Surrounded by Heroes: Six Campaigns with Divisional Headquarters, 82d Airborne, 1942–1945
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Joining the army in 1942, Leonard Lebenson was recruited into the 82nd Airborne for his skills as a typist and draftsman. Lebenson thus gained a ringside seat for some of the greatest campaigns of World War II—from the invasions of North Africa, Sicily, and France, to the Netherlands, the Bulge, and the drive on Berlin.
Throughout the campaigns, Lebenson was at the division’s nerve center, typing orders, drafting battle maps, and acting as liaison. A rare enlisted man with top-secret status, he was in the room with Gen. Patton, Field Marshal Montgomery, “Jumpin’ Jim” Gavin, and other luminaries who came through headquarters. But Lebenson also saw battle up close—by ship, plane, glider, parachute, and Jeep. With the rest of the All American Division, he was on the ground in Africa and the Ardennes, facing ever-present enemy fire.
Rising from private to master sergeant, Lebenson thought that he had “the best job in the army.” In this revealing memoir, however, he never fails to give full credit to the men on the firing line who suffered the greatest hardships and casualties.
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Surrounded by Heroes - Leonard Lebenson
Published by
CASEMATE
© 2007 Len Lebenson
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publishers. For further information please contact Casemate Publishers, 1016 Warrior Road, Drexel Hill, PA 19026.
ISBN 1-932033-58-8
Cataloging-in-publication data is available from the Library of Congress.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
CONTENTS
FOREWORD by Barbara Gavin Fauntleroy
INTRODUCTION
AFTERWORD
To all the indomitable troopers of the
82d Airborne Division, 1943–45, who are the
Heroes
of this memoir.
FOREWORD
By Barbara Gavin Fauntleroy
I had the pleasure of meeting Len Lebenson and his wife, Alice, in Ireland in 2005. We had flown from New York on the same plane, without knowing each other, then we had three days of sharing a lovely country house hotel and a van, traveling around Northern Ireland. We quickly got to know each other and the other members of our group. We were on a mission to dedicate memorials to the members of the 82nd Airborne Division who had stopped in Ireland in the fall and winter of 1943–44 on their way to England to train and prepare for D-Day.
Len told me that during WWII he had the best job in the Army for an enlisted man because of his skills at typing and drafting. Just two days after reporting to the Induction Center he was loaded onto a train for places unknown and found himself the next day at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, assigned to the G-3 Section of the 82nd Airborne Division Headquarters. The Division was in need of someone with exactly Len’s skills, and he was immediately assigned to the 82nd Headquarters staff. He became one of the few men who served at Headquarters for all six of the Division’s campaigns. Rising to the rank of Master Sergeant, he was often selected for special missions because of his intelligence and the trust in which he was held by the Division staff.
He writes about basic training and his first glimpse of the 82nd Airborne Division’s commander, General Ridgway on his horse, surveying the new recruits. He describes the officers and men with whom he worked in the Operations Section of the Division Headquarters before going overseas and during the war. On the troop ship bound for Africa he met the top ranking NCO of the Army detachment on board who offered him a shipboard job that he couldn’t refuse, which brought him a green arm band and the run of the ship.
During the invasion of Sicily, Len was selected to go on the ship with Gen. Ridgway. He discovered that he was also sharing the ship with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and also Generals Weydemeyer and Patton. While writing about this trip, Len describes the adventure of the rope net
a new and hard-won skill. His G-3 group moved back to Africa, then to Italy as Len managed the responsibility of operations maps, overlays, orders, after action reports and all of the equipment needed to produce them.
The next move was again by ship to Ireland for a few months and then to England, where his G-3 group took part in the normal training activities while also participating in planning for Overlord, the invasion of France. He was given top-secret bigoted
status, very rare for a sergeant, allowing him access to the Division War Room where plans for Overlord were kept. He retained bigoted
status for all later campaigns and thus gained a unique perspective on the plans and actions of the Division.
On D-Day Len arrived in France by glider. His first mission was to find the Division Command Post, west of Ste. Mere Eglise, and begin the routine of updating maps and reports and orders, both incoming and outgoing. After more than four weeks of battling the Germans in Normandy, the 82nd was relieved by the 8th Infantry Division and returned to England. Len created a flow-of-battle map which, along with text, became the 82nd Airborne’s After Action Report for Normandy.
Back in Leicester, a jump school was set up. Len knew after his arrival by glider in France that he would prefer going into combat by any other means. With the departure of Gen. Ridgway and most of his staff for the newly formed XVIII Airborne Corps, the new Division Staff, under my Dad as Commanding General, was made up exclusively of paratroopers. The new G-3, Col. Jack Norton, encouraged Len to go through jump training. He went through a condensed two-week version of jump school and won his wings in time to make the daytime jump into Holland. There is a well known photo of my Dad using one of Len’s maps to brief Gen. Sir Miles Dempsey in Holland.
Like most World War II veterans, Len was not immediately ready to examine his experiences and write about them when he returned. It took a while to achieve the perspective and, perhaps, detachment needed to put them down on paper. But after a time, with the affectionate urging of Alice and his family, he wrote his story of World War II. It is a gem. His memory is sharp, and he shares with us the amazing experiences he had and the personalities with whom he served during the war. Len says that he was surrounded by heroes.
He was, without question, a hero himself.
Thirty-four years later. Part of a letter from General James Gavin, one of the author’s prized possessions.
INTRODUCTION
Starting in 1945, continuing through 1946 into the following year, literally millions of men (plus a relatively few women who had served) were released from our armed forces back into the uncertainties of civilian life. They included the heroes of Normandy and Iwo Jima, the air battles over Europe and the sea warfare over the vast expanses of the Pacific—and also those who had spent three years on New York’s Governors Island, the Presidio in San Francisco, or at Fort Benning, Georgia. Each had his or her own pride in service and legitimacy.
The experiences of the members of my family who served were fairly average. My brother served in the States from 1941 into 1944, finding a niche as a supply sergeant in an infantry company with the 80th Infantry Division—running a payday crap game with his 1st Sergeant that kept them in spending money. He came to the battlefield in September 1944, and was severely wounded and evacuated three weeks later. My half-brother, Herbert, who used the surname Ross,
served in the Coast Guard out of New York.
A step-brother, Wilbur Cutler, had the extreme ill-fortune to be assigned to the outer Air Force defense in Greenland for more than three years, and came out of the mind-deflating boredom of that hell-hole a mental wreck from which he never recovered. One brother-in-law, Al Cooper, served with the medics in the Mediterranean and escaped his dead-end only when it was discovered (with a lot of hinting by Al) that he was one of the best ping pong players in the country, and he then traveled around giving exhibitions. Bernie Raved, another brother-in-law, served in the Pacific, came back to the States for OCS, which he did not pass, and ended the war as a corporal. My other two brothers-in-law, both of whom were quite a bit older, also served. Eugene Zimmerman, the older of the two, was discharged early on from the army when age requirements were lowered. The other, Willie, served in a Military Police unit. Of us all, Willie, a good-looking man, looked the best in the photographs that have survived.
I was the one who, through the luck of the draw, participated in many campaigns, as will be seen later on. The profile, however, of the family, was fairly representative. During the war my father proudly displayed a small banner in a living room window with six stars showing the number of servicemen in the family.
When we were so unceremoniously, though happily, dumped back into society, we immediately turned to civilian pursuits far removed from our recent martial activities. For example, I had a son, 19 months old, who I had never seen, a wife and romance to become reacquainted with, and the immediate problem of finding a place to live. In 1942, when I left for the Army, finding an apartment in New York meant spending a day or so in the neighborhood of your choice, locating a place that suited desires and matched resources, and moving in. That system was long gone, as we found out. Housing in late 1945 was already in short supply. By 1946 it was absolutely impossible.
In the midst of this re-immersion into civilian life, talk about the war and individual experiences was remarkably limited. It seemed each veteran had had his own experience and there didn’t appear to be much reason to talk about the other guy’s. Civilians, even those extremely close, didn’t seem to get it (or the teller could not find the proper words to reach the audience). I remember, as my children grew older but still were children, I would from time to time mention something about my war experiences and, even with them, saw the uncomprehending though sympathetic response. Anyway, it was all behind us, and now we were in the present and looking to the future, not on what had happened in the war.
It went on like that for years. I avidly read the various biographies, histories and memoirs as they were published, particularly those that included accounts of the actions I had been engaged in. But it was a relatively private endeavor, shared with my wife, Alice, and nothing I discussed with others.
My experience was the same as that of most veterans. But slowly over the years, some things happened. Doubts, fears, jealousies, feelings of inadequacy, terrible memories, etc., started falling away and it became easier to talk about the war, even though it was still difficult to convey the sense of it to someone who had not been there. We universally scoffed at the versions of war coming from time to time out of Hollywood, and that, too, was hard to explain.
As the years passed, more and more was thought about the past, battlefield visits were made, veteran’s organizations joined and supported. For myself, I made a trip back to Normandy in 1970, and Holland and Belgium in later years. I also joined the C-47 Club (named after the WWII transport aircraft) for a D-Day plus 40 trip in 1984 and again for D-Day plus 50 in 1994. I became an active member of the North Jersey Chapter of the 82d Airborne Division Association. I supplied a narrative to Stephen Ambrose for use in the World War II archive he was building, attended a conference of D-Day veterans in New Orleans, and an excerpt from my narrative was included in his best seller, D-Day.
Because of these growing connections, I was interviewed and given a half-page spread, including photos, in the Bergen (New Jersey) Record’s special D-Day plus 50 Anniversary Edition. I also participated in a New Jersey Public Television program on the same anniversary. Later that year I was a speaker at the official New Jersey celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the Battle of the Bulge. So I was getting around quite a bit.
All of this led me to believe I had something to say. I had been in six major campaigns and my service in the G-3 (Operations) Section of the 82d Airborne Division Headquarters afforded a unique position and view. When I was Division Operations Sergeant, I honestly felt I had the best enlisted man’s job in the army, and am still of the same opinion. Not too many people, including ex-service personnel, may agree with me. My principal reason is that every order, every action report, every plan, goes through the G-3 section and thus is handled by the Operations Sergeant, who, therefore, was in on the know of all the plans and movements of the Division. At the New Orleans Conference mentioned earlier, I talked with an ex-Master Sergeant of the 101st Division (looking great—he still fit into his uniform) and he disclosed he had been the Intelligence Sergeant of either the 502d or 506th Parachute Regiment. When I told him what my assignment had been, he exclaimed, Ah, you had the job!
The passage of time, however, hasn’t made it easier for someone who was not in the war to understand what it felt like to be in it. Many years after the event, it seems unthinkable that this otherwise sensible looking man being engaged in conversation may have actually killed someone. I was talking to someone at a meal on an Elderhostel trip and was being questioned about the war and, by the look in her eye, I knew she was formulating how to ask whether I had ever fired at someone and that the next question would get to the inevitable follow up of damage inflicted. I wasn’t about to answer her directly if she asked, and diverted the conversation as deftly as I could.
I had occasion to talk with a Congressional Medal of Honor winner at the Battle of the Bulge Commemorative. In order to get this medal one must have acted above and beyond the call of duty,
placed oneself at mortal risk and inflicted serious damage on the enemy. Such actions as throwing oneself on a live grenade, exposing oneself to fire while helping comrades, storming a pill box single handedly, etc., are the types of deeds that lead to consideration for this medal. This hero (for such he was) told me he has been called upon to appear at meetings over the years and to make short speeches but was thinking of giving it up. The reason was that at a recent such event, after a description of his action was given to a class of school kids, a young girl came up to him and rebuked him, asking, Why did you kill all those people?
He had no answer.
The bane of most soldiers was not knowing what was going on, or what was being planned. This went for the training phase as well as being in combat. Rumors abounded, all having to do with what we did, what we were going to do, who’s going to be in charge, when do we get leave, etc., etc. The better sources
—company clerk, supply personnel, headquarters people, are constantly buttonholed for information—it was called poop
in those days. And universally, when some bit of poop was gleaned the receivers of the information inevitably then turned on the givers with accusations of, He’s full of it.
I personally found this to be true on occasions during the war and, even after, when I told stories of some of my adventures which, as will be seen, had me on occasion close to some very important figures.
Sometime in the mid 1990s, at a Division Association meeting, I was talking with Henry Aust, who was an artillery officer during the war and Gary Szente, who joined the 82d after the war years. Gary, when I mentioned that I held the job that I did asked with a mixture of awe and incredulity in his voice, How did you ever get that job?
Aust said, He obviously earned it.
I appreciated Henry’s response. In truth, landing the job had to do with being at the reception center (Camp Upton) at the right time, being presumptively assigned to the G-3 Section even before I arrived at Fort Bragg as the 6th man of a complement of six, joining the group after a brief basic training, seeing the guys who were there before me busted for reasons of breaches of security, the just plain busting of another, the departure of another for OCS, and finally the death of Sergeant Dorant (more about him later), following which I took over the section.
The Heroes
of this memoir’s title are the 12,000 (sometimes greater, sometimes fewer) officers and men of the 82d Airborne Division, which made its indelible mark across the battlefields of the Mediterranean and European Theaters of World War II.
The whole story follows.
Forty-two years later. Extract from a letter from Lt. General Jack Norton (82d Airborne Division G-3 during WWII), which reads, in part: Our Div. was very fortunate to have such a dedicated and professional Opn’s Sergeant. You could follow the battle, handle critical messages, radio traffic, type like a machine gun, compose and produce overlays (with those slimey jelly pads!) keep our decision-making operations maps, and still find time to help others—and shave, and laugh—you were my right arm, and I’ll always be grateful.
1
ARMY INDUCTION
To the beginning:
I was drafted in September of 1942. In those days the procedure was to take the Army (or other branch) physical and not be sworn in until passing it and being accepted for duty. Then the individual had two weeks to go home and clear up his affairs before reporting for duty. This system was used to avoid someone quitting a job, for example, before taking the physical and then being left high and dry if he failed.
The physical was taken at Governors Island in New York Harbor. When I had received my notice for induction to the Army I made a hurry-up visit to Coast Guard Headquarters to see whether I could volunteer for that branch, but was turned down because of not meeting the minimum height requirement. So, with hundreds of others that day at Governors Island, I went through a battery of physical and psychological tests and was given a clean bill of health on all accounts.
Speculation was that if you told the psychological tester that you were homosexual you would be immediately rejected for induction. One of the men in my group traveling to Governors Island was very flamboyant in his sexual orientation, told the examiner that he was homosexual and, indeed, was rejected for service. In those days, none of us knew too much about all that and treated the whole idea (out of ignorance) with amusement.
So after being accepted physically, I had the two-week grace period before reporting for duty. A lot had to be done, including giving up our love-nest one bedroom apartment on East 36th Street (which we would regret three years down the road). For various reasons, including job, family and other considerations, we had been living in unmarried state while telling everyone we were married—Alice had been wearing her hastily purchased $3.50 ring from Saks on 34th Street. Our number one priority for this period was to get married before I entered the Army. There was no traditional wedding. Instead we went to the City Clerk in City Hall, found out we needed two witnesses, frantically recruited two unknowns from the street, and got married. Then we prepared for the wrench of separation as best we could.
I reported as directed to Penn Station and joined a large group coming in at the same time for a trip on the Long Island Railroad to Camp Upton in Yaphank. When we arrived, I had my first exposure to the Army rumor syndrome, as we all tried to gather some idea of what was about to happen to us. I found out from the old hands
that the testing to be done, the issuance of uniforms, etc., and the medical processing would take two to three days, after which, in a short time, the individual would receive an assignment, usually as part of a large group, and would leave Upton on a troop train under sealed orders. So it looked like we would be there anywhere from four days to a week. There were a few pay phones on the base, with long lines at them, and after waiting for my turn I failed to make connection with Alice the first day, but fortunately was able to do so the second.
Now I was a soldier, joining the thousands of equally unprepared men who were being sworn in every day. The un-reality of it all was difficult to take seriously. But, on to the next steps: Part of the procedure included filling out a job history, listing civilian skills, as the attempt was to find the square peg for the square hole.
When I graduated High School in 1933 in the depths of the Depression (the banks were closed shortly afterward when Roosevelt took office in March of that year), there were few, if any, jobs. About a day or so after graduation a guy who I knew not too well—all I remember now is that his name was Nat—called at my house and asked if I was looking for a job! Nat was still in High School and had a job after school working in a candy/ice cream store the next block over from where I lived. It seemed that in the adjoining store there was a struggling one-man real estate office owned and operated by an Al Roberts who wanted someone to man the office while he wasn’t there, which was most of the time. I jumped at the opportunity and got the job for the princely sum of $5 per week! Not only that, but within a couple of weeks I had secured jobs (better than mine) for two other recent graduates in the same block of stores. Roy Schwartz went to work in a small advertising agency and the other guy, whose name escapes me, in a drug store.
But I had very little to do in this office which consisted physically of two desks and a number of chairs in a small space about 15 feet square. Part of the equipment was an old Oliver typewriter and, as I discovered, an instruction book for touch typing. With so little to do in the office, I decided to learn to type, spending an hour or two per day on the machine. After a few months, and before I left the office I was a fairly proficient typist.
But another opportunity struck and I left for a better paying job ($10 per week) in the garment center in Manhattan. (At the time we were living in Queens). My older brother, Milton, had been working for a textile firm as a shipping clerk/delivery boy and the firm, Reliable Textile Co., at 200 West 37th St., needed another body so I was brought in. This was in 1933 and I worked in the Garment Center until 1941.
By this time the war clouds were gathering over our country and there was a great expansion of work relating to armaments. A friend of mine, Burt Garrett, was conducting an evening class for the Federation of Architects, Engineers, Chemists and Technicians. At his urging, and our recognition that this was the proper thing to do, I enrolled in his class and after a few months had enough rudimentary skills so that I was able to quit the Garment Center and went to work for a die maker as a draftsman, and later for