy French roads were covered to the tune of.
"There's a long, long trail
a-winding
Into the land of my dreams."
But, now we have returned again!
To get back home, again, and to see
there old friends and faces of long vanished days;
to hear some friendly voice call out from the old familiar streets or
oft-remembered places,
which we trod in the days of youth, before the red days of 1914. To get
back home again, where
rain and sunshine is abundant; where the lights of home hold up their
golden shield, with its soft,
warm arms of welcome, from out the long ago, waiting to welcome us from
the fields of
France.
To get back home again,-to know at
last the guns are silent from Flanders to Lorraine; the days of
marching through the mud are past, the nights of terror in the driving
rains of France, lie hidden
in the midst of the Argonne glades,-all of it a grim, yet holy specter
of our dreams,-of the years
that wait ahead of us, where every shadow lifts before the smile of
loved ones that welcome
through their tears.
To get back home again,-to see the
purple twilights and sunsets of the native land,-beyond the
black shadows and misty dawns still filled with ghosts and
death,-beyond the dreamless sleep of
those who wait to hold the line they fought for to the end,-eternal
sentinels at Freedom's
Gate!
"And only silent thoughts of those
who stay
To hold the guard across the endless years,
Who will not come again the ancient way."
Above the broken walls, the
apple-boughs of the French springtime are murmurous with
bees; again the breezes of coming "Printemps" whirl the drifting
chestnut-flowers, and the little
ruffling winds will soon be going merrily through the poplar trees; and
though we are now far,
far away in our homeland, we shall know that once again the spring has
come to France.
Soon again the blood-red poppies
shall bloom in the wheatfields; the rains of spring
gleam along the boulevards, and the flower-girls, with mignonette and
pinks and clematis
shall come again to sell their wares in Paris streets; the Seine,
slipping under the pretty bridges to
the sea,-and the west; and out in the countryside of the beautiful
Yonne Valley, shall shine the
pale golden smile of the buttercups, that glorifies the gray ruins with
bravery heartbreaking and
valiant,-the smile that lights the eyes of France! And beyond the dark
days of the past, we have
seen, not the worn, steadfast France, wan, gallant, spent, with eyes
blurred haggard by the spirit
of the Maid of Orleans and Charlotte of Normandy but France,
triumphant, high of heart,
smiling through throbbing drums, on Reims restored, Nancy and
Alsace-Lorraine, in this new
spring that comes, the spring the hald and blind and dead and the rest
of us who fought, have
brought again to France!.
CHAPTER IX
TO OUR DEAD!
When out glasses are raised in the
many happy fetes that shall crown the homecoming of the
fighters; when the cheeks of the victors are flushed with the new joys
of the homeland; and when
the Cup of Life seems filled to its fullest measure with the joy of
living once more in the peaceful
land of our nativity; let us then drink, deep and long, those of us who
shall tread again the
undisturbed pathway of life, let us drink to those who gave their Wine
of Life that the world
might once again enjoy the sunshine of Peace, and whose souls hallow
the stretches of the
Argonne and the silent wastes of Picardy.
They are sleeping where they fell,
along our lines; placed in their narrow cots of earth by the
hands of loving and sorrowing comrades! Beside the gaping shell-craters
of Thiaucourt, upon
the bloody slopes of the Bois de Belleau and the bald Nose of Grand
Pre; sleeping quietly the last
sleep of the brave, among the poppied fields of France.
How silently they rest beneath
their tiny wooden crosses! Hearing no more the roar of guns that
once belched their thunder of death across the barren wastes of No
Man's Land; unmindful of the
sweet songs of the birds among the bursting buds and blossoms of
spring, in the apple orchards
of Picardy. How bravely and gallantly they marched away,-that other
generations, as yet un-
born, might possess the fruits of their suffering and death,-that the
heritage of happiness for
which they fought and bled should bless the whole earth. What a
glorious martyrdom! Baring
their bosoms freely, rather than have the flag of their country
dishonored and her name reviled;
their breasts the bulwark and the fortress of right and justice, upon
which the temple of Free-
dom should be raised in the sight of all nations.
It was not our privilege to die for
the land that we love. But when are met the loyal hosts of those
who fought,-around that board shall ring the glasses, raised in memory
of our hero dead! Not
even death itself shall utterly divide we who have struggled together
on the fields of France. We
salute our hero dead!-Dead upon the Field of Honor for the nation in
the hour of her need!
Our banners carry the glorious names of, Cantigny, Bois de Belleau,
Torcy, Chateau-Thierry,
Marne, Champagne, Saint Mihiel and Argonne, and many others,-stars in
America's crown of
glory,-names which they who died upon those fields have written in
letters of purest gold upon
the crown of the country which sent them forth!
Let us here offer our last, supreme
homage of gratitude and affection,-would it might have been
beside those freshly-dug graves upon the slopes of the Argonne, where
they rest in the shadow of
the Tricolor of France, beside all the brave fellows, whose deeds they
have emulated,-justly
entitled to be counted among the illustrious dead of the ages,-
America's sacrifice upon the Altar
of Freedom!
Lads of the Golden Legion, we who
knew you, worked with you, ate with you, slept with you,
and fought beside you, salute you as we pass the spot where you lie.
Our breath comes faster, our
hearts beat stronger, and our eyes grow dim with the tears of comrades,
as we pass the spot, but
we pass on, better and stronger men. Your bodies alone, torn by the
merciless hands of the
enemy, have gone from amongst us; your souls, long since gone to the
Great White Comrade
still hover over us; your memory remains in our hearts,-imperishable,
shining and tender.
Laddies, we who have returned to
the land of our fathers, salute you!-Farewell!
THE HOMECOMING.
From the squelching mud of Flanders,
From the Chateau-Thierry wheat,
From the shattered Halles of Ypres,
From where Scarpe and Escaut meet,
From the shell-strewn slopes of Verdun,
Comes the tramp of marching feet,
For the boys are coming home.
Ye who sat in the twilight when the
light of your homes was gone,
Who wearily watched and waited till the day when the war was done,
What will ye think on the day when they all come back, who can,
And the boy you sent with a mother's tears returns, but returns a man.
Browned by the suns of foreign
climes, with the lines of fate in his face,
The lines of men who have fought with men in many a fearful place,
Men who have looked old death in the face and laughed as he passed them
by,
But, "Where is the boy I gave to you?" I can hear the mothers cry.
Oh, mother, thy son has come back
to thee, tempered and tried like steel,
In the flaming fire of the hell of war where the charging legions reel.
Where the rocket gleams on the bayonet (where it is not dyed with red),
And the fitful glare of the Verey flare lights up the face of the dead.
He has seen men die with a smile on
their lips that the nations might be free.
He has charged the foe with his blood on fire and has seen the foeman
flee.
And mother, the boy who thus passed through hell can be no longer a boy.
For the ore of Man in that furnace tried is metal without alloy.
And to those whose sons have
tarried awhile, asleep in their Mother Earth,
Whose brave young souls have barred the foe from the land that gave
them birth,
I say to them "Weep." for weep they must, but hold up their heads, as
they can,
For the boy they gave at the Nation's call has gone to his rest, a man.
From the squelching mud of Flanders
From the Cliateau-Thierry wheat,
From the shattered Halles of Ypres,
From where Scarpe and Escaut meet,
From the shell-strewn slopes of Verdun,
Comes the tramp of marching feet,
For the men are coming home.
JAMES BEVERIDGE, Sgt. M. C.,
First printed in "Stars and Stripes," France.
[FINIS.]