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MEDICAL DETACHMENT
394th Infantry
[99th Infantry Division]
1 January 1945
SUBJECT: Record of Events.
1. The following is the Record of
Events of this Detachment, covering the period between 0500 – 16
December 44 to 0500 – 31 December 44.
16 Dec 44 – At 0500 German troops counterattacked striking on the
battalion fronts, while laying down heavy artillery barrages in
Hunningen, Belgium site of the Regimental Command Post, and Regimental
Aid Station.
The First Battalion Section was operating an Aid Station in support of
its battalion on line in the vicinity of Losheimergraben, Belgium,
while the Second Battalion Section supported its battalion on line in
the vicinity of Weisserstein, Belgium. The Third Battalion Section was
set-up at F. Buchholz, in reserve.
At 0900 the three battalion surgeons called for additional litter
bearer teams to assist in the evacuation of casualties sustained from
the heavy enemy artillery barrages and small arms fire. Six squads of
litter bearers were secured from Collecting Company B, 324th Medical
Battalion and were rushed to the front lines. A second call for litter
bearers and additional ambulances was received at 1000 from the
battalion sections. Personnel from the Regimental Aid Station along
with infantrymen from Regimental Headquarters and Service Companies
were rushed to the Third Battalion area where an attacking German
Combat Patrol had inflicted heavy casualties upon the reserve
battalion. Casualties were treated and evacuated by aid men and litter
bearers under the heaviest artillery barrages and machine gun fire that
the regiment had been up against in the war.
Evacuation of casualties from the Battalion arid Regimental Aid
Stations continued under the most hazardous of conditions as the roads
leading to the rear were raked with artillery fire.
At 1300 the Third Battalion Aid Station was shelled and the building
housing it was shattered by exploding shells and shrapnel. The Aid
Station was moved into the cellar but the constant shelling of the area
forced its withdrawal to Losheimergraben, where it went into operation
in unison with the First Battalion Aid Station. Casualties from both
battalions were treated at the station under heavy shell fire.
Headquarters Section Aid Station received its bitter taste of the
enemy's surprise attack at 0500 with the station being shelled. This
necessitated its moving into the basement of the house and walking and
litter wounded were treated there under the poorest of lighting and
working conditions.
17 Dec 44 – The enemy continued its attack on our positions and kept up
the shelling of the forward and rear areas, but the battalion aid
stations and the Regimental Aid Station operated in the same positions
they held at the close of the first stages of the enemy attack. The
Second Battalion operating an advanced aid station 200 yards from the
front line, pulled it back to the rear station where it operated until
the regiment received word to withdraw to Murringen, Belgium.
2
17 December 44 (cont’d).
At 1400 the Regimental Aid Station received word to prepare for a
withdrawal to Murringen, Belgium. All equipment and personnel were
loaded on the detachment’s 2½ ton truck. All of the
section’s dental equipment as well as various medical and
organizational equipment was lost in the withdrawal.
Arriving in Murringen, Belgium at 1405 the Regimental Aid Station was
set-up in the building occupied by Collecting Company B, 324th Medical
Battalion, prior to its withdrawal from the city. Casualties left
behind by the Collecting Company were treated in addition to our own
wounded.
The three battalion aid stations entered Murringen at 1900 and
immediately went into operation. Basements of shell torn houses were
used for cover by the station personnel from the inclement weather so
that treatment of casualties could be carried out without a great deal
of discomfort to the wounded.
The First and Third Battalion Sections made its withdrawal under heavy
enemy artillery and mortar fire and suffered a number of casualties
which necessitated the leaving of aid men and litter bearers behind to
treat the wounded.
After a fairly quite night the Second Battalion Medical Section was
kept busy treating and evacuating casualties. Late in the afternoon the
Section was divided into two parts, motor and foot, and a withdrawal to
Murringen was started. The foot element started cross country with the
Second Battalion Headquarters Company to set up a new command post and
upon arriving at the designated point at 1700, no companies could be
found and the party then made its way to the CP of Company C, 393rd
Infantry, where it spent the night under German Artillery barrages. An
enemy patrol neared the CP but was dispersed by rifle and machine gun
fire and three enemy soldiers were injured.
The three Battalion Medical Sections each lost one jeep and trailer in
the artillery barrages.
Shortly after the Regimental Aid Station had set-up in Murringen, the
town was shelled by the enemy and the barrage lasted the remainder of
the night, forcing the aid station to be moved into the cellar of the
house where five litter patients were placed and treated along with a
large number of walking wounded. Lighting was poor and though candles
and flashlights were used the patients were given the best of care.
18 Dec 44 – As the minutes ticked by, the shelling of the city
continued and Burp Guns could be heard in the area. It was the second
sleepless night and mealless day for the Medics but the officers and
enlisted men spent the night treating and dressing the wounded and
giving plasma to the more serious casualties. Knowing that we were cut
off and completely surrounded by the enemy we took security measures,
emptying our pockets of all personal items in case of capture by the
enemy. Time passed slowly and the shelling of the town seemed to
increase with each minute, but at 0145 word was received that the
Regiment was going to make a withdrawal at 0230.
Due to the fact that no ambulances were available to transport the
wounded, Headquarters Section was faced with the problem of evacuating
the litter and walking wounded personnel. A check was made with the 2nd
Division’s Collecting Company B and it was found that they had a number
of ambulances not in use but when permission to use them was asked for
to transport the casualties it was refused and in turn they transported
their aid station personnel in the vehicles. It was then decided to
unload the Section’s 2½-ton truck of Medical Supplies and
Equipment and use it for the transportation of the wounded. Four litter
wounded were placed on the truck and three Medicos were designated to
accompany them. The walking wounded and remainder of the Station
personnel boarded the Regimental CP truck, while the officers travelled
by jeep.
3
18 Dec 44 (Cont’d).
The convoy, composed of the three battalions and special units located
in the Murringen area, pulled out at 0235 for Krinkelt, Belgium and
moved to within two miles of the city when the order to abandon
vehicles was given due to enemy action at the head of the column.
Troops then began to move on foot in the direction of Krinkelt, but
were halted alongside the roads when small arms fire was heard and
flares lit up the terrain. A patrol of Infantrymen went ahead and upon
returning informed the Commanding Officer that the city was now in
American hands. Troops then boarded the vehicles and the convoy made
its way through Krinkelt and on to Wirtzfeld, Belgium, at which point
trucks were unloaded and plans for regrouping of the regiment were put
into effect. The wounded were rushed to the 2nd Division Clearing
Company in Elsenborn, Belgium and later evacuated on to Evacuation
Hospitals.
Approximately one hour after arriving in Wirtzfeld the battalion aid
stations and the Regimental group accompanied their respective units on
a march to Camp Elsenborn. A number of company aid men encircled by the
Germans broke through the barrier and reached the safety of the
American lines joining up with the 2nd Division and 30th Infantry
units. During the course of events Headquarters and Second Battalion
sections each lost one jeep and the latter one trailer.
The foot elements of the Second Battalion spent the night at the 393rd
CP and left that place at 0800 for the old Second Battalion CP site.
Troops from the rifle companies were contacted in the vicinity of the
old CP and a withdrawal was started and after an hour’s march was
halted for an hour and a half by heavy enemy artillery barrages.
Reaching the outskirts of Murringen, Belgium the troops were pinned
down by machine gun fire and artillery. A shell hit in the area and
shrapnel from it wounded a soldier from Co G, 39th Inf, in the leg. An
improvised litter was used to carry the wounded man to the city where
strong opposition was met. In an effort to break through enemy
positions, a number of men were wounded but one house was taken over
and a fiercely contested house-to-house fight ensued with the Second
Battalion being forced to withdraw due to the enemy's superiority in
manpower. Two aid men Tec 5 Floyd B. Morgan and Pvt Raymond Goeckler
remained behind to treat the wounded.
At 1700 the withdrawal was in effect with the troops fighting their way
through 2500 yards of enemy territory. An artillery barrage pinned the
troops down for 45 minutes with Company H suffering eight casualties.
Tec 5 Gray G. Smeltzer, Company H aid man, remained behind with the
wounded and later made his way to the 23rd Regiment, 2nd Division who
sent patrols out to evacuate the wounded, while the remainder of the
Second Battalion made its way to Krinkelt and on to Camp Elsenborn.
The Battalion Aid Stations and Headquarters Section then moved to
Elsenborn where a check-up on personnel was made and it was found that
one-third of the Detachment was missing and that the Headquarters
Section truck had succeeded in its mission of evacuating the
casualties. The Regimental CP truck carrying walking wounded and aid
station personnel had not as yet arrived.
T/Sgt Clarence F. Flynn, Acting First Sergeant, who was a passenger on
the CP truck arrived at the Regimental Aid Station and reported that
the Regimental CP truck had been ambushed by the enemy a half-mile
outside of Murringen. Five of the passengers were wounded when the
truck was machine gunned. Sgt Flynn was instructed to treat a wounded
officer by the Germans and while he was rendering aid the other members
of his party were marched away. The enemy left a company at the truck
to guard it as well as Sgt Flynn and his patient.
4
18 Dec 44 (Continued).
Sgt Flynn and Lt Murray escaped from the Germans, when the Cannon
Company, 394th Infantry, fired point blank at the ambushing Jerries.
The Germans hit the dirt for protection as did Sgt Flynn and Lt Murray,
but the latter two didn't stay there, they crawled to a ditch on the
side of the road and as the shells burst they dashed out across the
fields escaping their captors. At one time on their trudge to Krinkelt
they were within five feet of a German Machine Gun emplacement and
stayed there twenty minutes, unable to move. The machine gun crew
finally pulled out because of the terrific barrage layed down by the
Cannoneers.
The Battalion Aid Stations and Company aid men left Camp Elsenborn
early that afternoon for the front. While the remainder of Headquarters
Section, four officers and six enlisted men pulled out for the city of
Elsenborn at 1400.
Bn Aid Stations were set up in Elsenborn and advance stations put into
operation at the front, with Headquarters Section setting up a station
near the Regimental CP.
19 Dec 44 – First, Second and Third Battalion Sections had advance aid
stations operating in support of their respective battalions in
defensive positions on the line. Headquarters Section was in a static
position.
A number of the men from the battalion aid sections returned to duty on
this date after a march of two to three days.
Sgt Irvin S. Rosen, Headquarters Section, who was captured on the
morning of the 18th on the CP truck by the Germans returned to duty on
this date. He made his escape from the enemy, when they pleaded with
him to enter the city of Krinkelt. He told them he wouldn't guarantee
his return and instead of telling the Americans to surrender he gave
Second Division troops information as to the location of the enemy.
From 20 Dec 44 to 27 Dec 44, the Battalion Sections operated advanced
and rear aid stations, under periodic artillery fire as did
Headquarters Section.
On 16 Dec 44 – Pfc Willie C. Fauber, ASN xxxxxxxx, Litter Bearer, First
Battalion Aid Station, went out to retrieve a wounded soldier, but upon
reaching the casualty he was pinned down by machine gun fire. He then
dug in next to the casualty and spent the night there treating him. In
the morning he built a sled, placed the wounded soldier on it and
pulled him back to the aid station.
Infantrymen who served as auxiliary litter bearers on 16 Dec 44 praised
the work of the medics and stated that they has [sic] really earned
their combat Infantrymen Badges that day. It’s tough out there with a
gun and a lot tougher without one.
T/3 Milton L. Jackson, T/3 Herbert Carmichael and Pvt Erwin A. Baxter
of the Medical Detachment, were wounded by German Burp Gun fire on the
Regimental CP Truck when it was ambushed.
The Detachment’s Litter-Jeep drivers have performed superhuman jobs in
the evacuation of wounded from the forward aid stations under
heavy enemy artillery fire and over rough roads.
STEPHEN M.
GILLESPIE
Major, MC
Commanding
Source: National Archives and Records Administration
Record Group 407, Records of The Adjutant General’s
Office, U.S. Army
World War II Unit Records
Records of the 99th Infantry Division, 394th
Infantry Regiment,
14 Nov
44-25 Aug 45
Box 14199
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