The Battle of the Bulge: Hell at Bütgenbach / Seize the Bridges
By Hans Wijers
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The Battle of the Bulge - Hans Wijers
The Stackpole Military History Series
The American Civil War
Cavalry Raids of the Civil War
Ghost, Thunderbolt, and Wizard
Pickett’s Charge
Witness to Gettysburg
World War I
Doughboy War
World War II
After D-Day
Armor Battles of the Waffen-SS, 1943–45
Armoured Guardsmen
Army of the West
Australian Commandos
The B-24 in China
Backwater War
The Battle of Sicily
Battle of the Bulge, Vol. 1
Battle of the Bulge, Vol. 2
Beyond the Beachhead
Beyond Stalingrad
The Brandenburger Commandos
The Brigade
Bringing the Thunder
The Canadian Army and the Normandy Campaign
Coast Watching in World War II
Colossal Cracks
A Dangerous Assignment
D-Day Bombers
D-Day Deception
D-Day to Berlin
Destination Normandy
Dive Bomber!
A Drop Too Many
Eagles of the Third Reich
Eastern Front Combat
Exit Rommel
Fist from the Sky
Flying American Combat Aircraft of World War II
For Europe
Forging the Thunderbolt
For the Homeland
Fortress France
The German Defeat in the East, 1944–45
German Order of Battle, Vol. 1
German Order of Battle, Vol. 2
German Order of Battle, Vol. 3
The Germans in Normandy
Germany’s Panzer Arm in World War II
GI Ingenuity
Goodwood
The Great Ships
Grenadiers
Hitler’s Nemesis
Infantry Aces
In the Fire of the Eastern Front
Iron Arm
Iron Knights
Kampfgruppe Peiper at the Battle of the Bulge
The Key to the Bulge
Knight’s Cross Panzers
Kursk
Luftwaffe Aces
Luftwaffe Fighter Ace
Massacre at Tobruk
Mechanized Juggernaut or Military Anachronism?
Messerschmitts over Sicily
Michael Wittmann, Vol. 1
Michael Wittmann, Vol. 2
Mountain Warriors
The Nazi Rocketeers
No Holding Back
On the Canal
Operation Mercury
Packs On!
Panzer Aces
Panzer Aces II
Panzer Commanders of the Western Front
Panzer Gunner
The Panzer Legions
Panzers in Normandy
Panzers in Winter
The Path to Blitzkrieg
Penalty Strike
Red Road from Stalingrad
Red Star under the Baltic
Retreat to the Reich
Rommel’s Desert Commanders
Rommel’s Desert War
Rommel’s Lieutenants
The Savage Sky
Ship-Busters
The Siegfried Line
A Soldier in the Cockpit
Soviet Blitzkrieg
Stalin’s Keys to Victory
Surviving Bataan and Beyond
T-34 in Action
Tank Tactics
Tigers in the Mud
Triumphant Fox
The 12th SS, Vol. 1
The 12th SS, Vol. 2
Twilight of the Gods
Typhoon Attack
The War against Rommel’s Supply Lines
War in the Aegean
Wolfpack Warriors
Zhukov at the Oder
The Cold War / Vietnam
Cyclops in the Jungle
Expendable Warriors
Flying American Combat Aircraft: The Cold War
Here There Are Tigers
Land with No Sun
Phantom Reflections
Street without Joy
Through the Valley
Wars of the Middle East
Never-Ending Conflict
General Military History
Carriers in Combat
Cavalry from Hoof to Track
Desert Battles
Guerrilla Warfare
Ranger Dawn
Sieges
I have worked on these books for many years, visited the battlefield, and seen the evidence of that difficult battle for freedom. I am happy and proud that I was able to speak with so many of the soldiers—old men now, but all seventeen or eighteen then. I call them heroes, but they will deny it, claiming that they just did what they had to do.
Not long ago, I met my hero, a person who touched my heart with her courage, spirit, and energy—just by being herself. There are no words to describe her impact on me, but one meets someone like her only once in a lifetime and is wise never to let go. I wish I could do more for her, but this book is dedicated to her. Kimmie, you are my hero. Semper Fi—Oorah!
Copyright © 2010 by Hans Wijers
Published in 2010 by
STACKPOLE BOOKS
5067 Ritter Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055
www.stackpolebooks.com
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to Stackpole Books.
Cover design by Tracy Patterson
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN-13 978-0-8117-3587-2
The Library of Congress has cataloged the first volume as follows:
Wijers, Hans J.
The Battle of the Bulge / Hans Wijers.
v. cm. — (Stackpole military history series)
Contents: v. 1. The Losheim Gap/Holding the line.
ISBN 978-0-8117-3592-6
1. Ardennes, Battle of the, 1944–1945. I. Title.
D756.5.A7W55 2009
940.54'219348—dc22
2009011932
e-Book ISBN: 9780811741446
Contents
Book One: Hell at Bütgenbach
Introduction to Book One
Chapter 1: American Defensive Positions
Chapter 2: The German Perspective
Chapter 3: The First Attack on Domaine Bütgenbach
Chapter 4: Restoration and Defense of the Weywertz-Waimes Sector
Chapter 5: The Second Day of the Attack on Domaine Bütgenbach
Chapter 6: The 12th SS Panzer Division Continues the Attack
Chapter 7: Renewed Attack on Domaine Bütgenbach
Chapter 8: The Last Attempt to Seize Domaine Bütgenbach
Chapter 9: Conclusion to Book One
Epilogue to Book One
Book Two: Seize the Bridges
Introduction to Book Two
Chapter 1: The German Plan of Attack
Chapter 2: American Forces
Chapter 3: The Germans Attack
Chapter 4: The Malmédy Massacre
Chapter 5: The Battle for Ligneuville
Chapter 6: The Battle for Stavelot
Chapter 7: The Battle for Trois Ponts
Chapter 8: The Bridge at Habiemont
Chapter 9: Continued Fighting for Stavelot
Chapter 10: The Battle for La Gleize–Stoumont
Chapter 11: Kampfgruppe Peiper Is Cut Off in Stavelot
Chapter 12: Reducing the Germans’ Southwest Pocket
Chapter 13: The Fight for Malmédy
Chapter 14: The Bitter Fight for Stoumont
Epilogue to Book Two
Sources
Acknowledgments
Book One
Hell at Bütgenbach
Introduction to Book One
After finishing Battle of the Bulge, Vol. 1 , it was clear to me that without this volume on the 1st Infantry Division and the next one on the 30th Infantry Division, the combat history of the north shoulder of the Battle of the Bulge would not be complete.
This work describes actions in the V Corps’ sector. This is the area—at such locations as (Domaine) Bütgenbach, Büllingen, Morscheck, Schoppen, Faymonville, Waimes, and Weywertz—where the 1st Infantry Division and its supporting units defended themselves from 17 December 1944 until the German attack was halted. It is based on official U.S. Army documents and after-action reports and is complemented by testimonies by members of the 1st Infantry Division and its supporting troops.
A forest area of Schoppen during the battle at Bütgenbach.
HANS J. WIJERS
THE GENERAL SITUATION
On 16 December 1944, heavy enemy attacks on the southern half of the U.S. First Army’s front heralded the opening of the Germans’ Ardennes campaign.
The 1st Infantry Division, commanded by Maj. Gen. Clift Andrus, with elements of the 29th Infantry Division attached, on D-Day, 6 June 1944, assaulted Omaha Beach near St. Laurent-sur-Mer as part of the V Corps, First Army, and on 13 June, it captured Caumont. A month later the division was relieved at Caumont and, as part of VII Corps, First Army, attacked through the St. Lô breakthrough. The division first attacked south toward Avranches and then northeast toward Falaise, where it assisted in closing the Argentan-Falaise pocket on 19 August, resulting in the virtual destruction of the German Seventh Army. From there, the 1st Division swiftly moved east and crossed the Seine River south of Paris. In the attack to the northeast to the vicinity of Mons, in five days of fighting (3–8 September), the division annihilated a German corps of five divisions that was attempting to escape from the pocket caused by the rapid advance of the First Army.
Maj. Gen. Clift Andrus.
U.S. ARMY
Infantrymen from G Company, 26th Infantry, advance cautiously toward an intersection in Aachen while routing out dug-in Germans.
U.S. ARMY
Aided by the armored force, American infantry of M Company, 26th Infantry, move forward to engage the enemy in Aachen.
U.S. ARMY
On 21 October 1944, the 1st Division captured Aachen, and on 7 December, it completed a determined drive through the Hürtgen Forrest to reach the Roer River as part of the VII Corps. The division, having suffered heavy casualties in this drive, was subsequently relieved and retired to a rehabilitation area in the vicinity of Eupen, Belgium. On 16 December, it was alerted for employment in the Ardennes.
M10 3-inch GMCs of A Company, 634th Tank Destroyer Battalion, fight their way into the outskirts of Aachen on 14 October 1944.
THE OPENING PHASE OF THE GERMAN ATTACK
The rough wooded tableland of the Ardennes in eastern Belgium contains numerous small streams, which become serious obstacles during periods of heavy rain or thaw. The principal ridgeline runs from Bastogne northeast through St. Vith, with the north end through the village of Losheim. Parallel to this ridge and extending from Stavelot to beyond Monschau is another section of high ground called the Hohe Venn. To the east of this hill mass, Elsenborn Ridge crosses the approach to Malmédy from the east. About one third of the Ardennes area is wooded. The terrain is favorable for armored employment near St. Vith and Bastogne but poor in the forest and marshes in the western portion of the Ardennes area.
The Ardennes contains a fair primary but poor secondary road system, making control of the limited roads a prerequisite to either successful attack or defense. Because of the rough terrain, the key centers of the road net assumed great importance. St. Vith is the center of the road net south of the Hohe Venn. This highway along the ridge from Wiltz through St. Vith and Malmédy to Aachen was the principal lateral road for combat units in the line.
Winter had arrived on the Western Front. In the Ardennes particularly, the winter months are severe, and the expected heavy snow would make infantry maneuver difficult and would seriously limit tank movement. A partial thaw, which set in at the beginning of the counteroffensive, created cloud conditions, which nullified Allied air efforts but made it very muddy for the movement of German armor. Later, the weather cleared and the ground froze hard, making the going better for armor and also for the Allied air forces.
The broad plan of the enemy was to strike toward the Meuse River and on to Brussels and Antwerp, with the 6th Panzer Army on the north driving to Liege and the 5th Panzer Army on the south thrusting toward Namur. The area of attack was a sixty-mile front between Echternach, Luxembourg, and Roetgen, Germany.
To the right of the I SS Panzer Corps, the LXVII Army Corps, with the 272nd and 326th Volksgrenadier Divisions, had been committed as part of the effort of the 6th Panzer Army. It had orders to break through the American front line on both sides of Monschau and then turn toward the northwest to cover the right flank of the tank units advancing toward the Meuse on the Simmerath-Eupen line.
To the south, the 5th Panzer Army was to attack on a broad front with plans to advance northwest by way of St. Vith, then due west by way of Houffalize and Bastogne. In conjunction with the attacks of the 5th and 6th Panzer Armies, Otto Skorzeny’s task force, comprising about 2,000 men organized into a panzer brigade and a picked group of 150 English-speaking commandos, was given the twofold mission of seizing undamaged at least two Meuse bridges and creating confusion and loss of control in the American rear. The task force, partially equipped with American vehicles, was to accompany the mass of armor and, splitting into small groups was to attempt to infiltrate to the Meuse at night. The commandos were provided with American uniforms and vehicles and were to slip through the line and give false directions, cut communications, and generally disrupt control.
Lt. Col. Otto Skorzeny.
J. WIJERS
The Germans’ attack was expertly planned and carefully disguised. They picked unlikely terrain and a thinly-held front. They waited for weather favorable to this attack (limited visibility to reduce the effectiveness of Allied air superiority), and for the first week their operations were concealed in fog. They built up enough supplies to catapult the initial momentum. Furthermore, beyond the normal means at their command, they used every deception and surprise element they could conceive, labeling these measures Operation Greif.
Detailed intelligence reports and estimates kept track of the American situation in the avenue of the proposed attack, and it was plain that the one imponderable in the German planning was the mobility of the American forces, which could be made available to block the drive. Operation Greif had the mission of balancing this factor. About 700 parachutists would drop behind Allied lines to seize the important road junctions between Eupen and Malmédy and block any American attempts to reinforce the breakthrough area.
By the night of 15–16 December 1944, the German assault divisions had closed into their final assembly area, the bulk of their artillery was in position, and reserve divisions were en route.
The attack was initiated in the southern portion of the V Corps and the northern portion of the broad front held by the VIII Corps and was supported by a heavy schedule of well-coordinated artillery fire, commencing at 0530 hours. Beginning at 0800 hours, the enemy’s long-range artillery concentrated on key rear installations at Roetgen, Eupen, Malmédy, Verviers, and St. Vith.
Things went wrong from the start in the northern sector. On the night of 16–17 December 1944, the parachutists were dropped in the general area of the Malmédy-Eupen woods. As established from prisoners of war, they were members of a special unit, led by Col. Friedrich von der Heydte, who were grouped together from various parachute divisions on a volunteer basis. In spite of distinguished leadership, their plan to seize the vital crossroads between Eupen and Malmédy failed. None of the paratroopers had been told of the mission, other than the statement that further instructions would be issued on landing. A crosswind and bad briefing of the Ju 52 pilots scattered the units and their weapons and equipment over a wide area. Much equipment and radios were broken or lost during the fall, and reorganization was never accomplished. To add to the Germans’ misfortunes, their attack in the north around Büllingen was slow in starting, and on 17 December 1944, the attack on Monschau was turned back by American artillery. In its attack on 16 and 18 December, the corps had initial successes, but was unable to hold on to them. In the entire sector the front line remained in American hands.
The initial mission of the 6th Panzer Army was to attack rapidly west on a narrow front to seize Malmédy. The I SS Panzer Corps—with the 1st SS Panzer Division leading, followed by the 3rd Parachute Division, the 12th Volksgrenadier Division, and the 12th SS Panzer Division—was to make the main effort for the 6th Panzer Army. The II SS Panzer Corps was held in the rear of the I SS Panzer Corps to exploit the breakthrough and swing north on the east flank of the I SS Panzer Corps. Farther to the south, the 1st SS Panzer Division successfully reached the outskirts of Malmédy.
To the left of the 6th Panzer Army, the 5th Panzer Army joined up. The breakthrough of the 1st SS Panzer Division at Krewinkel and the 3rd Fallschirmjôger Division at Manderfeld pulled its extreme right wing along. The divisions of the corps committed here, the LXVI Corps and the LVIII Panzer Corps, in the beginning had suffered considerable problems. To the left, the LXVI Panzer Corps crossed the Our River between Dasburg and Gemünd, and on 16 December, it broke through the American front. To the left of the 5th Panzer Army, the 7th Army crossed the Our against little opposition and formed a bridgehead at Vianden; even farther to the left, the Sauer was crossed between Wallendorf and Echternach.
On 16 December 1944, the U.S. First Army reacted promptly to protect the vital road network leading to the vast supply points in the vicinity of Liege and Verviers. The 1st, 9th, and 30th Infantry Divisions, 82nd Airborne Division, 5th Armored Division, and elements of the 3rd Armored Division were quickly assigned to the V Corps and moved in rapidly, extending the front of the corps from Bütgenbach through Malmédy, Stavelot, and La Gleize to the vicinity of Werbomont. The Germans succeeded in capturing Büllingen late in the afternoon of 17 December and pushed patrols toward Bütgenbach but failed to take advantage of the fact that American defenses in that area were still somewhat fluid.
Troops of the U.S. 1st Division on the lookout for German paratroopers in the Baraque Michel area.
U.S. ARMY
On 17 December, the right wing of the 5th Panzer Army made only slow progress toward St. Vith. The LVIII Panzer Corps also made no progress. On the other hand, the XXXXVII Panzer Corps crossed the Clerf with the 2nd Panzer Division and took Clervaux. At Drauffelt, the 26th Volksgrenadier Division formed a bridgehead, over which the Panzer Lehr Division was brought forward. In the 7th Army, the 5th Parachute Division formed a bridgehead over the Clerf at Kautenbach, close to its junction with the Wiltz. The neighboring divisions on the left gained little ground.
CHAPTER 1
American Defensive Positions
DISPOSITION OF THE 1ST INFANTRY DIVISION
The 1st Division, after participating in the campaign to reach the Roer River in late November and early December, was relieved of this mission on 5 December. The 16th Regimental Combat Team (RCT) passed under the operational control of the V Corps and relieved the 60th RCT on the Monschau front. The 26th RCT was relieved on 6 December by elements of the 9th Division and went to the rest area at Aubel, Belgium, while the 18th RCT was relieved on 8 December by units of the same division and went into quarters near Plombiers, Belgium.
The 26th had been hit hard in the Hürtgen Forest. E and F Companies, with machine-gun attachments from H Company, had been surrounded and annihilated in the town of Merode, Germany, from 30 November to 3 December 1944. The remaining elements of the battalion had been reduced to small numbers prior to the regiment’s relief in the Hürtgen Forest on 7 December. E and F Companies and the machine-gun platoons of H Company had started their reorganization on 8 December. On 9 December, replacements had joined the battalion in its rehabilitation area in the vicinity of Eupen. The companies had been brought up to about 100 men each—about 60 percent strength. G Company had not been brought to full strength and started from Aubel with only about fifty men. Thus, G Company had 10 to 15 percent replacements, while E and F Companies were 90 percent replacements (others back from the hospital). Two heavy machine-gun platoons were completely new except for eight men. Officer ranks were depleted. In the whole battalion, there were only seven old
officers (four officers in headquarters and two in the line who came in on D-Day). There were only about four Browning automatic rifles to a company, but the battalion was not short on heavy guns. It was short on grenade launchers and lacked two jeeps.
1st Lt. August T. Mac
McColgan, commander of G Company, 2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division, remembers: "Aubel was the little village where my battalion (2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry) was sent for R&R after suffering through the meat-grinding known as the Hürtgen Forest. R&R in this instance did not mean rest and relaxation. In early December 1944, it meant repair, regroup, and replace men and material.
Soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division are trying to buy wooden shoes from a local store in Belgium.
U.S. ARMY
"Having been in Aubel for several days repairing the morale and welfare of the troops, checking new and old equipment, and orienting new troops to the sight, sound, smell, and expectations of battle, on 15 December 1944, I decided a trip to Verviers (Belgium) to visit my soldiers in the hospital was in order.
"My troops in the hospital were in good shape. Some would be back in about thirty days; some would be evacuated to England and then to the United States. However, the staff at the hospital was uptight. A nurse friend told me that they might have to pack up and move. She said that the hospital had not been hit, but that several times during the past twenty-four hours a large shell would land and blow a hole in the Verviers landscape. No one seemed to know where the shells were coming from.
Lt. Amy Lou Smith of the Army Nurse Corps offers water to Cpl. Jean L. Ferry during a card game between patients at the 50th Field Hospital, somewhere in Belgium, 6 November 1944.
WACs in Paris visit nearby hospitals to cheer up wounded GIs, December 1944.
"Looking at my map, I calculated that the German lines were twenty to thirty miles east of Verviers. No one on our front lines had reported sight, sound or flash of any weapon large enough, or with range enough to reach all the way to Verviers. Anyhow about an hour later one dropped about 500 yards away. I then decided it was safer in Aubel, so I headed back (many years later I found one of those mystery guns in the museum at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; the Ordnance Corps experts estimated it had a range of seventy miles with a rocket assisted projectile).
"At 1700 hours (15 December), the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Derrill M. Daniel, at a hastily called conference, cautioned the company commanders and staff to stay close by, not more than thirty minutes away, and to keep radios on when away from a telephone. He then let us read the latest ‘poop’ from higher headquarters. Among them was a corps or army intelligence estimate. It, in vague terms, identified ‘a German panzer unit east of the Ardennes region.’ It gave an assessment of its capabilities, an attempt to break through the lines in the Ardennes.
As a parting word to me, Daniel said, ‘Mac, officially you are company commander of G Company; however, I still want you to function as the battalion antitank officer until I get a replacement. Can you do it?’ ‘I’ll give it my best shot,’ was my reply. ‘Good, tell the platoon sergeant he will look to you for final guidance on defense. You will be too damm busy should we have to attack any place anytime soon.’
1st Lt. August T. Mac
McColgan.
Sgt. Vaughn Sturtevant.
On 16 December, following the announcement of the German breakthrough in Belgium and Luxembourg, the VII Corps issued an order placing the 26th RCT on a six-hour alert ready for movement to the breakthrough area. That evening, the 16th Infantry was placed on a four-hour alert, while the 33rd Field Artillery Battalion was placed on one-hour call. The 26th RCT was then warned to be ready to move at midnight by way of Aubel and Verviers to Elsenborn. By 2250 hours, the 18th RCT was also alerted for movement, and the 26th was told to start moving at 2400 hours to Camp Elsenborn, where it would come under control of the V Corps. At the same time, the V Corps returned the 16th RCT to the control of the VII Corps and the 1st Division.
Sgt. Vaughn Sturtevant, a squad leader in I Company, 3rd Battalion, 26th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division, recalls: "A few days before the start of the German counteroffensive in December 1944, the 1st Division was taken off line for some rebuilding following the Hürtgen Forest and Roer River battles, in which we took heavy casualties. I had been a squad leader since the first time we took Büllingen sometime earlier. My very modest spoken French was better than that of anyone else in our I Company, 26th Infantry Regiment, so I was asked to negotiate with a farmer (near Verviers, I think) to provides us with space inside his hay barns for temporary residence. This we found to be a real luxury, considering the fact that for weeks we had been living outdoors. I think it was in our first night’s sleep in the hay (17 December?) when a messenger awakened me, saying, ‘Get your men ready to move out. The Germans have broken through in the Ardennes.’ I think Stars and Stripes called it putting the ‘varsity’ back in play!"
Sgt. Rocco J. Moretto of C Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, gives this account: "C Company was attached to the 2nd Battalion of the 26th Infantry Regiment for the move. We traveled both on foot and by truck in a shuttle type move, and our target was Domaine Bütgenbach. On our way we encountered many American troops who had been overrun, were disorganized and in full retreat.
Some of the troops were on foot and some in vehicles including some tanks. Some of the men related some weird accounts of what was going on. The one account, which has always stuck in my mind, was that parachutes, which turned out to be false, were dropping Tiger tanks and that German paratroopers dressed in American uniforms who spoke perfect English were dropped behind the lines. This turned out to be true. This and other stories we heard made us wonder what we were headed for.
McColgan, continues his story: "On the morning of 16 December, at 0900 hours officers call, we were told: no more men, no more equipment, we fight with what we have. Of course, at that time, no one said we were going back into the line. Upon return to the company area, it was continued maintenance and orientation of the troops. At that time, G Company consisted of 100 troops and 3 officers, including myself. The other two were ‘retreads’ from the transportation corps. Good men, but they have yet to hear the sound and smell of battle.
T/Sgt. Bob Weight (left) and S/Sgt. Rocky Moretto (right) at Dom Bütgenbach.
ROCKY MORETTO
"At approximately 1100 hours, word came telling us to be at battalion headquarters at 1200 hours. This turned out to be a crucial meeting. The order was very simple. There had been a breakthrough, some American units had been over run; account for all your men, combat packs, extra ammo, two days rations and be prepared to move. Didn’t know exactly where to or when, but be ready to load up and move out.
"At dusk, a truck company moved into the area. Four for each company. It would be a little crowded, but what the hell, we had to keep warm. At 1800 hours another meeting at battalion headquarters. The battalion was on a six-hour alert to move. Still did not know where to or when, but get ready to move at a moment’s notice. More hurry-up-and-wait. However, the battalion commander said a possible destination was Camp Elsenborn. That sounded nice. A camp could be more or less permanent location. Maybe it would be clean and warm. Be back at 2000 hours for another meeting and maybe some more information. How little did we know what the next week, the next month would bring.
The 2000 hours meeting was a little more informative. Camp Elsenborn was a definite, but we may have trouble along the way. The Germans have dropped numerous paratroops, most in American uniforms, so we may have our road march to Elsenborn disrupted or delayed. At that point we were on a five-minute ‘load up and move status.’ We were instructed to return at 2400 hours for a final briefing. The suspense of a ‘stand-by and be ready to move’ situation was tiring.
Snow and ice make the going tough for U.S. Army vehicles on a road in Belgium. The snowstorm was responsible for the gasoline truck at left skidding off the road and for stalling trucks going in the opposite direction.
American infantrymen of the 26th Infantry move up to repel a strong German counterattack near Bütgenbach, 17 December 1944.
DISPOSITION OF THE 26TH INFANTRY REGIMENT
The village of Elsenborn lies at a height of 630 meters. From there, the ground falls to 570 meters at Wirtzfeld. Büllingen is nearly the same elevation. The terrain north of the Domaine Bütgenbach rises to 602 meters, and at first drops to 570 meters toward Bütgenbach, then rises to 597 meters. The large stone manor house known as Domaine Bütgenbach, with its flanking stone foundation, wooden barns, and nearby gardens, was situated in a narrow valley between the two hills. The Schwarzenbüchel Hill west of Büllingen rises to 603 meters from the Schwarzenbach, with one hill to the north (Hill 598) and one to the south (Hill 613). These hills were mostly devoid of cover except for some straight rows of tall, widely spaced spruce trees on either side of the trails crisscrossing the estate. In the north behind the Schwarzenbach brook, there are moist meadows, and behind that in the west a wood (Plôttscheidor Platzheid). At the top of Hill 613, almost a kilometer south of the manor, lay the edge of the Bütgenbacher Heck, a dense strip of coniferous forest. A kilometer beyond that, out of sight over the hill’s crest, was the crossroads of Morscheck, which was occupied at that moment by the paratroopers of the 3rd Fallschirmjôger Division.
Aerial view of Elsenborn.
U.S. ARMY
The main east-west highway the Germans wanted so desperately ran south past the manor, dipping into another small valley about 500 meters to the east. North of the Rocherath-Elsenborn line, many brooks that generally run north cut the moist terrain. South of this line, which forms a local watershed, many brooks run in a southwestern direction towards the dam in the vale of Bütgenbach. Apart from the brooks and some edges of the lake, the rolling terrain here is dry and littered with small patches of woods. South of the lake, the open ground in an east-west direction on both sides of the Domaine Bütgenbach is funneled into a narrow strip, about one kilometer wide. For the defenders the narrow pass on both sides of the Domaine and an advanced position on the Schwarzenbüchel Hill offered themselves. The Americans clearly had seen this, especially the V Corps and the 99th Infantry Division, who were fighting here for some time and knew the terrain. The Bütgenbach-Waimes sector was the responsibility of the 26th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division.
At 0200 hours on 17 December 1944, the 26th Infantry was ordered to Camp Elsenborn on the northern flank of the breakthrough in order to contain the enemy’s drive and prevent it from spreading north. The leading battalion, the 3rd, was held back behind American lines to defend against a drop of German paratroopers. The column then drove on without lights, and the first elements of the 26th Infantry reached Camp Elsenborn at 0700 hours and were placed under the 99th Division (until 18 December, when the regiment reverted to the 1st Division). At 1400 hours, the battalion drove on toward Bütgenbach and then assumed defensive positions northwest of Büllingen. The 2nd Battalion was committed to the defense of the narrows to the east of Domaine Bütgenbach. At 1830 hours, both battalions were in their sectors. The regiment was attached to the 99th Infantry Division.
Domaine Bütgenbach.
HANS J. WIJERS
1st Lt. Mac McColgan, commander of G Company, 2nd Battalion, 26th Infantry, remembers: "Finally, at about 0200 hours on 17 December, we loaded up and moved out to Elsenborn. Our trip was delayed several times along the way as we stopped to hunt some German paratroops. Really we didn’t get any, never saw any, and we must have scared the hell out of them. I later heard they were surrendering to units that came behind us.
"We arrived at Elsenborn at approximately 0700 hours on 17 December. In the shelter of a building in the town of Bütgenbach, we received a map briefing and were given our orders. G Company would ‘attack’ along the road, Bütgenbach to Büllingen, and occupy the ridge line overlooking Büllingen. G Company would deploy one platoon on each side of the road, one platoon in reserve. That platoon would take up positions along the ridgeline covering all approaches to Domaine Bütgenbach from the south. The battalion commander’s last words were ‘Gentlemen, we fight and die here.’
At 0900 hours, G Company started the attack toward the ridge line (approximately 2,000 yards). I had covered 300 to 400 yards when a hysterical officer came running up to me. He was shouting, ‘You can’t go up there. You’ll all be killed. Thousands of Germans, hundreds of tanks. You’ll all be killed. Don’t go.’ I had paused for a moment and contacted the battalion commander by radio to report. His word was to send the officer back to the battalion command post and continue the attack. Attack we did, all 2,000 yards, didn’t see one German, didn’t see one tank, didn’t fire one round.
Morscheck. To the left is the building used by the 3rd Parachute Division as a headquarters and later by the 12th SS Panzer Division as a headquarters and field hospital.
HANS J. WIJERS
This hysterical officer
was Capt. John J. Kennedy, commander of B Company from the 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion. He had clerks, mechanics, and other troops with him. Kennedy had organized a roadblock with the remains of the 254th Engineers, who were still fighting after being overrun by tanks and infantry of Kampfgruppe Peiper and were supported by elements of the 99th Infantry Division headquarters, as well as by a nearby antiaircraft unit and four 3-inch guns of the 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion.
At 0500 hours on 17 December, Kennedy had received a report by radio that tanks were attacking Honsfeld. He immediately decided to try to reach Honsfeld by going through Büllingen. While going down the road toward Honsfeld, he was met by elements of the 801st Tank Destroyer Battalion moving on foot who told him that their positions in front of Honsfeld had been hit by hordes of German tanks followed by infantry and that the company had nothing left—only a few personal weapons. Captain Kennedy then decided to approach Honsfeld on foot. Since enemy planes had become very active and flares were being dropped throughout the area, he had no trouble looking into the town. What he saw was shocking, even to a company commander who had been fighting the Germans since soon after D-Day. The entire town was surrounded by enemy troops, and tanks could be seen milling around the area. It was immediately apparent that elements of B Company and the reconnaissance platoon had been lost. With a heavy heart, he proceeded to Büllingen, where a direct wire to the 99th Infantry Division’s command post was found and the chaotic situation reported. He was ordered by the chief of staff to gather any available troops and block the road to Bütgenbach. He then decided to try to reach the platoon. The 254th Engineer Battalion in Büllingen was overrun. The G-3 of the 99th Division ordered them to fight a delaying action. B Company and headquarters were to fall back down the Büllingen-Bütgenbach road. This was easier said than done. When the Germans overran the battalion, the unit was cut off and consequently could not be withdrawn from the Büllingen-Bütgenbach road. They simply disappeared in the German surge. Headquarters and the service company were able to quickly form a new defensive line west of the town. To give the appearance of having more strength than it actually did, men were constantly shifted from position to position.
Aerial view of Büllingen.
The 254th Battalion headquarters used any and all available men to hold the new line—cooks, drivers, clerks, and a motley collection of stragglers from the 99th Division headquarters. The headquarters line was clearly visible from the town. After working their way through the woods, two platoons of B Company, 254th Engineers, reached the headquarters positions around noon. When the German lead vehicles arrived around 0800 hours, they recognized the line of positions. The tank destroyers immediately opened fire. The Germans saw the danger of the engineers’ line. They brought up artillery and swept the positions with shellfire.
At 1300 hours, under the cover of several arriving light tanks, the engineers slipped out of their positions. They established a new line at the crossroads. At 1500 hours, the 2nd Battalion of the 26th Infantry Regiment quickly moved up from a rear rest area to relieve the battalion. They had been there since 0800 hours that morning. Captain Kennedy was recommended for the Silver Star for his defense of the vital crossroads, which remained in American hands throughout the day.
The 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry, on its way to Bütgenbach.
U.S. ARMY
The 26th Infantry occupied Bütgenbach at 1400 hours, at which time the 2nd and 3rd Battalions were ordered to