History
The
313th Med
Bn was the
medical unit of the
88th Inf Div,
attached to II Corps.
It arrived in the
MTO 25 Dec 43 and
served in Italy, where
it obtained the following
campaign credits:
Rome-Arno, North Apennines,
and Po Valley.
The
organization's Medical
Clearing Company received
some support from
the 11th Fld Hosp
in Mar 44. Before
the capture of Monte
Cassino, the 313th
Med Bn (and
also the 310th Med
Bn / 85th Inf Div)
had both received
an overstrength of
100 litter bearers,
supplemented by additional
service and headquarters
personnel, as well
as Italian troops.
Due
to the high patient
census, 3/4-ton ambulances
were borrowed from
other medical units,
and many jeeps converted
to ambulances with
litter racks. Between
1 - 12 May 44, the
Bn received 369 wounded.
The 88th Inf
Div participated
in the drive to Rome
which was launched
11 May 44.
The
313th Med
Bn Clearing
Station was bombed
1-2 Jun 44 and suffered
7 killed. During 11
May - 9 Jun 44, a
total of 248 psychiatric
patients were admitted
and evacuated to the
88th Inf Div
Training & Rehabilitation
Center (established
11 May 44 and attached
to the 313th
Med Bn).
During
the fighting in the
Apeninnes, the Battalion
received support from
a Platoon of the 32d
Fld Hosp. By Sep 45,
the 88th Inf
Div was stationed
at Udine (part of
TRUST troops), and
maintained a Med Coll
Sta near the Austrian-Yugoslav-Italian
border at Tarviso,
as well as a Med Clr
Sta at Cividale.
The
Bn eventually operated
a number of Aid Stations
and Dispensaries in
the region until end
1946. The 313d
Med Bn had
meanwhile been reorganized
as a garrison unit
(in lieu of a combat
unit) keeping a 400-bed
capacity. The 313th
Med Bn was
inactivated 15 May
47 in Italy.
Source:
https://med-dept.com/forum/
From
the Garigliano to
the Arno
Preparations
for the Offensive
The
Strategic Concept
After
the failure to crack
the Gustav Line in
mid-March 1944, General
Alexander revised
his strategy for the
whole campaign. Plans
for the spring offensive
contemplated combining
another and still
heavier frontal assault
with a double flanking
movement from the
left. II Corps was
to move up the coast,
along the axis of
Highway 7, while the
French Expeditionary
Corps predominantly
skilled in mountain
fighting, was to attack
through the lightly
held ridges that formed
the southern wall
of the Liri Valley.
Simultaneously, the
British Eighth Army
was to renew the assault
on Cassino, while
VI Corps, at Anzio,
was to be ready at
the strategic moment
to cut Highway 6 at
Valmontone. If the
movement succeeded,
an entire German army
would be trapped and
destroyed.1
The
plan of attack called
for a high degree
of co-ordination and
involved logistical
problems of great
difficulty, especially
in the sector assigned
to the French. It
was necessary, moreover,
to regroup the Allied
forces all along the
line before the offensive
could be mounted,
and to do it without
giving the enemy any
hint of the nature
of the forthcoming
operation.
Under
orders issued on 5
March, the British
10 Corps in the Minturno
sector was quietly
relieved by the U.S.
88th Infantry Division,
newly arrived from
Africa where it had
completed its training.
The British 5th Division
from 10 Corps and
the U.S. 34th Division
from II Corps went
to Anzio in March,
while the 36th went
into training for
a later role with
the beachhead forces
or for new action
on the southern front.
The French Expeditionary
Corps, reinforced
by the arrival of
the 4th Moroccan Mountain
Division, sideslipped
to positions on the
right of the 88th,
while Eighth Army,
leaving only one corps
of two divisions to
hold the Adriatic
front, took over the
Cassino sector. Moving
in small groups at
night to camouflaged
positions, the reshuffling
was not complete until
April.
By
that time the 85th
Infantry Division,
fresh from the United
States, had joined
the 88th
on the lower Garigliano.
These new American
divisions were accompanied
by their organic medical
battalions, the 310th
with the 85th Division
and the 313th
with the 88th.
Both divisions were
attached to II Corps,
which had been weakened
by loss of the 34th
and 36th. When the
British 56th Division
returned from Anzio
it was assigned to
Eighth Army. The remaining
10 Corps division,
the 46th, was sent
to the Middle East,
but returned to Italy
later in the year
as an Eighth Army
unit.
Regrouping
of Medical Installations
The
realignment of the
Allied Armies in Italy,
as the former 15th
Army Group was now
called, made Highway
6 the main artery
of support for Eighth
Army, while II Corps
was served by Highway
7 along the coast.
U.S. medical installations
were accordingly moved
to positions in the
new Fifth Army area
as rapidly as they
could be cleared,
with due regard to
deception of the enemy
in the process. (Map
25) Patients were
evacuated to base
hospitals in the Caserta
area, the Naples hospitals
being largely reserved
for Anzio casualties
and those from the
French Expeditionary
Corps.
In
the new sector, all
Fifth Army hospitals
were grouped in the
vicinity of Carinola,
adjacent both to Highway
7 and to the railroad
that roughly paralleled
that highway all the
way to Rome. The area
was about 12 miles
east of the mouth
of the Garigliano
and no more than 10
or 15 miles southwest
of the Teano-Riardo
area from which most
of the installations
came. The 11th Evacuation
Hospital opened at
the new site on 11
March, followed two
days later by the
95th. The 8th Evacuation
Hospital and the neuropsychiatric
hospital operated
by the 601st Clearing
Company were ready
to receive patients
in the Carinola area
on 23 March, and the
38th Evacuation completed
its move on the 29th.
The 10th Field Hospital,
the 16th Evacuation,
and the 3d Convalescent
opened in the Carinola
area on the 3d, 16th,
and 26th of April,
respectively.
The
38th Evacuation had
changed places with
the 56th from Anzio,
and the 11th had rotated
with the 93d before
all these moves were
completed. The 94th
Evacuation Hospital
went direct to Anzio
from its Mignano site
late in March. The
venereal disease hospital
operated by the 602d
Clearing Company closed
at Riardo on 27 March
and went into bivouac.
Its place was taken
by a temporary venereal
disease hospital set
up under II Corps
control by the clearing
company of the 54th
Medical Battalion.
The hospitalization
units of the 11th
Field Hospital were
brought together late
in February, operating
under canvas as a
provisional 400-bed
station hospital for
troops in training
until early April.
The 11th Field then
went into direct support
of the clearing stations
of the 310th and 313th
Medical Battalions.
Veterinary
units serving Fifth
Army were also moved
during March in the
same general pattern.
The two Italian-staffed
veterinary hospitals
were established in
the II Corps area,
the 110th on the extreme
left and the 130th
at Nocelleto close
to the main concentration
of medical units.
The first U.S. veterinary
installation to reach
the theater, the 17th
Veterinary Evacuation
Hospital, arrived
during the regrouping
and was established
near Teano, on the
extreme right of Fifth
Army.
For
some six weeks before
the launching of the
drive on Rome, set
for 11 May 1944, Fifth
Army medical units
on the southern front
had only routine functions
to perform. Hospitals
brought their equipment
up to standard and
replaced losses, while
combat medical personnel
trained with their
divisions. Emphasis
was placed on physical
conditioning and on
evacuation in mountainous
terrain, but opportunities
for recreation were
provided.3
Combat
Medical Service
The
Drive to Rome
The
Southern Front- An
hour before midnight,
11 May 1944, Allied
guns pounded German
positions from the
Tyrrhenian Sea to
Cassino and beyond.
Immediately thereafter
the 85th and
88th Divisions
of II Corps, and the
French Expeditionary
Corps on their right,
attacked through the
mountains north and
west of Minturno.
In the center of the
front, the British
13 Corps of Eighth
Army forced a crossing
of the Rapido where
the 36th Division
had suffered
disaster in January;
on the right the Polish
Corps stormed Cassino
and Monastery Hill.
Though taken by surprise,
the Germans rallied
quickly to fight back
with their customary
stubbornness and skill;
but this time the
Allies were not to
be stopped, and the
monastery was taken
on the 18th.
While
the Germans were still
off balance from the
punishing blows of
Allied artillery,
the French corps stormed
the heights where
the British had failed
in January and within
twenty-four hours
had broken through
the Gustav Line. Against
stiffening but disorganized
opposition, Algerian
and Moroccan mountain
troops then followed
the ridges that overlooked
the Liri Valley from
the south, and by
19 May had outflanked
the Montedoro anchor
point of the still
unfinished Hitler
line, last of the
German fortified positions
on the southern front.
Between
the French colonials
and the sea, the
88th and
85th Divisions of
II Corps also penetrated
the mountains and,
in a series of bitterly
contested small unit
actions, broke through
the enemys prepared
defenses. On 19 May
the important highway
junction of Itri fell
to II Corps. Fondi
was taken the next
day, and the corps
turned southwest toward
Terracina, from which
Highway 7 ran straight
across the Pontine
Marshes to Cisterna,
the Alban Hills, and
Rome.
On
the Eighth Army front,
where the strongest
German defenses were
concentrated, the
advance was slower
and more difficult,
but the threat posed
by Fifth Army on the
left flank relieved
enough of the pressure
along Highway 6 to
keep Eighth Army moving
through the Liri Valley
proper and on into
the Sacco Valley beyond.
While
II Corps drove through
another mountain mass
toward Terracina and
the FEC stormed Pico,
an important road
junction which the
enemy could not afford
to lose, VI Corps
at Anzio struck on
23 May toward Valmontone,
where Highway 6 could
be cut, the Sacco
Valley blocked, and
the whole German Tenth
Army trapped.
In
the rugged, mountainous
area south of the
Liri and Sacco Rivers,
medical support was
difficult in the extreme.
Medical supplies and
equipment were carried
forward by jeep, by
mule, by band carry,
and in a few instances
were dropped by parachute
from small planes.
Jeeps and mules were
also used to evacuate
the wounded, supplementing
the inadequate number
of ambulances and
trucks whose usefulness
was restricted by
the severe limitations
of the road network.
In some instances
it was found advantageous
to hold casualties
at the aid
stations until the
advancing troops had
secured neighboring
roads in order to
avoid the long and
difficult litter hauls.
As
in the mountain fighting
before Cassino, the
heaviest burden fell
on the litter bearers.
The medical battalions
organic to the 85th
and 88th Divisions
- the 310th and
313th, respectively--had
each received its
authorized overstrength
of 100 litter bearers5
before the drive began,
but the number available
was still far short
of needs, and both
II Corps divisions
drew heavily upon
service and headquarters
troops for additional
bearers. Italian troops
were also attached
as litter bearers.
All together the 85th
Division had 700 litter
bearers above the
normal Table of Organization
allotment, and the
88th
had almost as many.
The
85th Division, on
the left flank of
II Corps, left its
clearing station and
the 1st platoon of
the 11th Field Hospital
in the vicinity of
Cellole some five
miles southeast of
the Garigliano crossing.
Casualties began coming
back about an hour
after the division
went into action,
and reached a record
544 during the 24
hours of 12 May. On
the second day of
the drive, with admissions
to the clearing station
again exceeding 500,
the 3d Platoon of
the 11th Field Hospital
joined the 1st in
support of the 85th
Division. Collecting
companies operated
in two sections in
order to give closer
support to the combat
forces. All ambulances
organic to the division
were in use forward
of the clearing station,
together with additional
ambulances borrowed
from corps. Jeeps
fitted with litter
racks were invaluable.
Through 14 May weapons
carriers and trucks
were used to bring
out the walking wounded.
Evacuation from the
clearing station and
field hospital was
by two platoons of
the 54th Medical Battalion.
The
offensive was in its
sixth day before the
85th Division had
moved far enough forward
to permit the clearing
station to advance,
but thereafter for
the next ten days
its moves were frequent.
On 17 May the station
crossed the Garigliano
River to the vicinity
of Minturno, leaving
one platoon of the
field hospital at
the old site to care
for patients not yet
in condition to be
evacuated. The other
field hospital platoon
similarly remained
at Minturno, while
the clearing station
moved forward to Formia
on 20 May and to a
site near Itri on
the 21st. On 24 May
the clearing station
was established five
miles west of Fondi,
with both field hospital
platoons adjacent.
Two days later the
clearing station
again advanced without
its field hospital
support, this time
to Sonnino, where
it operated until
the division was withdrawn
from the line on 27
May.
The
88th Division,
on the right of the
85th with the French
Expeditionary Corps
on its own right,
followed a line of
advance parallel to
that of the 85th but
somewhat farther to
the north. Highway
7 was the initial
axis of both divisions,
and was consequently
the line along which
medical installations
of both tended to
be located. The starting
site of the
88th Division
clearing station was
in the vicinity of
Fasani, just north
of the highway and
some three or four
miles east of the
Garigliano.
Although
casualties were not
as heavy as those
of the 85th, 369 passed
through the clearing
station of the 88th
Division
on 12 May. The station
had crossed the river
to a site a mile southeast
of Minturno before
it was given field
hospital support on
16 May. At that time
the 2d Platoon of
the 11th Field Hospital
moved into the area.
Evacuation from the
clearing station was
by an ambulance platoon
of the 54th Medical
Battalion.
Once
the Gustav Line was
broken, the campaign
moved more rapidly.
The 88th Division
clearing station shifted
to Formia on the Gulf
of Gaeta on 20 May
and the next day to
a site just west of
Itri. In each move
the field hospital
platoon lagged behind
for a day or two until
its nontransportable
patients could be
transferred to one
of the evacuation
hospitals behind the
lines.
At
this point the 88th
Division
moved into the mountains
north of Highway 7,
and evacuation became
increasingly difficult.
Collecting companies
were split to establish
treatment stations
along litter trails,
and Italian troops
were attached as litter
bearers. Two collecting
stations were in the
vicinity of Fondi
when that town was
bombed the night of
23-24 May and suffered
considerable damage
to their vehicles.
Over
the next three days,
the division cut across
roadless mountains
to Priverno. In this
drive litter carries
were up to twelve
miles from the moving
front back to Fondi,
with as many as fourteen
relay posts along
a single trail.
It
was the last important
action on the southern
front. Once II Corps
was in contact with
the Anzio forces,
German resistance
south of the Liri
and Sacco Valleys
collapsed. On the
88th Division
front, the entire
313th Medical
Battalion
moved to the vicinity
of Sonnino on 25 May,
and two days later
the clearing station,
with its attached
field hospital unit,
was set up just outside
Priverno.
The
French Expeditionary
Corps, on the II Corps
right, had the most
difficult mission
of any Fifth Army
formation in the drive
to Rome and suffered
casualties commensurate
with its success.
The French medical
units supporting the
corps, though adequate
for normal operations,
were unable to carry
the exceptional load
required, and on 23
May the 403d Medical
Collecting Company,
161st Medical Battalion,
with elements of the
551st Ambulance Company
attached, was sent
to reinforce the FEC.
The next day the 406th
Medical Collecting
Company, 162d Medical
Battalion, was given
the mission of evacuating
French forward hospitals.
The Anzio
Front
TheGermans
were retreating hastily
from Terracina when
VI Corps, now more
than seven divisions
strong, began its
drive on 23 May from
Anzio beachhead. The
1st Armored, the 3d
Division, and the
1st Special Service
Force led off, passing
through the 34th to
take the Germans by
surprise. The attacking
forces quickly penetrated
enemy positions before
the Germans could
regroup. The 45th
struck for limited
objectives on the
left of the salient,
while the British
1st and 5th Divisions
held defensively from
the Albano road west
to the sea, and the
U.S. 36th remained
in reserve.6
In
two days of violent
action, the 3d Division
once more proved its
right to the name
the Germans gave it
of Sturmdivision.
The 7th Infantry took
Cisterna, fighting
from house to battered
house. The 15th and
30th regiments bypassed
the town on either
side and converged
on Con, six miles
nearer to Highway
6. In the same two
days the Special Service
Force seized the dominating
height of Mt. Arrestino,
southeast of Con,
and columns of the
1st Armored were threatening
Velletri, key to the
Alban Hills and center
of German resistance,
from south and east.
Contact had been made
with II Corps patrols
on Highway 7; the
Twelfth Air Force,
in close support,
had destroyed hundreds
of German vehicles
on the crowded escape
roads from the beachhead;
and VI Corps had taken
more than 2,600 prisoners.
On
26 May a sudden change
of direction again
caught the Germans
unprepared. The 34th
and 45th Divisions
lunged west toward
Campoleone Station
and Lanuvio, while
the 3d held its gains.
The 1st Armored, after
a final thrust toward
Velletri in terrain
too rough for tanks,
was relieved by the
36th. The 1st Armored
was back in the line
in the Campoleone
sector on 29 May,
but the Germans, holding
fanatically along
the Albano-LanuvioVelletri
railroad, gave ground
only by inches.
Meanwhile,
the U.S. IV Corps
headquarters under
Maj. Gen. Willis D.
Crittenberger had
relieved II Corps
headquarters on the
southern front on
28 May, and II Corps
had shifted to the
beachhead, where General
Keyes took command
of the Valmontone
sector. The 3d Division
and the Special Service
Force passed to II
Corps command at this
time. The 85th Division,
coming up from Terracina
to reinforce the 3d,
went into the line
the evening of 30
May, and the 88th
Division
was on the way.
The
final drive to Rome
was launched on 1
June, when Valmontone
fell to the 3d Division
and Highway 6 was
finally cut. The bulk
of the German forces,
however, had escaped
from the Sacco Valley
before the trap could
be sprung, leaving
II Corps to pursue
a beaten but still
dangerous enemy. At
the same time elements
of the 36th Division,
on a mission in the
rough and wooded area
north of Velletri,
penetrated the eastern
slopes of the Alban
Hills without encountering
any resistance. Seizing
the opportunity, the
division shifted its
ground and by evening
of 1 June held commanding
positions on the heights
above Velletri that
made the German position
in the town no longer
tenable.
Indeed,
the Germans were already
withdrawing, and only
mopping up remained.
Small, highly mobile
units from II Corps
on Highway 6 and from
VI Corps on Highway
7, swept into Rome
on 4 June, so close
behind the retreating
enemy that he had
no time to destroy
the bridges across
the Tiber. Highway
6 had not been cut
quickly enough to
prevent the escape
of the bulk of the
German forces, but
enemy losses in both
men and material had
been heavy.
The
character of medical
support on the Anzio
front differed markedly
from that dictated
by the mountainous
terrain west of the
Garigliano. During
the first few days
of the VI Corps offensive,
clearing companies
remained in the hospital
area east of Nettuno.
The 3d Division clearing
station, supporting
both its own division
and the Special Service
Force, was the first
to move, setting up
south of Con on 26
May along with a platoon
of the 33d Field Hospital.
One
platoon of the 36th
Division clearing
company went into
action with the division
on 26 May, north of
Cisterna, but did
not have a platoon
of the 33d Field Hospital
adjacent until the
28th. Both clearing
station and field
hospital moved to
the Velletri area
on 3 June. The field
hospital platoon supporting
the 3d Division moved
over to support the
clearing station of
the 45th after II
Corps took command
of the Valmontone
sector. The remaining
unit of the 33d Field
Hospital was established
near the 34th Division
clearing station south
of Velletri by 30
May.
In
the new II Corps sector,
the 10th Field Hospital
relieved the 11th
on 29 May, units of
the 10th Field being
attached to the clearing
stations of the 3d,
85th, and 88th
Divisions.
The unit attached
to the 3d Division
was forced to withdraw
from its initial site
south of Valmontone
by enemy shelling
on 29 May. The clearing
station of the 88th
Division
in the same general
area was a 3d division
casualty in the Cisterna
area. bombed on the
night of 1-2 June.
A direct hit on the
admissions tent killed
nine persons, seven
of them personnel
of the 313th
Medical Battalion.
For the next twenty-four
hours 88th
Division
casualties were taken
to the 85th Division
clearing station west
of Valmontone on the
rim of the Alban Hills.
By
this time the combat
troops were moving
rapidly, and evacuation
routes between collecting
and clearing stations
were lengthening.
This was especially
true of the 1st Armored
Division, where treatment
stations set up 2
of 3 miles to the
rear might be 10 miles
behind in a few hours.
Both the 52d Medical
Battalion, supporting
VI Corps, and the
54th Medical Battalion,
supporting II Corps,
were called upon to
reinforce the division
collecting companies
in the final drive
to Rome. On the II
Corps front, along
Highway 6, clearing
stations moved almost
daily.
Litter
carries in the same
period were long,
as the troops outran
their medical support.
The indispensable
jeep, fitted with
litter racks, was
used in many places
inaccessible to ambulances,
but even jeeps were
useless in much of
the hill country on
the 36th Division
front.
Casualties
were heaviest in the
first two days of
the drive out of the
beachhead and on 1
June, when the Germans
made their final effort
to hold open their
line of retreat along
Highway 6. Field hospital
units often operated
beyond normal capacity
and were frequently
unable to evacuate
their patients in
time to move with
the division clearing
stations. Holding
sections were usually
left behind on these
occasions, permitting
the main body of the
unit to advance. In
other instances, it
was necessary for
one field hospital
unit to support two
divisions. Additional
nurses for the field
hospitals were supplied
by Fifth Army, while
other personnel and
extra equipment were
borrowed from nonoperational
units. On 2 June the
1st Platoon of the
11th Field Hospital
was attached to the
10th Field in the
II Corps sector to
help carry the load.
Pursuit
to the Arno
After
the fall of Rome,
the German armies
in Italy might have
been destroyed had
Alexander been allowed
to retain adequate
forces. The Combined
Chiefs of Staff, however,
gave higher priority
to the expanding operations
in France. During
June and July General
Clark reluctantly
gave up both VI Corps
and the French Expeditionary
Corps. to Seventh
Army for the invasion
of southern France.
The equivalent of
more than eight veteran
divisions, with supporting
units, were withdrawn
while Fifth Army was
in pursuit of a badly
beaten foe. In addition
to the medical units
organic to these divisions,
Fifth Army also lost
the 52d and 56th Medical
Battalions, the l0th
and 11th Field Hospitals,
and the 11th, 93d,
and 95th Evacuation
Hospitals. At the
same time the 750-bed
9th and 59th Evacuation
Hospitals were withdrawn
from the Peninsular
Base Section.7
The
combat-hardened units
of the VI Corps and
the FEC were gone,
and in their place
were the untested
91st and 92d Divisions
and the Brazilian
Expeditionary Force
of somewhat more than
division strength.
Of these only the
91st saw action before
the Arno River line
was reached. In effective
strength, Fifth Army
numbered 379,588 on
4 June, when Rome
was taken, and only
171,026 on 15 August
when the lines were
stabilized.
After
the fall of Rome the
Germans fought only
small rear-guard actions,
trading ground for
time to regroup and
reequip their disorganized
and decimated forces.
Bridges, culverts,
port facilities were
methodically destroyed
wherever
their destruction
would impede the Allied
advance or delay the
delivery of supplies.
Battles were fought
on terrain of the
enemys choosing by
mobile units that
could disengage at
will and outrun the
slower Allied formations.
Fifth Army, forced
like the Germans to
reorganize on the
march, never quite
caught up with any
substantial body of
enemy troops.
The
pursuit opened on
6 June, the day Allied
forces crossed the
English Channel and
secured the first
beachhead on French
soil. VI Corps, in
the coastal sector,
drove out along Highway
1 toward Civitavecchia,
the largest port between
Naples and Leghorn
and urgently needed
to shorten supply
lines. The 1st Armored
led the advance in
two columns, the 34th
and 36th Divisions
following as closely
as their transportation
permitted. Elements
of the 34th passed
through the armor
that night and took
the city after only
a token fire fight
on the morning of
7 June. Within a week
the port had been
restored sufficiently
to dock Liberty ships.
Some
twenty miles inland,
II Corps, with the
85th and 88th
Divisions,
struck along Highway
2 toward Viterbo with
its important complex
of airfields. The
infantry
was outdistanced by
a task force of the
1st Armored that swung
inland after the capture
of Civitavecchia and
secured Viterbo the
morning of 9 June.
By this time the pattern
of the campaign was
well defined. The
hit-and-run tactics
of the German retreat
did not call for pursuit
in force, permitting
both the reduction
and the reoganization
of Fifth Army to be
carried out in orderly
fashion without loss
of momentum. The 3d
Division, which garrisoned
Rome until 14 June,
did not go back into
the line, and the
45th, in VI Corps
reserve, was withdrawn
on 8 June. The French
Expeditionary Corps,
which had been pinched
out in the final days
of the drive to Rome,
began relief of II
Corps along the Highway
2 axis on 9 June,
and both the 85th
and 88th Divisions
were withdrawn for
needed rest. At the
same time the VI Corps
sector was narrowed
and left in sole command
of the 36th Division,
with the 361st RCT
of the 91st Division
attached, while the
34th and 1st Armored
rested. On 11 June
General Crittenberger's
IV Corps relieved
VI Corps.
The
reinforced 36th Division
seized the town of
Grosseto on 15June,
and crossed the Ombrone
River that night.
Two days later the
517th Parachute Combat
Team, in Italy to
gain experience for
a mission in southern
France, was also attached
to the 36th. The advance,
however, was slowing
down in the face of
stiffening opposition
and more difficult
terrain. In the French
sector, the fighting
centered around Lake
Trasimeno was becoming
particularly bitter.
To
relieve the French
and prepare for the
first withdrawals
from the FEC, the
IV Corps sector was
widened, and the 1st
Armored returned to
the line on 21 June.
Five days later the
34th Division, with
the 442d Infantry
attached, relieved
the 36th, which went
at once to the Seventh
Army staging area.
The 361st Infantry
remained in the line,
attached to the 1st
Armored, but the 517th
was withdrawn on the
28th.
The
34th Division took
command of the coastal
sector just north
of Piombino, the small
but immensely useful
port that had fallen
on 25 June. The division
closed rapidly toward
Highway 68, a lateral
road that runs roughly
east from a point
on Highway some twenty
miles south of Leghorn
to a junction with
Highway 2 at Poggibonsi,
a similar distance
south of Florence.
The Germans fought
hard at Cecina just
below the junction
of Highways 1 and
68, in an effort to
delay the capture
of Leghorn as long
as possible, but the
34th was beyond the
intersection by 2
July. The next day
the 363d Infantry
of the 91st Division
was attached to the
34th, in time to take
part in a 6-day battle
for Rosignano, only
a dozen miles southeast
of Leghorn.
On
11 July the 88th
Division
came back into the
line as a IV Corps
unit, relieving the
1st Armored, and the
following day the
91st was committed
as a division, though
its 363d Regiment
remained for the time
being attached to
the 34th. IV Corps
reached the Arno plain
on 17 July, and two
days later the 34th
Division entered the
battered port of Leghorn.
Pisa fell on the 23d,
and Fifth Army moved
up to the Arno on
its entire front.
The
last of the French
units had been withdrawn
on 22 July, and Eighth
Army had shifted west
to fill the gap. Florence
fell to Eighth Army
on 4 August. By the
l5th of that month
the Arno River line
was secure, and the
Adriatic coast was
also in Allied hands
as far north as the
Metauro River above
Senigallia. The weakening
of Fifth Army to supply
troops for operations
in southern France,
however, had permitted
the enemy to withdraw
to the Gothic Line
in the northern Apennines.
Pursuit beyond the
Arno was impossible
without rest, regrouping,
and resupply. The
enemy would also have
time to recover his
strength and to improve
his fortified positions.
On
the rolling plains
northwest of Rome,
clearing stations
and their accompanying
field hospital platoons
experienced great
difficulty in keeping
up with the racing
troops. Advances during
the first few days
of the pursuit were
as much as twenty
and thirty miles a
day, so that a clearing
station located within
range of enemy guns
in the morning might
be miles behind by
nightfall. Even with
frequent moves it
was impossible to
avoid long ambulance
runs. For similar
reasons, litter hauls
too became long as
combat elements outran
ambulance control
points and even aid
stations.
Field
hospital platoons
found it impossible
to move with the same
frequency as the clearing
stations they supported,
because of the need
for giving postoperative
care to their patients,
and of the inadequacy
of their organic transportation.
The field hospitals
were given six additional
2 l/2-ton trucks in
June, making ten in
all, but even this
number was sufficient
to move only one platoon
at a time. The problem
of caring for patients
who could not be moved
was solved only by
attaching additional
field hospital units
and by operating the
units in two sections.
On more than one occasion
a single field hospital
had seven separate
sections in simultaneous
operation, all in
support of a single
division clearing
station.
The
10th Field Hospital
remained in the line
in support of the
85th and 88th
Divisions
until the relief of
II Corps was completed
on 11 June. At that
time the 11th Field
was brought up from
bivouac in the Cisterna
area, going into action
with IV Corps. Platoons
of the 33d Field Hospital
followed the VI Corps
drive to Civitavecchia,
shifting to IV Corps
when VI Corps was
relieved. For the
33d, work was light
until the end of June,
when the 11th was
withdrawn to stage
for the invasion of
southern France. Thereafter
the 33d carried the
entire burden of forward
surgery for IV Corps,
including the relatively
heavy casualties from
the battles for Cecina
and Rosignano.
The
pursuit was characterized
by alternating periods
of heavy fighting
and comparative lull,
with corresponding
peaks and valleys
for the medical service.
On various occasions,
corps medical battalions
were compelled to
fill in at the division
and regimental levels.
During the period
of severe fighting
in the mountainous
area around Cecina
early in July, and
the subsequent advance
to Leghorn and Pisa,
the clearing station
of the 109th Medical
Battalion, Supporting
the 34th Division,
cleared casualties
from five regimental
combat teams and their
attached troops.
The
316th Medical Battalion,
organic to the 91st
Division, operated
as a unit in combat
for the first time
when the division
was committed on 12
July, although collecting
companies of the battalion
had been in action
with the 361st and
363d RCT's.
On
3 August, with all
but mopping up operations
completed, a rest
center for Fifth Army
medical personnel
was established at
Castiglioncello, about
fifteen miles south
of Leghorn on the
coast. The camp had
accommodations for
50 officers, 25 nurses,
and 100 enlisted men.
Each group remained
four days.
Hospitalization
in the Army Area
The
long period of preparation
for the May drive
on Rome gave ample
time to clear Fifth
Army hospitals, but
the nature of the
terrain on the Garigliano
front, together with
the rapid movement
of the combat troops
once the Gustav Line
was broken, prevented
close support. Hospitals
remained in the Carinola
area until late May,
while lines of evacuation
stretched out to fifty
and seventy-five miles
along Highway 7. 8
Hospitals
supporting II Corps
began moving forward
after the capture
of Terracina. The
95th Evacuation, augmented
by the 1st Platoon
of the 601st Clearing
Company, opened at
Itri on 24 May, and
the 93d leapfrogged
ten miles farther
forward, to Fondi,
two days later. The
750-bed 56th Evacuation
took over from the
93d at Fondi on 1
June, the 93d going
to Campomorto in the
Anzio area. At the
same time the 95th
jumped ahead fifty
miles to Con, southeast
of the Alban Hills.
The 16th Evacuation,
meanwhile, had gone
by sea to Anzio where
it opened on 27 May;
and the 8th, after
a brief stay at Cellole,
between Carinola and
Minturno, moved overland
to Le Ferriere in
the beachhead sector,
opening on June. The
neuropsychiatric hospital
operated by the 601st
Clearing Company,
and the venereal disease
hospital operated
by the 602d Clearing
Company, both moved
into the Anzio area
on 31 May.
Two
casualty clearing
stations (evacuation
hospitals), two field
hospitals, three mobile
surgical formations,
and a mobile surgical
group attached to
the French Expeditionary
Corps were similarly
slow in moving up
for reasons of terrain
and because of the
rapid movement of
the corps. Additional
French hospital units,
although requested
early in April, were
not available in time
for the Rome-Arno
Campaign.
As
the hospitals moved
forward, ambulance
control posts were
set up to direct the
flow of casualties.
Movement was facilitated
by keeping new casualties
out of hospitals scheduled
for an early change
of location.
General
Martin was with the
first group to enter
Rome, where he quickly
located buildings
suitable for hospital
use. The 94th Evacuation
from Anzio and the
56th from Fondi both
moved into Rome on
6 June, with the 38th
and 15th from Anzio
following on 9 and
10 June, respectively.
The 38th exchanged
its dug-in ward tents
with the 59th Evacuation
Hospital, newly arrived
from Sicily to act
as a Peninsular Base
Section station hospital
at Anzio.
In
Rome, the 38th Evacuation
set up under canvas
in a park near Vatican
City. The 15th was
located in a school
building, while the
94th and 56th shared
a large building originally
constructed for hospital
use by one of the
religious orders and
recently operated
as a military hospital
by the Germans - so
recently, in fact,
that pots of coffee
and vats of beans
were still warm in
the kitchen when the
Americans arrived.
Although it was recognized
that these evacuation
hospitals did not
have the organic personnel
necessary for cleaning
and maintenance of
fixed structures,
General Martin felt
that the service they
would render in preparing
the buildings for
later occupancy by
PBS units would more
than outweigh the
disadvantages.
The
last of the Fifth
Army hospitals from
the southern front,
the 3d Convalescent,
moved into the Anzio
area on 9 June, opening
at Le Ferriere. Movement
had been delayed by
lack of transportation
and congested roads.
In
the pursuit north
of Rome, where the
terrain was well adapted
to the use of armor,
the combat troops
quickly outdistanced
their supporting hospitals,
and lines of evacuation
once more lengthened
out, up to 100 miles.
Here the main axis
of advance for the
U.S. forces was Highway
1, along the Mediterranean
coast, with the French
Expeditionary Corps,
supported in part
by American medical
units, using Highway
2, farther inland.
The first hospital
to move into the new
combat zone was the
11th Evacuation, which
opened at Santa Marinella,
just
below Civitavecchia,
on 10 June. The new
location was 40 miles
northwest of Rome
and more than 80 miles
from the hospita'ls
former Anzio site.
The following day
the 93d opened at
Tarquinia, some 15
miles farther north.
On 13 June the 95th
Evacuation was established
at Montalto di Castro,
10 miles beyond Tarquinia,
where it was joined
by the 94th two days
later. The 400-bed
evacuation hospitals
were usually moved
in pairs, the organic
transportation of
the two units being
pooled to move first
one, and then the
other.
Throughout
this period, communication
was poor and lines
of evacuation were
maintained only by
great effort. The
advance of the front
was so rapid that
the Signal Corps was
unable to include
the hospitals in its
telephone network.
Pigeons were used
to some extent, but
for the most part
communication was
maintained by couriers
driving jeeps hundreds
of miles a day. The
8th Evacuation Hospital,
for example, sent
an advance party to
lay out a site near
Orbetello, 20 miles
beyond the 94th and
95th, on 16 June.
The party was met
by an ambulance driver
who had already come
50 miles from the
front in search of
a hospital. The 8th's
commander, Col. Lewis
W. Kirkman, hastily
changed plans and
after making contact
with the Fifth Army
surgeon by courier,
ordered the hospital
established 4 miles
south of Grosseto.
The new site was only
6 miles from the point
of contact with the
enemy, but by the
time the hospital
was ready to receive
patients the front
was a safe distance
away.
Other
moves were made toward
the end of June. The
l5th Evacuation moved
from Rome to Grosseto
on the 23d of the
month. The 94th left
Mont-alto on the same
day to set up at Montepescali,
10 miles south of
Grosseto, where it
was joined on 27 June
by the 16th Evacuation.
The 3d Convalescent
moved to Grosseto
on 29 June. Also on
29 June the 56th Evacuation
opened at Venturina,
near Piombino, 30
miles northwest of
Montepescali. The
venereal
disease hospital moved
on 26 June to Guincarico,
about 5 miles from
the sites of the 94th
and 16th Evacuation
Hospitals. The 38th
Evacuation shifted
from Rome to Massa
Marittima, about 10
miles north of the
venereal disease center,
on 2 July.
By
this date the rate
of advance had slowed
owing to the withdrawal
of substantial forces
for the invasion of
southern France and
to the more rugged
terrain. For the first
time since the fall
of Rome the location
of hospital sites
with respect to availability
of air evacuation
became a problem,
requiring reconnaissance
from the air as well
as on the ground.
Hospitals caught up
with the combat troops,
and even outdistanced
organic medical units
on occasion. The 8th
Evacuation for example,
moved into the outskirts
of Cecina while the
fighting for that
town was still in
progress and was actually
set up on 2 July forward
of the 34th Division
clearing station.
The
next series of moves
came toward the middle
of July, when the
11th, 93d, and 95th
Evacuation Hospitals
were withdrawn from
Fifth Army. The 94th
Evacuation, with a
platoon of the 601st
Clearing Company attached,
moved up to Ponteginori,
about ten miles east
of Cecina along the
road to Florence,
on 11 July; and the
venereal disease hospital
moved into the same
area four days later.
At the same time the
neuropsychiatric hospital
was established at
Cecina. The 38th Evacuation
opened on the coast
road, twelve miles
above Cecina, on 18
July, after a 24-hour
delay because the
area was still under
fire. The 15th Evacuation
moved to Volterra,
a few miles beyond
the site of the 94th.
The 32d Field Hospital,
released from attachment
to the Peninsular
Base Section, was
established at Saline,
halfway between the
l5th and 94th Evacuations,
on 23 July.
The
16th Evacuation operated
at Ardenza, on the
southern outskirts
of Leghorn, from 26
July to 12 August.
The 3d Convalescent
moved on 2 August
to Laiatico, twenty
miles southeast of
Leghorn; and the 56th
Evacuation was established
three days later about
five miles farther
north, at Peccioli.
On 8 August the 6oist
Clearing Company set
up its neuropsychiatric
hospital at Montecchio,
a mile or two south
of the Peccioli site
of the 56th Evacuation.
The front was stabilized
at about this time,
with the actual fighting
reduced to patrol
actions along the
Arno River line.
The
Rome-Arno Campaign
again demonstrated
the value of the separate
ambulance company,
of the 400-bed evacuation
hospital, and of the
field hospital platoon
as a forward unit.
The shortcomings of
these platoons with
respect to size were
overbalanced by their
mobility in a campaign
of rapid movement.
The capacity of the
400-bed evacuation
could be readily increased,
even beyond its own
expansion limits,
by the attachment
of one or more clearing
platoons from the
corps medical battalions.
The field hospital
platoons operating
with the division
clearing stations
were also augmented
from time to time
by additional personnel
and beds from other
sources. In the Rome-Arno
Campaign the field
hospital platoons
were able to move
forward with the divisions
they supported because
holding units to care
for their nontransportable
patients were improvised
from personnel of
the corps medical
battalions, with nurses
borrowed from evacuation
hospitals. As in
previous Mediterranean
campaigns, surgical,
shock, and other specialist
teams of the 2d Auxiliary
Surgical Group worked
with the field hospital
platoons and the evacuation
hospitals. The usual
complement was one
shock and four surgical
teams for each field
hospital platoon.
It
should be noted in
this connection that
the 750-bed evacuation
hospitals in the Italian
campaign were moved
with much greater
speed than had been
the case in Tunisia.
The 8th Evacuation,
for example, struck
its tents, moved 80
miles from Cellole
to Le Ferriere, and
set up again for operation
in 30 hours, while
the 38th closed in
Rome, moved 160 miles
to Massa Marittima,
and reopened in 40
hours. The improvement
owed something to
accumulated experience,
but more to the effective
co-operation of corps
and army in providing
the necessary trucks
when they were needed.
For the most part,
however, these larger
unsts were not required
to make rapid changes
of position. As the
lines of combat moved
forward, the 750-bed
evacuation hospitals
tended to function
toward the rear of
the army area more
as fixed than as combat
units, eventually
being replaced by
base section hospitals.
Admissions
to hospital and quarters
from Fifth Army during
the period of the
Rome-Arno Campaign
reached a peak in
June of more than
32,000, of which one-third
were battle casualties.
Evacuation
From Fifth Army
For
the first two weeks
of the drive on Rome,
evacuation from Fifth
Army continued to
follow the pattern
of the preceding months.
Casualties from the
southern front were
evacuated from the
Carinola area by rail
to Naples. The 41st
Hospital Train, controlled
by the Peninsular
Base Section, operated
between that city
and the Sparanise
railhead. The 42d
Hospital Train, scheduled
for southern France,
was brought over from
Africa and went into
service between Sessa,
near the main concentration
of Fifth Army hospitals,
and Naples, starting
12 May. As had been
the case in Africa,
the necessary hospital
cars were converted
from local rolling
stock. Holding hospitals
at the railheads were
maintained by the
corps medical battalions.
Casualties from Anzio
continued through
most of May to be
evacuated exclusively
by hospital ships
and by LST's staffed
by teams from the
56th Medical Battalion.
On
the fifth day of the
attack the encampment
of the 56th Medical
Battalion near Nocellito
was bombed in bright
moonlight, apparently
deliberately, with
two enlisted men killed,
seven wounded, and
extensive damage to
equipment.
After
the consolidation
of the two fronts,
air evacuation began
from the army area,
and thereafter, for
the remainder of the
campaign, forward
hospitals were cleared
by planes of the 802d
and 807th Medical
Air Evacuation Transport
Squadrons. The first
flight from the Nettuno
airstrip was made
on 26 May. Air evacuation
for both U.S. and
French forces was
directed by the Office
of the Surgeon, Fifth
Army, which had made
proximity to an airfield
or to level ground
where an airstrip
might be constructed
a condition in the
selection of hospital
sites. By 1 June approximately
400 patients a day
were being flown from
the combat zone to
fixed hospitals in
Naples and Caserta.
Holding
units for air evacuation
were operated at various
points by two collecting
companies of the 161st
Medical Battalion
and by the clearing
company and one collecting
company of the 163d
Medical Battalion.
The 56th Medical Battalion
handled both air and
sea evacuation at
Anzio until 23 June,
when it was relieved
by the 54th and departed
for Naples to stage
for the invasion of
southern France. The
402d Collecting Company
of the 161st Medical
Battalion, assigned
to the French Expeditionary
Corps, even helped
to construct and maintain
an airstrip, and directed
the approach and take-off
of the C-47 transports.
Transportation
between hospitals
and airfields was
handled by corps medical
battalions. The 162d
Medical Battalion
also cleared patients
from evacuation hospitals
in Rome to the 59th
Evacuation, which
functioned as a Peninsular
Base Section station
hospital at Anzio
until 23 June. By
this date more than
3,000 fixed beds were
available in the Italian
capital, so that forward
evacuation hospitals
began sending casualties
to Rome instead of
to Naples and Caserta.
During
the entire 7-month
period of the Anzio,
Cassino, and Rome-Arno
Campaigns, casualties
were evacuated from
Fifth Army hospitals
to Peninsular Base
Section installations
by ambulance, hospital
train, hospital ship,
LST, and transport
plane. The figures
are not reported by
campaigns, only on
a monthly basis. For
the period 1 January-31
August 1944 the total
was 102,298.
Medical
Supplies and Equipment
Like
the Fifth Army hospitals,
the supply dumps of
the 12th Medical Depot
Company moved forward
only after II and
VI Corps had joined
at Anzio. The company
headquarters and base
platoon and the 2d
Platoon went from
Calvi Risorta to Nocellito
on 20 April, in the
general alignment
of Fifth and Eighth
Armies. The 2d Platoon
moved forty-five miles
to Itri on 23 May,
and went on to Rome
on 9 June. Headquarters
and the base platoon
had meanwhile moved
from Nocellito to
Anzio on 5 June, where
the 1st Platoon reverted
to control of the
parent company.
The
1st Platoon was established
in Civitavecchia on
11 June, only four
days after the capture
of the city and before
the harbor had been
cleared. On 18 June,
headquarters and the
base platoon went
on to Grosseto. Ten
days later the 2d
Platoon turned over
the supply function
in Rome to Peninsular
Base Section installations
and followed the rapidly
moving army to Piombino.
The 1st Platoon was
in Cecina on 9 July.
The
12th Medical Depot
Company was reorganized
at this time, the
personnel complement
being reduced from
178 to150. The three
platoons were redesignated
the 1st, 2d, and 3d
Storage and Issue
Platoons.
Headquarters
and the 1st Storage
and Issue Platoon
moved from Grosseto
to Saline on 30 July,
where they were joined
on 14 August by the
3d Storage and Issue
Platoon. The latter
unit was established
in the vicinity of
Florence at the end
of the month.
In
all these rapid changes
of position, one platoon
of the 12th Medical
Depot Company was
always in support
of each of the two
U.S. corps engaged,
with the headquarters
group accessible to
both. The French Expeditionary
Corps had its own
system of combat medical
supply, which was
organized under the
same U.S. Table of
Organization as its
American counterpart,
and was supplied through
the same channels.
Medical
supplies were brought
up by water, air,
and truck as circumstances
dictated, with no
shortages developing
except the perennial
shortages of blankets,
litters, and pajamas
stemming from faulty
property exchange
with air evacuation
units. This shortage
was felt at all airstrips
used for evacuation,
since the incoming
planes were on other
missions, which generally
precluded the carrying
of bulky medical items.
One
of the features of
the supply system,
in the later phases
of the campaign, was
the daily arrival
of whole blood by
plane from the 15th
Medical General Laboratory.
Professional
Services in the Army
Area
The
months of March and
April 1944, when the
armies were regrouping
and re-equipping for
the crushing attack
that would carry Allied
power to the Arno
River, were used by
the Medical Department
to review past practices
and improve techniques
for the future. The
conferences and seminars
that medical officers
had been able to attend
only spasmodically
up to that time were
systematized, with
all phases of the
work of the medical
service being discussed.
Medical officers of
all levels profited
by these interchanges
before they returned
to active combat support.16
Medicine
and Surgery
Forward
Surgery- The techniques
of forward surgery
in the Rome-Arno Campaign
did not differ greatly
from those employed
during the preceding
eight months in Italy.
While there were a
number of clinical
improvements, including
a more extensive use
of penicillin and
the unrestricted availability
of whole blood in
the field hospital
platoons, the only
important administrative
change was the withdrawal
of twenty-eight teams,
or half of the entire
Complement, of the
2d Auxiliary Surgical
Group early in July
to stage for the coming
invasion of southern
France.17 The loss
of these teams was
not made up until
the next stage of
the Italian campaign.
Neuropsychiatry-
The early success
of the 3d Divisions
experiments at Anzio
in treating psychiatric
cases at the division
level led General
Martin to initiate
similar experiments
in the 88th
Division, which
had not yet been in
combat. It was hoped
that the incidence
of psychiatric casualties
could be reduced if
adequate facilities
for early treatment
existed from the start.18
The
88th Division Training
and Rehabilitation
Center was formally
established on 18
April 1944, commanded
by a line officer
with two noncommissioned
officers as assistants,
all with extensive
combat experience.
The division psychiatrist,
Capt. (later Maj.)
Joseph Slusky, acted
as consultant. The
center was attached
for rations and quarters
to the clearing company
of the 313th
Medical Battalion.
Actual operation began
on 11 May when the
division went into
combat. The procedure
was simple, but effective.
An
exhaustion or psychiatric
case admitted to the
clearing station was
examined by the division
psychiatrist, who
evaluated the severity
of the symptoms. The
patient was retained
at the clearing station
for two or three days,
where he was given
sodium amytal three
times a day after
meals. Sedation was
sufficient to ensure
adequate rest and
sleep, but not heavy
enough to keep the
patient from going
to mess and otherwise
taking care of himself.
After 24 to 48 hours
of this treatment,
the patient was again
examined by the division
psychiatrist. If he
appeared to be responding,
he was retained. If
not, he was transferred
to the Fifth Army
Neuropsychiatric Center,
operated by the 601st
Clearing Company.
The
patients who showed
improvement under
sedation were given
suggestive and supportive
therapy and turned
over to the division
Training and Rehabilitation
Center, where they
were given lectures
combined with calisthenics,
hikes, and other physical
activities, including
tactical training
with weapons. Most
were ready to return
to duty after two
days at the center.
Others were retained
for a few days longer,
while those whose
symptoms persisted
were evacuated to
the neuropsychiatric
hospital.
Each
patient was re-examined
by the division psychiatrist
before returning to
combat and was given
a final therapy session
oriented toward reassurance.
Returns to duty were
made through non-medical
channels.
The
record for the period
11 May-9 June, during
which the 88th was
in continuous combat
under particularly
difficult conditions,
showed a total of
248 psychiatric admissions
to the division Training
and Rehabilitation
Center. Of these,
141 or 56.9 percent,
were returned to duty
from the center. One
hundred and four were
evacuated to the 601st
Clearing Company,
from which 24 were
later returned to
duty. Total returns
to duty were thus
165, or 66.5 percent.
Eighty, or 32.3 percent,
were lost to the division.
Two remained under
treatment at the end
of the period, and
one was absent without
leave.
The
results of this experiment
led to an order of
2 July 1944 directing
all divisions of Fifth
Army to establish
similar training and
rehabilitation centers.
Thereafter, admissions
to the Fifth Army
Neuropsychiatric Center
were exclusively by
transfer from these
division installations.
A Fifth Army consultant
in neuropsychiatry,
Maj. (later Lt. Col.)
|