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The FReeper Foxhole Revisits Anzio - The Bid for Rome - June 5th, 2004
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Posted on 06/05/2004 12:19:50 AM PDT by snippy_about_it



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.



...................................................................................... ...........................................

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The FReeper Foxhole Revisits


Anzio - The Bid for Rome
22 January-24 May 1944


During the early morning hours of 22 January 1944, troops of the Fifth Army swarmed ashore on a fifteen-mile stretch of Italian beach near the prewar resort towns of Anzio and Nettuno. The landings were carried out so flawlessly and German resistance was so light that British and American units gained their first day's objectives by noon, moving three to four miles inland by nightfall. The ease of the landing and the swift advance were noted by one paratrooper of the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82d Airborne Division, who recalled that D-day at Anzio was sunny and warm, making it very hard to believe that a war was going on and that he was in the middle of it. The location of the Allied landings, thirty miles south of Rome and fifty-five miles northwest of the main line of resistance running from Minturno on the Tyrrhenian Sea to Ortona on the Adriatic, surprised local German commanders, who had been assured by their superiors that an amphibious assault would not take place during January or February. Thus when the landing occurred the Germans were unprepared to react offensively. Within a week, however, as Allied troops consolidated their positions and prepared to break out of the beachhead, the Germans gathered troops to eliminate what Adolf Hitler called the "Anzio abscess." The next four months would see some of the most savage fighting of World War II.



Strategic Setting


Following the successful Allied landings at Calabria, Taranto, and Salerno in early September 1943 and the unconditional surrender of Italy that same month, German forces had quickly disarmed their former allies and begun a slow, fighting withdrawal to the north. Defending two hastily prepared, fortified belts stretching from coast to coast, the Germans significantly slowed the Allied advance before settling into the Gustav Line, a third, more formidable and sophisticated defensive belt of interlocking positions on the high ground along the peninsula's narrowest point. The Germans intended to fight for every portion of this line, set in the rugged Apennine Mountains overlooking scores of rain-soaked valleys, marshes, and rivers. The terrain favored the defense and, as elsewhere in Italy, was not conducive to armored warfare. Luftwaffe Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, whom Hitler had appointed as commander of all German forces in Italy on 6 November 1943, promised to hold the Gustav Line for at least six months. As long as the line was maintained it prevented the Fifth Army from advancing into the Liri valley, the most logical and direct route to the major Allied objective of Rome. The validity of Kesselring's strategy was demonstrated repeatedly between October 1943 and January 1944 as the Allies launched numerous costly attacks against well-entrenched enemy forces.

The idea for an amphibious operation near Rome had originated in late October 1943 when it became obvious that the Germans were going to fight for the entire peninsula rather than withdraw to northern Italy. The Allied advance following the Salerno invasion was proving so arduous, due to poor weather, rough terrain, and stiffening resistance, that General Dwight D. Eisenhower pessimistically told the Anglo-American Combined Chiefs of Staff that there would be very hard and bitter fighting before the Allies could hope to reach Rome. As a result, Allied planners were looking for ways to break out of the costly struggle for each ridge and valley, which was consuming enormous numbers of men and scarce supplies.

Operation Shingle


The Anzio invasion began at 0200 on 22 January 1944 and achieved, General Lucas recalled, one of the most complete surprises in history. The Germans had already sent their regional reserves south to counter the Allied attacks on the Garigliano on 18 January, leaving one nine-mile stretch of beach at Anzio defended by a single company. The first Allied waves landed unopposed and moved rapidly inland. On the southern flank of the beachhead the 3d Division quickly seized its initial objectives, brushing aside a few dazed patrols, while unopposed British units achieved equal success in the center and north. Simultaneously, Rangers occupied Anzio, and the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion seized Nettuno. All VI Corps objectives were taken by noon as the Allied air forces completed 1,200 sorties against targets in and around the beachhead. On the beach itself, the U.S. 36th Engineer Combat Regiment bulldozed exits, laid corduroy roads, cleared mines, and readied the port of Anzio to receive its first landing ship, tank (LST), an amphibious assault and supply ship, by the afternoon of D-day. By midnight over 36,000 men and 3,200 vehicles, 90 percent of the invasion force, were ashore with casualties of 13 killed, 97 wounded, and 44 missing. During D-day Allied troops captured 227 German defenders.



Allied units continued to push inland over the next few days to a depth of seven miles against scattered but increasing German resistance. In the center of the beachhead, on 24 January, the British 1st Division began to move up the Anzio-Albano Road toward Campoleone and, with help from the 179th Infantry Regiment of the 45th Infantry Division, captured the town of Aprilia, known as "the Factory" because of its cluster of brick buildings, on 25 January. Within three days the continuing Anglo-American drive pushed the Germans a further 1.5 miles north of the Factory, created a huge bulge in enemy lines, but failed to break out of the beachhead. Probes by the 3d Division toward Cisterna and by the 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment toward Littoria on 24-25 January made some progress but were also halted short of their goals by stubborn resistance. Renewed attacks on the next day brought the Americans within three miles of Cisterna and two miles beyond the west branch of the Mussolini Canal. But the 3d Division commander, Maj. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott, Jr., on orders of the corps commander, called a halt to the offensive, a pause that later lengthened into a general consolidation and reorganization of beachhead forces between 26 and 29 January.

Meanwhile, the Allied troop and materiel buildup had proceeded at a breakneck pace. Despite continuous German artillery and air harassment, a constant fact of life throughout the campaign, the Allies off-loaded twenty-one cargo ships and landed 6,350 tons of materiel on 29 January alone, and on 1 February the port of Anzio went into full operation. Improving air defenses downed ninety-seven attacking Luftwaffe aircraft prior to 1 February, but the Germans did succeed in sinking one destroyer and a hospital ship, as well as destroying significant stocks of supplies piled on the crowded beaches. Mindful of the need for reinforcements, Lucas ordered ashore the rest of the 45th Infantry Division and remaining portions of the 1st Armored Division allotted to the Anzio operation, raising the total number of Allied soldiers in the beachhead to 61,332.



The Germans had not been idle during the week after the Anzio landing. The German Armed Forces High Command (OKW) in Berlin was surprised at the location of the landing and the efficiency with which it was carried out. Although they had considered such an attack probable for some time and had made preliminary plans for meeting it, Kesselring and his local commanders were powerless to repel the invasion immediately because of the lack of adequate reserves. Nevertheless, German reaction to the Anzio landing was swift and ultimately would prove far more powerful than anything the Allies had anticipated.

Upon receiving word of the landings, Kesselring immediately dispatched elements of the 4th Parachute and Hermann Goering Divisions south from the Rome area to defend the roads leading north from the Alban Hills. Within the next twenty-four hours Hitler dispatched other units to Italy from Yugoslavia, France, and Germany to reinforce elements of the 3d Panzer Grenadier and 71st Infantry Divisions that were already moving into the Anzio area. By the end of D-day, thousands of German troops were converging on Anzio, despite delays caused by Allied air attacks.

OKW, Kesselring, and Brig. Gen. Siegfried Westphal, Kesselring's chief of staff, were astonished that the Anzio forces had not exploited their unopposed landing with an immediate thrust into the virtually undefended Alban Hills on 23-24 January. As Westphal later recounted, there were no significant German units between Anzio and Rome, and he speculated that an imaginative, bold strike by enterprising forces could easily have penetrated into the interior or sped straight up Highways 6 and 7 to Rome. Instead, Westphal recalled, the enemy forces lost time and hesitated. As the Germans later discovered, General Lucas was neither bold nor imaginative, and he erred repeatedly on the side of caution, to the increasing chagrin of both Alexander and Clark.



By 24 January Kesselring, confident that he had gathered sufficient forces to contain the beachhead, transferred the Fourteenth Army headquarters under General Eberhard von Mackensen from Verona in northern Italy to Anzio. Mackensen soon controlled elements of 8 divisions, totaling 40,000 troops, with 5 more divisions on the way. Seeking to prevent a permanent Allied foothold at Anzio, Kesselring ordered a counterattack for 28 January, but Mackensen requested and received a postponement until 1 February to await further reinforcements, especially armored units that were being held up by Allied air attacks. Two days before the scheduled offensive, the Fourteenth Army numbered about 70,000 combat troops, most already deployed in forward staging areas, with several thousand more on the way.

Racing against the expected German counterattack, both the Fifth and Eighth Armies prepared to renew their stalled offensives in the south. Lucas meanwhile planned a two-pronged attack for 30 January. While one force cut Highway 7 at Cisterna before moving east into the Alban Hills, a second was to advance northeast up the Albano Road, break through the Campoleone salient, and exploit the gap by moving to the west and southwest. A quick link-up with Fifth Army forces in the south was believed still possible even though German resistance all along the perimeter of the beachhead was becoming stronger.






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To: SAMWolf; All

Go thy great way!
The Stars thou meetst
Are even as Thyself --
For what are Stars but Asterisks
To point a human Life?
~Emily Dickinson

61 posted on 06/05/2004 9:51:58 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul (I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born ~ Ronald Reagan)
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To: Victoria Delsoul

Thanks Victoria. We lost a great American today. it's a shame that due to the Press, President Reagan has been very underrated, but the American people remember him for the great man he was despite the best efforst of the Press and the Liberals to erase his deeds from our history.


62 posted on 06/05/2004 10:38:41 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I intend to live for ever, or die in the attempt.)
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To: SAMWolf

I agree with you, Sam. Even today, I've heard subtle and not too subtle unfavorable comments about him. Some in the media won't give him a break, even today!


63 posted on 06/05/2004 10:48:01 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul (I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born ~ Ronald Reagan)
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To: Victoria Delsoul

I went to CNN to see what they were covering and it was the Iran/Contra Scnadal of course.


64 posted on 06/05/2004 10:50:43 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I intend to live for ever, or die in the attempt.)
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To: Victoria Delsoul

Evening Victoria, thank you for the Reagan tribute.


65 posted on 06/05/2004 11:00:13 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: SAMWolf

CNN is disgusting. I can't stand it.


66 posted on 06/05/2004 11:04:41 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul (I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born ~ Ronald Reagan)
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To: snippy_about_it

Hi Snippy, thank you.


67 posted on 06/05/2004 11:05:03 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul (I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born ~ Ronald Reagan)
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To: snippy_about_it; SAMWolf; E.G.C.; Aeronaut; bentfeather; Mudboy Slim; Valin; ...
Some ABC schmuck quoted Sam Donaldson ("as genuine as the carpet on his head") making that hateful crack that "he's so nice you like him even as he cuts your grandmother's Social Security".

To emend the record, Sam Clymerson, it was traitorrapist42 who taxed Social Security.

The measure of the smallness of the so-called "journalists" is their Pygmy cheapshot vendetta--

Reading of the Nazi sinking of an Allied hospital ship I am reminded of ABCNNBCBS, the fifth column working ceaselessly for the enemy du jour, be it world Communism or world terrorism.

President Reagan destroyed the Evil Empire and set free millions.

I don't think a copy of The Black Book of Communism would fit in, say, Dan Rather's mouth--but I've got an all-steel sledge hammer, and I never leave home without it.

~~~

The Medal of Honor is awarded in the name of the congress to each person who, while an officer, noncommissioned officer, or private of the Army, in action involving actual conflict with an enemy, distinguishes himself conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty.

In order to justify an award of the Medal of Honor, the individual must perform in action a deed of personal bravery or self-sacrifice above and beyond the call of duty, so conspicuous as clearly to distinguish him for gallantry and intrepidity above his comrades, involving risk of life or the performance of more than ordinarily hazardous service, the omission of which would not justly subject him to censure as for shortcoming or failure in the performance of his duty. The recommendations for the decoration will be judged by this standard of extraordinary merit and incontestable proof of the performance of the service will be exacted. (Act of 9 July 1918, 40 Stat. 870; 10 U.S.C.1430; M.L. 1939, sec 903).

Recipients of the Medal of Honor
ANZIO Campaign

Sgt. Sylvester Antolak - 3rd Div.
T/Sgt. Van T. Barfoot - 45th Div.
Pvt. Herbert F. Christian - 3rd Div.
T/Sgt. Ernest H. Dervishian - 34th Div.
PFC John W. Dutko - 3rd Div.
PFC Lloyd C. Hawks - 3rd Div.
2nd LT. Thomas W. Fowler - 1st Armd Div.
Capt. William W. Gault - 34th Div.
T/5 Eric Gibson - 3rd Div.
S/Sgt. George J. Hall - 34th Div.
Cpl. Paul B. Huff - 509th Para. Inf. Bn.
Pvt. Elden H. Johnson - 3rd Div.
PFC William H. Johnson - 45th Div.
PFC Patrick L. Kessler - 3rd Div.
PFC Alton W. Knappenberger - 3rd Div.
Pvt. James H. Mills - 3rd Div.
1st LT. Jack C. Montgomery - 45th Div.
1st LT. Beryl R. Newman - 34th Div.
Sgt. Truman O. Olson - 3rd Div.
PFC Henry Schauer - 3rd Div.
Pvt. Furman L. Smith - 34th Div.
PFC John C. Squires - 3rd Div.

~~~

Anzio Annie

280mm German "Leopold" K5 railroad gun

Anzio from Fifth Army Antiaircraft WWII Unit History

James "Red" Dunn Jr., MM1/c.

James "Red" Dunn Jr., MM1/c. Served on Mayo:27 December 1940 to 24 January 1944. Dunn was killed in action in the After Engineroom when Mayo was damaged during the Anzio Invasion, presumably from a mine. He was at his station in the After Engineroom maintaining the "heart" of the ship.

And that's about all I have to say tonight, except for one thing. The past few days when I've been at that window upstairs, I've thought a bit of the `shining city upon a hill.' The phrase comes from John Winthrop, who wrote it to describe the America he imagined. What he imagined was important because he was an early Pilgrim, an early freedom man. He journeyed here on what today we'd call a little wooden boat; and like the other Pilgrims, he was looking for a home that would be free. I've spoken of the shining city all my political life, but I don't know if I ever quite communicated what I saw when I said it. But in my mind it was a tall, proud city built on rocks stronger than oceans, windswept, God-blessed, and teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace; a city with free ports that hummed with commerce and creativity. And if there had to be city walls, the walls had doors and the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here. That's how I saw it, and see it still.

And how stands the city on this winter night? More prosperous, more secure, and happier than it was 8 years ago. But more than that: After 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she's still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.

We've done our part. And as I walk off into the city streets, a final word to the men and women of the Reagan revolution, the men and women across America who for 8 years did the work that brought America back. My friends: We did it. We weren't just marking time. We made a difference. We made the city stronger, we made the city freer, and we left her in good hands. All in all, not bad, not bad at all.

And so, goodbye, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.

68 posted on 06/05/2004 11:36:42 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hitlery: das Butch von Buchenvald)
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To: PhilDragoo

Regarding the MOH recipients, I like what Stephen Ambrose said in an interview about D-Day. He said in order to receive the MOH, your action must have been witnessed by six people. There were a lot of individual acts of heroism on D-Day and beyond that no one saw or lived to tell but they were all heroes.


69 posted on 06/05/2004 11:45:22 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: Victoria Delsoul

That makes 2 of us.


70 posted on 06/06/2004 12:15:29 AM PDT by SAMWolf (What happens to the hole when the cheese is gone?)
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To: PhilDragoo

Evening Phil Dragoo.

Thanks for listing the Medal Of Honor Winners during the Anzio Campaign.

I noticed that Kerry was going to halt his campaign "to Honor Ronald Reagan". More likely that his handlers are trying to prevent him from saying something stupid.

The Germans sure had a "thing" for big guns, seemed like in the long run they were a waste of resources.


71 posted on 06/06/2004 12:20:27 AM PDT by SAMWolf (What happens to the hole when the cheese is gone?)
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To: PhilDragoo

BTTT!!!!!!!


72 posted on 06/06/2004 3:00:46 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: PhilDragoo
"I don't think a copy of The Black Book of Communism would fit in, say, Dan Rather's mouth--but I've got an all-steel sledge hammer, and I never leave home without it."

Lemme know when yer planning on undertaking this noble endeavor and I'll hold him down while you take a few swings...MUD

73 posted on 06/06/2004 3:29:28 AM PDT by Mudboy Slim (Rest in Peace, Dutch Reagan!!)
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To: PhilDragoo
We made a difference. We made the city stronger, we made the city freer, and we left her in good hands. All in all, not bad, not bad at all.

We lost a great one. I hope my dad finally gets to meet the man he admired most.

74 posted on 06/06/2004 6:42:32 AM PDT by Samwise (The day may come when the courage of men fails...but it is not this day. This day we fight!)
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To: PhilDragoo

Good post.

Many years ago, one of my WW2 Uncles said he wanted to live long enough to see Ronald Reagan in the White House. My Uncle said, "Reagan is the first politician he had seen in years that does what he says he's going to do."

There weren't too many people in this world my Uncle had any respect for, but Reagan was one of them. My Uncle passed two years before Reagan was elected to office the first time. I am sure if they get a chance to meet in the hereafter, they will have a lot to talk about.


75 posted on 06/06/2004 7:08:00 AM PDT by tomball
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