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Book Cover: The Siegfried Line Campaign


UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

The European Theater of Operations

THE SIEGFRIED LINE
CAMPAIGN

 

by
Charles B. MacDonald

CMH Logo

 

CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
UNITED STATES ARMY
WASHINGTON, D. C., 1990


Photo:  The Siegfried Line


Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-60001

 

 

 

 

 

 

First Printed 1963—CMH Pub 7-7-1

___________________________________________________
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402


UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

Stetson Conn, General Editor

Advisory Committee
(As of 24 May 1961)

Fred Harvey Harrington
Maj. Gen. Louis W. Truman
University of Wisconsin
U.S. Continental Army Command

William R. Emerson

Maj. Gen. Evan M. Houseman
Yale University
Industrial College of the Armed Forces

Oron J. Hale

Brig. Gen. Bruce Palmer, Jr.
University of Virginia
U.S. Army War College

W. Stull Holt

Brig. Gen. William A. Cunningham III
University of Washington
U.S. Army Command and General Staff College

Bell I. Wiley

Col. Vincent J. Esposito
Emory University
United States Military Academy

C. Vann Woodward
Johns Hopkins University

 
 

Office of the Chief of Military History
Brig. Gen. James A. Norell, Chief of Military History

Chief Historian
Stetson Conn
Chief, Histories Division
Col. Leonard G. Robinson
Chief, Publication Division
Lt. Col. James R. Hillard
Editor in Chief
Joseph R. Friedman


 

 

 

 

 

... to Those Who Served

 

 

 

 



Foreword

To many an Allied soldier and officer and to countless armchair strategists, World War II in Europe appeared near an end when in late summer of 1944 Allied armies raced across northern France, Belgium, and Luxembourg to the very gates of Germany. That this was not, in fact, the case was a painful lesson that the months of September, October, November, and December would make clear with stark emphasis.

The story of the sweep from Normandy to the German frontier has been told in the already published Breakout and Pursuit. The present volume relates the experiences of the First and Ninth U.S. Armies, the First Allied Airborne Army, and those American units which fought under British and Canadian command, on the northern flank of the battle front that stretched across the face of Europe from the Netherlands to the Mediterranean. The operations of the Third U.S. Army in the center, from mid-September through mid-December, have been recounted in The Lorraine Campaign; those of the Seventh U.S. Army on the south will be told in The Riviera to the Rhine, a volume in preparation.

Unlike the grand sweep of the pursuit, the breaching of the West Wall called for the most grueling kind of fighting. Huge armies waged the campaign described, in this book, but the individual soldier, pitting his courage and stamina against harsh elements as well as a stubborn enemy, emerges as the moving spirit of these armies In the agony of the Huertgen Forest, the frustration of MARKET-GARDEN, the savagery of the struggle for Aachen, the valor of the American soldier and his gallant comrades proved the indispensable ingredient of eventual victory.

 

 

Washington, D.C.
24 May 1961
JAMES A. NORELL
Brigadier General, USA
Chief of Military History


The Author

Charles B. MacDonald, a graduate of Presbyterian College, is the author of Company Commander,1 an account of his experiences as an officer of the 2d Infantry Division in the European theater during World War II. He is coauthor and compiler of Three Battles: Arnaville, Altuzzo, and Schmidt and a contributor to Command Decisions. Since 1953 he has supervised the preparation of other volumes in the European and Mediterranean theater subseries of UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II and is currently writing another volume in the European theater subseries. In 1957 he received a Secretary of the Army Research and Study Fellowship and spent a year studying the relationship of terrain, weapons, and tactics on European battlefields. A lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve, he holds the Purple Heart and the Silver Star.

 

 

 


l. Washington, 1947.

[x]


Preface

Some who have written of World War II in Europe have dismissed the period between 11 September and 16 December 1944 with a paragraph or two. This has been their way of gaining space to tell of the whirlwind advances and more spectacular command decisions of other months. The fighting during September, October, November, and early December belonged to the small units and individual soldiers, the kind of warfare which is no less difficult and essential no matter how seldom it reaches the spectacular.

It is always an enriching experience to write about the American soldier—in adversity no less than in glittering triumph. Glitter and dash were conspicuously absent in most of the Siegfried Line fighting. But whatever the period may lack in sweeping accomplishment it makes up in human drama and variety of combat actions. Here is more than fighting within a fortified line. Here is the Huertgen Forest, the Roer plain, Aachen, and the largest airborne attack of the war. The period also eventually may be regarded as one of the most instructive of the entire war in Europe. A company, battalion, or regiment fighting alone and often unaided was more the rule than the exception. In nuclear war or in so-called limited war in underdeveloped areas, of which we hear so much today, this may well be the form the fighting will assume.

As befits the nature of the fighting, this volume is focused upon tactical operations at army level and below. The story of command and decision in higher headquarters is told only when it had direct bearing on the conduct of operations in those sectors under consideration. The logistics of the campaign likewise has been subordinated to the tactical narrative. It is a ground story in the sense that air operations have been included only where they had direct influence upon the ground action. It is also an American story. Although considerable attention has been paid British and Canadian operations where U.S. units were involved, this is designed only to place U.S. operations in proper perspective.

In the fullest sense of the term, this volume represents a co-operative enterprise. Reference in the footnotes and the bibliographical note can give only partial credit to the scores of officers and men who furnished information or unraveled questions of fact. Nearly every officer who held the post of division commander or above during the campaign has read the manuscript of this volume, and at least one ranking officer from each division, corps, and army headquarters has read and commented upon the manuscript.

[xi]


To list all present and former officials of the Office of the Chief of Military History who by their advice and support helped make the work possible would be prohibitively lengthy. Those of my colleagues whose invaluable contributions to this co-operative enterprise can be precisely noted are as follows:

The historian who performed most of the original research in German materials and by his monographs on German actions provided in effect a companion manuscript to the author's American story was Lucian Heichler. The editor was Miss Ruth Stout, who accomplished her task with high professional skill and commendable tact and understanding. Copy editing was done by Mrs. Marion P. Grimes. The maps, which serve not only to illustrate the narrative but also to tie diverse actions together, are the work of Charles V. P. von Luttichau. Miss Ruth Phillips selected the photographs. Mrs. Lois Aldridge of the World War II Records Division, National Archives and Records Service, displayed remarkable patience in assisting the author's exploration of mountains of records from the European theater.

The contributions of Dr. Kent Roberts Greenfield, chief historian at the time this volume was prepared, cannot be so precisely stated, yet no individual contributed more. It was he who first brought the author into the field of military history and patiently and astutely guided his early efforts.

Any credit for this volume should be divided among all those who helped make it possible. On the other hand, the author alone is responsible for interpretations made and conclusions drawn, as well as for any errors of omission or commission which may appear.

 

 

Washington, D.C.
15 May 1961
CHARLES B. MacDONALD

[xii]


Contents

PART ONE
Breaching the Siegfried Line

Chapter
Page
I.
THE ROAD TO GERMANY
3
 
 
 
Allied Strategy
6
The Shadow of Logistics
10
The Germans in the West
14
II.
THE FIRST U.S. ARMY
20
 
 
 
Weapons and Equipment
25
The Terrain and the West Wall
28
A Pause at the Border
36
III.
V CORPS HITS THE WEST WALL
39
 
 
 
 
 
The Race for the West Wall
41
Into Germany
43
Battle of the Schnee Eifel
49
Bridgehead at Wallendorf
56
Defense of the Bridgehead
63
IV.
VII CORPS PENETRATES THE LINE
66
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
German Developments
69
The Battle of the Stolberg Corridor
71
The Drive on the Second Band
75
A Wall About Aachen
80
Battle of the Monschau Corridor
82
The Germans Strike Back
86
The Onset of Position Warfare
90
The First Fight in the Forest
92
V.
ACTION ON THE NORTH WING
96
 
 
 
Defense of the Albert
98
From the Albert to the Border
101
Delay in the Assault
112

 

PART TWO
An Airborne Carpet in the North

Chapter
Page
 
VI.
OPERATION MARKET-GARDEN
119
 
 
 
 
The Germans in the Netherlands
123
Seven Days for Planning
127
What Did the Germans Know?
134
The Flight to the Corridor
136
VII.
INVASION FROM THE SKY
140
 
 
 
 
 
"a remarkably beautiful late summer day"
140
Hell's Highway
143
Six Bridges and a Ridge
154
Taking the Objectives
160
The Red Devils at Arnhem
170
VIII.
DECISION ON THE GROUND
174
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Developments on D Plus 2 (19 September)
174
The Fight for the Nijmegen Bridges
179
First Attempts To Drive on Arnhem
184
Keeping the Corridor Open
186
The Outcome at Arnhem
195
The Achievements and the Cost
198
Release of the U.S. Divisions
201
IX.
THE APPROACHES TO ANTWERP
207
 
 
 
 
 
The Controversy About Antwerp
209
The Battle of the Schelde
215
Baptism of Fire
222
South Beveland and Walcheren
227
Something Beastly in Antwerp
229
X.
THE PEEL MARSHES
231
 
 
 
First Army Draws the Assignment
231
The British Attempt
241
A Spoiling Attack
242

 

PART THREE
The Battle of Aachen

Chapter
Page
XI.
A SET ATTACK AGAINST THE WEST WALL
251
 
 
 
 
First Army Readjusts the Front
251
Planning the West Wall Assault
252
"Those infantrymen have guts!"
260
Commitment of CCB
269
XII.
CLOSING THE CIRCLE
281
 
 
 
The 18th Infantry Drives North
287
The 30th Division Strikes South
293
Sealing the Gap
304
XIII.
ASSAULT ON THE CITY
307
 
 
 
 
The Assault Begins
309
Holding the Last Link
313
The Final Blow
314
What Aachen Cost
317

 

PART FOUR
The Roer River Dams

Chapter
Page
XIV.
THE FIRST ATTACK ON SCHMIDT
323
 
 
 
 
 
The Neglected Objective
324
Objective: Schmidt
328
To the First Clearing
331
Toward Raffelsbrand and Vossenack
334
Regiment Wegelein
337
XV.
THE SECOND ATTACK ON SCHMIDT
341
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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