88TH
INFANTRY
DIVISION |
88th
Infantry Division
"Blue Devils" |
88TH
INFANTRY
DIVISION |
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1942 |
We
Were There
From Gruber to Brenner Pass
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97 pgs. |
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1946
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1947
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1950 |
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The
History of the 88th Infantry
Division Blue Devils
This booklet was published by
the Regiment for the troops
tro take home after the war. |
|
1945 |
Operation
of the 88th Division in the
Po Valley Campaign
15
April - 2 May 1945 |
Files
22 pgs. |
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Feb |
Mar |
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Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
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Personal
Experience of a Division G-4
Covers the operatikons of the
88th Infantry Division in the
breakthrough of the German winter
line in the Appenine Mountains
just south of Bologna, and the
Po Valley exploitation during
the Po Valley Campaign. (monograph) |
|
1946 |
The
Blue Devils Stumped the Experts
Saturday
Evening Post
Magazine
Article
7 Sep
1946 |
Files
6 pgs. |
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1947
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1950 |
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Saturday
Evening Post 7 Sep 1946, Vol.
219 Issue 10
Magazine article focuses on
the efficiency of the raw draftees
who composed the U.S. Army 88th
Infantry Division Blue Devils
in holding down a battle sector
in the Italian front. The group
was known to be the first all-draftee
division overseas and in combat.
The division led the liberating
forces into Africa and in Europe. |
|
Introduction |
The 88th
Infantry Division was the
first organized Reserve Division
to go overseas, and also the
first to enter combat. During
the time it was in combat,
from March 4 1944 to May 2
1945, the Blue Devils suffered
over four thousand battle
casualties, of whom twelve
hundred were killed in action.
|
|
|
88th
Infantry Division
"Cloverleaf"
Emblem

The
insignia was evolved
by two figures "8"
at right angles, the
result being a four-leaf
clover, representing
the four States from
which the personnel
of the division came.
It is in blue for
the infantry and machine
gun battalions, in
red for the artillery,
and in black for the
remainder of the division.
Draftees were from
Illinois, Iowa, North
Dakota and Minnesota.
|
|
|
|
Activated: |
15
July 1942 |
Overseas: |
6
December 1943 |
Campaigns:
|
Rome-Arno
North Apennines
Po Valley |
Days of combat:
|
317 |
Killed in Action: |
2,137
|
Wounded in
Action: |
8,248 |
Missing in
Action: |
521 |
Captured |
379 |
Total Casualties |
11,258
|
|
Source:
The Blue Devils in Italy |
|
Order
of Battle
349th
Infantry Regiment
350th Infantry Regiment
351st Infantry Regiment
337th Field Artillery Battalion
(105mm)
338th Field Artillery Battalion
(105mm)
339th Field Artillery Battalion
(155mm)
913th Field Artillery Battalion
(105mm)
88th Reconnaissance Troop
(Mechanized)
88th Counter Intelligence
Corps Detachment
88th Infantry Division Military
Police Platoon
88th Infantry Division Special
Troops
88th Quartermaster Company
88th Signal Company
313th Engineer Combat Battalion
313th Medical Battalion
788th Ordnance Light Maintenance
Company
442nd Infantry Regiment
(Nisei) attached Aug 44
- Sep 44 |
|
|
|
Maj.
Gen. John E. Sloan |
July
1942-September 1944 |
|
Maj. Gen. Paul
W. Kendall |
September 1944-July
1945 |
|
Brig. Gen.
James C. Fry |
July-November
1945 |
|
Maj. Gen. B.
E. Moore |
November 1945
to inactivation.
Inactivated: 24 October 1947
in Italy. |
|

Major
General
John E. Sloan
Commanding General
July 1942 - September 1944
|

Major
General
Paul W. Kendall
Commanding General
September 1944 - July 1945
|
|
|
Brigadier
General
James C. Fry
Commanding General
July 1945
|
Major
General
Bryant E. Moore
Commanding General
November 1945 |
|
1942 |
|
15
Jul - |
Activated
at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma under
the command of Major General
John E. Sloan. |
1943 |
|
Mid
Jun- |
The 88th
participated in Third Army
Louisiana Maneuvers #3. |
Late
Aug- |
The division
moved to Fort Sam Houston,
Texas. |
Nov- |
The division
stages at Camp Patrick Henry,
Virginia. |
15
Dec- |
The 88th
arrivived at Casablanca, French
Morocco from the Hampton Roads
Port of Embarcation. |
26
Dec- |
An advance
party of the 88th echelon
departed for Italy. |
28
Dec- |
The Division
moved to Magenta, Algeria
and conducted intensive training
for employment in Italy. |
1944 |
|
4
Jan- |
The division
went into the line as observers
attached to 3rd, 34th, and
36th Infantry Divisions, and
the British 5th, 46th, and
56th Divisions. |
3
Jan- |
A member
of this advance echelon became
the 88th’s first KIA when
Sergeant William A. Streuli
of Paterson, New Jersey (a
forward observer in B/339th
Field Artillery Battalion)
was killed by fragments from
a bomb dropped by a Luftwaffe
aircraft in the 34th Infantry
Division sector. Lieutenant
Elwin Ricketts, Battery B
Executive Officer, became
the first WIA when he was
wounded in the same attack. |
6
Feb- |
The main
body of the 88th was transported
to Italy in early February
and concentrated around Piedimonte
d'Alife for combat training. |
27
Feb- |
The first
88th Division unit into the
line was 2nd Battalion, 351st
Infantry, which relieved elements
of the Texas Division’s 141st
Infantry Regiment near Cervaro. |
28
Feb- |
The first
artillery round fired in combat
by an 88th DIVARTY unit was
sent downrange by Battery
C, 913th Field Artillery Battalion.
It's target was a registration
point at the Monte Cassino
Abbey, the rubble of which
was occupied by the Germans
after the Allies bombed it. |
4
Mar- |
The entire
Division moved into the line
at 1000 hours. |
5
Mar- |
The division
assumed responsibility for
the sector previously occupied
by the British 5th Division.
At the same time, the 88th
came under the control of
the British X Corps, and deployed
its three infantry regiments
on line from the Mediterranean
into the foothills to the
east. Opposing the 88th in
the strong fortified positions
of the Gustav Line, were the
German 71st and 94th Infantry
Divisions. The Blue Devil
infantry spent the next two
months occupying and improving
defensive positions and patrolling,
while DIVARTY fired harassing
and interdiction missions
at German positions and suspected
and known lines of communication. |
11
May- |
At 2300 the
Allied front in Italy began
their last attack on the Gustav
Line with the the 88th. In
less than an hour, the 350th
Infantry Regiment captured
Mt. Damiano, key terrain overlooking
the flank of the French units
attacking on the Division’s
right. |
12
May- |
In that
action, Staff Sergeant Charles
W. Shea of F/350th took charge
of his platoon after the platoon
leader was killed and the
platoon sergeant was wounded,
and led an assault which knocked
the defenders out of their
well-prepared positions. For
his actions that day, Staff
Sergeant Shea became the first
Blue Devil to earn the Medal
of Honor. |
11-14
May- |
The rest
of the Division also pushed
hard and forced the stubborn
foe off the Gustav Line. The
351st Infantry stormed into
Santa Maria Infante and engaged
in a particularly bitter battle
with the German defenders
there. After more than two
days of vicious combat, the
351st seized Santa Maria. |
11
May- |
The 88th
drove north to take Spigno,
Mount Civita, Itri, Fondi,
and Roccagorga. As the 349th
Infantry Regiment passed through
the 351st and continued the
attack to the north, the 88th’s
operations took on aspects
of a pursuit. Through towns
like Itri, Fondi, and Roccgorga,
the Blue Devils drove on toward
Rome, effectively destroying
the German 94th Infantry Division
in the process. So badly battered
was the 94th that it had to
be withdrawn to Germany for
reconstitution, and did not
return to combat until October. |
29
May- |
Elements
of the 88th made contact with
Allied units breaking out
of the Anzio beachhead, reached
Anzio on 29 May, and pursued
the enemy into Rome. |
4
Jun- |
Elements
of the 88th were the first
to enter the Rome. After the
fall of Rome, the 88th was
pulled out of the line to
refit and prepare for subsequent
operations. |
11
Jun- |
After continuing
across the Tiber to Bassanelio
the 88th retired for rest
and training. |
5
Jul- |
The Division
went into defensive positions
near Pomerance and relieved
the 1st Armored Division in
the vicinity. |
8
Jul- |
The Division
attacked Volterra at 0500
with the 349th and 350th Infantry
Regiments abreast, with the
351st in reserve. Intending
to envelop the objective from
both sides, the attack successfully
drove the defenders of the
veteran 90th Panzer Grenadier
Division from their choice
terrain. Volterra was secure
by 2200 hours. |
9
Jul- |
While performing
security duties on the Division’s
left flank, the 351st Infantry
Regiment unexpectedly ran
into a hornet’s nest near
Laiatico on 9 July. Here,
the regiment encountered Grenadier
Regiment 1060, an element
of the recently-disbanded
92nd Infantry Division now
attached to the 362nd Infantry
Division, as well as other
elements of the 90th Panzer
Grenadiers. |
12
Jul- |
The 351st
Regiment attacked again on
the 12th with the 2nd and
3rd Battalions up and the
1st in reserve. The 3rd Battalion
tore into the 1060th’s 1st
Battalion, destroying it and
killing the enemy battalion
commander. |
13
Jul- |
All regimental
objectives were secure; for
its part in the attack, the
3rd Battalion, 351st Infantry
Regiment was later awarded
the Distinguished Unit Citation. |
13
Jul- |
Villamagna
fell. |
20
Jul- |
The Arno
River was crossed. |
25
Jul- |
By 25 July,
the Fifth Army’s offensive
power had been spent; the
loss of VI Corps and its veteran
3rd, 36th, and 45th Infantry
Divisions to the impending
invasion of Southern France
prevented it from continuing
the drive further to the north.
The removal of the French
Expeditionary Corps for participation
in the same operation also
diminished Allied combat power
in Italy. Above the Arno,
the units of the Germans’
Army Group Southwest were
finishing their preparations
for defense of the Gothic
Line, and the Allied forces
of the US Fifth and British
Eighth Armies were going to
require every ounce of power
they could muster to breach
the heavily fortified line
in the mountains that ran
from the Ligurian coast in
the east to the Adriatic in
the west. |
Aug- |
Major General
Sloan was transferred first
to a hospital in Italy, then
to the States for treatment
of a recurring disease. General
Sloan was succeeded by the
Division’s Assistant Commander,
Brigadier General Paul W.
Kendall. |
10
Sep- |
Allied forces
in Italy attacked toward the
Gothic Line and penetrated
it in the central and Adriatic
sectors. |
21 Sep- |
After a period
of rest and training, the
Division opened its assault
on the Gothic Line and advanced
rapidly along the Firenzuola-Imola
road, taking Mount Battaglianear
near Casola Valsenio on the
28th. |
27
Sep- |
The 2nd Battalion
- 351st Infantry Regiment
earns the Distinguished Unit
Citation for Monte Cappello.
The fighting raged for days,
sometimes literally at bayonet
point,until the 1st and 2nd
Battalions secured the top
of the mountain. |
27-28
Sep- |
Captain Robert
Roeder, CO of Company G, was
awarded the Medal of Honor
for his actions at Monte Battaglia. |
27
Sep- |
The 2nd Battalion
- 350th Infantry Regiment
earns the Distinguished Unit
Citation for Monte Battaglia. |
30
Sep- |
The 349th
Infantry Regiment attack the
village of Belvedere enroute
to its objective, Mt. Grande. |
20-22
Oct- |
The enemy
counterattacked savagely
and heavy fighting continued
on the line toward the Po
Valley. The strategic positions
of Mount Grande and Farnetto
were taken on 20 and 22
October. |
24
Oct- |
Company
G, 351st came closest to breaking
through, but was literally
wiped out at Vedriano, southeast
of Bologna, on 24 October. |
26
Oct-
|
The 88th
went over to the defensive
in late October patrolling
in the Mount Grande-Mount
Cerrere sector and the Mount
Fano improved positions,
and rehabilitated its combat
troops. |
22
Nov- |
The Division
relieved the 85th Infantry
Division in its sector. |
1945 |
|
13
Jan- |
The Division
was relieved for general rehabilitation. |
24
Jan- |
The division
was committed in relief
of the 91st Infantry Division
near Loiano and Livergnano
and after more patrolling
and maintenance of defensive
positions, the Division
was pulled out of the line
again for further rehabilitation
and special training for
the impending spring offensive
to 2 Mar. |
1
Apr- |
That offensive,
which would finally defeat
the Wehrmacht in Italy,
commenced with a supporting
attack by the 92nd Infantry
Division on the Ligurian
coast in the west to draw
German forces away from
the point of the impending
main effort. |
9
Apr- |
Another supporting
attack, in much greater strength,
was launched by the British
Eighth Army on the Adriatic
coast on 9 April. Finally,
with the German reserves being
decisively committed to meet
these attacks at the extreme
ends of the line in Italy,
on 14 April, Fifth Army jumped
off in the main attack against
the German center. |
15
Apr- |
The 88th’s
attack began at 2230 hours
on 15 April, as its infantry
regiments lunged toward
Monterumici. In two days
the Blue Devils knocked
the German defenders off
the key ridge. |
17
Apr- |
Monterumici
fell on the 17th after an
intense barrage. |
24
Apr- |
The Po
River was crossed as the
88th pursued the enemy toward
the Alps. |
25
Apr- |
Verona
fell. |
28 Apr- |
Vicenza
fell. |
2
May- |
The 88th
was driving through the
Dolomite Alps toward Innsbruck,
Austria to link up with
the 103rd Infantry Division,
when the hostilities ended
on 2 May 1945. German forces
in Italy surrendered although
it took until early the
next day to notify all Blue
Devil units of the capitulation. |
4
May- |
Elements
of the 349th Infantry Regiment
linked up with units from
the 103rd Infantry Division’s
409th Infantry Regiment coming
down from Austria where German
forces had yet to surrender
in the Brenner Pass. |
7
Jun- |
The 88th
Division assumed POW Command
duties to repatriate a minimum
of 100,000 Germans and to
form an estimated 120,000
of them into service units.
POW strength figures at
the time indicated that
the 88th Division had approximately
295,000 Germans available
to accomplish this dual
mission. Later figures raised
this total above 320,000
as Germans came in out of
the hills, unguarded German
service units were discovered
and taken over, and responsibility
for the Czech PWs was transferred
from the Fifth Army to the
Division. |
1947
- 1954 |
The
88th in Occupation and the
Free Territory of Trieste
Trust Period.
TRUST stands for Trieste
United States Troops, the
5,000 man U.S. contingent
based in the Free Terrority
of Trieste created in 1947.
The Free State was established
in 1947 in order to accomodate
an ethnically and culturally
mixed population in a neutral
country between Italy and
Yugoslavia.
After
the war, the 88th Infantry
Division on occupation duty
in Italy guarded the Morgan
Line from positions in Italy
and Trieste until 15 September
1947. It was then withdrawn
to Livorno and inactivated.
The 351st Infantry was relieved
from assignment to the division
on 1 May 1947 and served
as the main component of
a garrison command in the
Free Territory of Trieste,
securing the disputed border
between Italy and Yugoslavia.
The
command served as the front
line in the Cold War from
1947 to 1954, including
confrontations with Yugoslavian
forces. In October 1954
the territory was ceded
to Italy and administration
turned over to the Italian
Army.
TRUST
units, which included a
number of 88th divisional
support units, all bore
a unit patch which was the
coat of arms of the Free
Territory of Trieste superimposed
over the divisional quarterfoil,
over which was a blue scroll
containing the designation
"TRUST" in white." |
|
History
of the
88th Infantry Division
"Blue Devils"
The 88th Infantry
Division was activated at Camp
Gruber, Oklahoma on 15 July
1942 under the command of Major
General John E. Sloan. On that
day, standing on the dusty,
hot parade ground, on behalf
of the fledgling Division, General
Sloan accepted the challenge
from the President of the 88th
Division Veterans Association
to, “take up the job we
didn’t get done.”
In
response, referring to the
Great War veterans present,
General Sloan assured onlookers
that, “their faith will
be sustained, their record
maintained and the glory of
the colors never will be sullied
as long as one man of the
88th still lives.”
It was a solemn
and demanding pledge, but
one that the men of the 88th
would keep through some of
the hardest-fought battles
of the Second World War.
General Sloan
drove the soldiers of the
88th hard, from activation
throughout all of its pre-deployment
training. Comprised overwhelmingly
of draftees, after basic training
for the Division’s recruits,
small unit training was conducted
at Camp Gruber. Next, the
88th participated in Third
Army Louisiana Maneuvers #3
from mid-June 1943, and moved
to Fort Sam Houston, Texas,
in late August before staging
Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia
in November. From the Hampton
Roads Port of Embarcation,
the 88th sailed for North
Africa, arriving in Casablanca,
French Morocco, on 15 December.
The Division
next moved to Algeria just
before the end of the year,
and conducted intensive training
for employment in Italy. Under
the command of the Assistant
Division Commander, Brigadier
General Paul W. Kendall, an
advance party departed for
Italy on 26 December, and
went into the line as observers
on 4-5 January, attached to
3rd, 34th, and 36th Infantry
Divisions, and the British
5th, 46th, and 56th Divisions.
On 3 January 1944, a member
of this advance echelon became
the 88th’s first KIA
when Sergeant William A. Streuli
of Paterson, New Jersey (A
forward observer in B/339th
Field Artillery Battalion)
was killed by fragments from
a bomb dropped by a Luftwaffe
aircraft in the 34th Infantry
Division sector. Lieutenant
Elwin Ricketts, Battery B
Executive Officer, became
the first WIA when he was
wounded in the same attack.
The main body
of the 88th was transported
to Italy in early February
1944, arriving in the Naples
area in increments as they
were ferried across from Oran,
Algeria. The first Division
unit into the line was 2nd
Battalion, 351st Infantry,
which relieved elements of
the Texas Division’s
141st Infantry Regiment near
Cervaro on 27 February. Early
the next day, firing in support
of a French unit, the first
artillery round fired in combat
by an 88th DIVARTY unit was
sent downrange by Battery
C, 913th Field Artillery Battalion.
Its target was a registration
point at the Monte Cassino
Abbey, the rubble of which
was occupied by the Germans
after the Allies bombed it,
and not before.
The entire
Division moved into the line
on 4 March, and at 1000 hours
on 5 March 1944 assumed responsibility
for the sector previously
occupied by the British 5th
Division. At the same time,
the 88th came under the control
of the British X Corps, and
deployed its three infantry
regiments on line from the
Mediterranean into the foothills
to the east. Opposing the
88th in the strong fortified
positions of the Gustav Line,
were the German 71st and 94th
Infantry Divisions.
The Blue Devil
infantry spent the next two
months occupying and improving
defensive positions and patrolling,
while DIVARTY fired harassing
and interdiction missions
at German positions and suspected
and known lines of communication.
At 2300 on
11 May, American, British,
British Commonwealth, French,
and Polish guns began a massive
barrage, behind which the
entire Allied front in Italy
began their last attack on
the Gustav Line. Finally,
the first US Army division
comprised primarily of draftees
would be tested in the crucible
of a major operation.
In less than
an hour, the 350th Infantry
Regiment captured Mt. Damiano,
key terrain overlooking the
flank of the French units
attacking on the Division’s
right. In that action, Staff
Sergeant Charles W. Shea of
F/350th took charge of his
platoon after the platoon
leader was killed and the
platoon sergeant was wounded,
and led an assault which knocked
the defenders out of their
well-prepared positions. For
his actions that day, Staff
Sergeant Shea became the first
Blue Devil to earn the Medal
of Honor.
The rest of
the Division also pushed hard
and forced the stubborn foe
off the Gustav Line. The 351st
Infantry stormed into Santa
Maria Infante and engaged
in a particularly bitter battle
with the German defenders
there. After more than two
days of vicious combat, the
351st seized Santa Maria,
and any doubts that a well-trained
“draftee division”
could fight as well as Regular
Army or National Guard units
were dispelled.
As the 349th
Infantry Regiment passed through
the 351st and continued the
attack to the north, the 88th’s
operations took on aspects
of a pursuit, one of the most
challenging—and exhausting—missions
possible for an infantry unit
in mountains. Yet the elements
of the Division doggedly pursued
the withdrawing Germans, annihilating
them where they chose to stand,
and chasing them up and over
the endless Italian hills.
Through towns like Itri, Fondi,
and Roccgorga, the Blue Devils
drove on toward Rome, effectively
destroying the German 94th
Infantry Division in the process.
So badly battered was the
94th that it had to be withdrawn
to Germany for reconstitution,
and did not return to combat
until October.
Surging northward,
elements of the 88th made
contact with Allied units
breaking out of the Anzio
beachhead on 29 May, and were
the first to enter the “Eternal
City”—Rome—
on 4 June.
After the
fall of Rome, the 88th was
pulled out of the line to
refit and prepare for subsequent
operations. Those operations
began on 5 July, when the
Division relieved the 1st
Armored Division in the vicinity
of Pomerance.
As the British,
British Commonwealth, and
French colonial forces opened
their drive to the Germans’
next line of defense, the
Gothic Line above the River
Arno, they attacked on the
east of the 88th toward Firenze.
At the same time, other US
forces attacked toward Livorno
on the west coast. Between
these, the 88th was ordered
to seize Volterra, an ancient
Etruscan fortress town with
a spectacular view of its
approaches for miles around.
The Division
attacked Volterra at 0500
on 8 July with the 349th and
350th Infantry Regiments abreast,
with the 351st in reserve.
Intending to envelop the objective
from both sides, the attack
successfully drove the defenders
of the veteran 90th Panzer
Grenadier Division from their
choice terrain. Volterra was
secure by 2200 hours.
While performing
security duties on the Division’s
left flank, the 351st Infantry
Regiment unexpectedly ran
into a hornet’s nest
near Laiatico on 9 July. Here,
the regiment encountered Grenadier
Regiment 1060, an element
of the recently-disbanded
92nd Infantry Division now
attached to the 362nd Infantry
Division, as well as other
elements of the 90th Panzer
Grenadiers. After being initially
repulsed on 11 July, the regiment
attacked again on the 12th
with the 2nd and 3rd Battalions
up and the 1st in reserve.
The 3rd Battalion tore into
the 1060th’s 1st Battalion,
destroying it and killing
the enemy battalion commander.
By the early morning of 13
July, all regimental objectives
were secure; for its part
in the attack, the 3rd Battalion,
351st Infantry Regiment was
later awarded the Distinguished
Unit Citation.
By 25 July,
the Fifth Army’s offensive
power had been spent; the
loss of VI Corps and its veteran
3rd, 36th, and 45th Infantry
Divisions to the impending
invasion of Southern France
prevented it from continuing
the drive further to the north.
The removal of the French
Expeditionary Corps for participation
in the same operation also
diminished Allied combat power
in Italy. Above the Arno,
the units of the Germans’
Army Group Southwest were
finishing their preparations
for defense of the Gothic
Line, and the Allied forces
of the US Fifth and British
Eighth Armies were going to
require every ounce of power
they could muster to breach
the heavily fortified line
in the mountains that ran
from the Ligurian coast in
the east to the Adriatic in
the west.
Perhaps the
most significant change in
the 88th’s history to
that point occurred in August
1944, when Major General Sloan
was transferred first to a
hospital in Italy, then to
the States for treatment of
a recurring disease. General
Sloan had built the division
from activation through all
of its training, and had led
the 88th into combat. A tough
and demanding trainer, his
insistence on excellence had
paid off in victory and saved
lives…and proven that
the US Army’s divisions
made up primarily of conscripts—the
largest category of units,
just coming into the line
in 1944—could be highly
effective on the battlefield.
General Sloan
was succeeded by the Division’s
Assistant Commander, Brigadier
General Paul W. Kendall. Kendall
had served with the 88th through
stateside training and had
established a very visible
presence throughout the Division’s
combat to that point. His
succession to Division command
seemed only natural to the
most of the Blue Devils, and
while General Sloan would
be missed, the turbulence
inevitably created by the
departure of any respected
and experienced leader was
certainly greatly attenuated
by General Kendall’s
assumption of command.
Allied forces
in Italy attacked toward the
Gothic Line on 10 September,
and penetrated it in the central
and Adriatic sectors, but
the Germans remained ensconced
in their mountain fortifications
in the west, and it was up
to the Blue Devils to drive
them out in their zone. The
Division’s history,
The Blue Devils in Italy,
sums up the Gothic Line assault
this way....
Each
veteran and survivor has
his own personal tale
of horror, his own nightmare
of those forty-four days
and nights which blended
together in one long drawn-out
hell. It has been said
that ‘all the mornings
were dark, all the days
were just different colors
of gray and all the nights
were black.’ And
all the time up in those
mountains north of Florence
was just borrowed time.
The terrain was so rough
the Germans figured that
no troops in the world
could get through the
few heavily defended mountain
passes. But the Blue Devils
made it, through the passes
or over the mountain tops.
The weather was so bad
that the Germans thought
no foot soldiers or vehicles
could possibly operate
in the mud and slime.
But the Blue Devils walked
and rode through the worst
of it. The defenses and
concrete, mined emplacements
were so formidable that
the Germans estimated
they were impregnable.
But the Blue Devils stormed
and shattered the biggest
and the best of them. |
Perhaps the
most spectacular fighting
of that raw, rainy autumn
took place on three craggy
mountain peaks in late September
and early October. On 27 September,
elements of the 350th Infantry
Regiment linked up with Italian
partisans and occupied Mt.
Battaglia without opposition.
However, over the next six
days, the “Green Devils”
of the German 1st Parachute
Division attacked fiercely
and without surcease in an
effort to seize this key terrain.
Their efforts were in vain,
however, as the 350th committed
everything it had, including
headquarters clerks, and threw
back every assault to retain
the critical mountain top.
Casualties were grave—50%
of the regiment, with all
but one company commander
killed or wounded—and
acts of extraordinary valor
had been almost common. For
its part in the brutal fighting
on Mt. Battaglia, the 2nd
Battalion, 350th Infantry
was later awarded the Distinguished
Unit Citation, and for his
gallantry and intrepidity—at
the cost of his life—Captain
Robert Roeder, CO of Company
G, was awarded the Medal of
Honor.
While the
350th was grimly holding on
to Mt. Battaglia, the 349th
Infantry Regiment was attacking
the village of Belvedere enroute
to its objective, Mt. Grande.
At Belvedere, it earned laurels
of its own, if from a distinctly
different source. Referring
to the 349th’s assault,
a German officer captured
in the fighting there remarked
to his captors that, “In
nine years of service, I have
fought in Poland, Russia,
and Italy—never have
I seen such spirit I would
be the proudest man in the
world if I could command a
unit such as the one which
took Belvedere.” Few
comments could be more telling
than a profound compliment
from an opponent. Even as
the “Kraut Killers”
(349th) and “Battle
Mountain” (350th) regiments
were engaged in these ferocious
and costly actions, the 351st
Infantry Regiment was locked
in its own ferocious struggle
for Mt. Capello. As the author
of The Blue Devils in Italy
put it, “The battle
for Capello…was a struggle
between German soldiers who
would not withdraw and American
troops who would not be stopped.”
The fighting raged for days,
sometimes literally at bayonet
point,until the 1st and 2nd
Battalions secured the top
of the mountain. For its part
in the battle, the 2nd Battalion,
351st Infantry Regiment was
later awarded the Distinguished
Unit Citation.
Opposed by
elements of the Luftwaffe’s
elite 1st Parachute Division
(the defenders of Monte Cassino
earlier in the year), the
88th slugged forward through
seemingly endless mountains
toward the Po Plain. In the
total of 44 days of rain,
mud, terror, ferocity, and
blood that was the campaign
in the North Appenines for
the Blue Devils, there were
many tactical victories, but
no ultimate operational success.
Like the rest of the fighting
elements of the Fifth Army,
the Division’s soldiers
were just too exhausted to
push further. Company G, 351st
came closest to breaking through,
but was literally wiped out
at Vedriano, on the very verge
of the Po Valley southeast
of Bologna, on 24 October.
The 88th went
over to the defensive in late
October and patrolled, improved
positions, and rehabilitated
its combat troops as best
it could through the oncoming
winter of 1944-45. The Division
relieved the 85th Infantry
Division in its sector on
22 November, and was in turn
itself relieved for general
rehabilitation on 13 January.
After a brief
interval out of the line,
the Blue Devils were again
committed on 24 January in
relief of the 91st Infantry
Division near Loiano and Livergnano.
After more patrolling and
maintenance of defensive positions,
the Division was pulled out
of the line again for further
rehabilitation, but also special
training intended to prepare
it for the impending spring
offensive.
That offensive,
which would finally defeat
the Wehrmacht in Italy, commenced
on April Fool’s Day
with a supporting attack by
the 92nd Infantry Division
on the Ligurian coast in the
west to draw German forces
away from the point of the
impending main effort.
Another supporting
attack, in much greater strength,
was launched by the British
Eighth Army on the Adriatic
coast on 9 April. Finally,
with the German reserves being
decisively committed to meet
these attacks at the extreme
ends of the line in Italy,
on 14 April, Fifth Army jumped
off in the main attack against
the German center.
The 88th’s
attack began at 2230 hours
on 15 April, as its infantry
regiments lunged toward Monterumici.
In two days of fearsome fighting,
the Blue Devils knocked the
German defenders off the key
ridge; they could not have
known it at the time, but
the German defense of Monterumici
was the last well-organized
resistance that the 88th would
encounter.
Once past
Monterumici, the 88th was
on its way across the Po and
to the Alps. Verona fell on
25 April, followed by Vicenza
three days later. German forces
in Italy surrendered on 2
May, although it took until
early the next day to notify
all Blue Devil units of the
capitulation. On 4 May, elements
of the 349th Infantry Regiment
linked up with units from
the 103rd Infantry Division’s
409th Infantry Regiment coming
down from Austria—where
German forces had yet to surrender—in
the Brenner Pass, marking
the long-sought union of Allied
forces attacking from Italy
with those which had originally
landed in France and fought
their wary through the Reich.
The Blue Devil
Division’s accomplishments
in its 344 days in combat
reflect the valor, commitment,
and unwavering devotion to
duty of its soldiers. Not
on ly did the 88th earn high
praise from the likes of General
Mark Clark, Commanding General
of Fifth Army and a widely-recognized
hard taskmaster, but it was
even grudgingly admired by
experienced enemy senior officers.
Generalmajor Karl-Lothar Schulz,
Commanding General of the
famed 1st Parachute Division
and one of only 159 recipients
of the Knight’s Cross
with Oak Leaf and Swords,
told his interrogators, “the
88th Division is the best
Division we have ever fought
against.” A written
estimate of enemy unit effectiveness
prepared by German intelligence
echoed Schulz’s sentiments.
It rated the 88th, “a
very good division with excellent
fighting material.”
It also noted that after VI
Corps departed for France
that the 88th was “the
best US division in Italy,”
with “very good leadership.”
In its 344
days of combat, the 88th Infantry
Division lost 2,298 men killed
in action (258 more died of
wounds) and 9,225 men wounded.
Although the cost was high,
the Blue Devils—as the
first of the “draftee
divisions” to see combat—proved
that well-trained, well-led
American citizen-soldiers
were equal or superior to
anything the vaunted Wehrmacht
could muster, under even the
most arduous of circumstances.
With the victory to which
they contributed so much accomplished,
their General Sloan’s
pledge to keep faith with
the Division’s veterans
and to uphold the Division’s
standards was fulfilled.
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Distinguished
Unit
Citations |
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2nd
Battalion, 350th Infantry
Regiment 
2nd Battalion,
351st Infantry Regiment

3rd
Battalion, 351st Infantry
Regiment 
Awarded
in the name of the President
of the United States (and
later redesignated the “Presidential
Unit Citation”), this
award was created during
WWII to recognize units
for a collective display
of extraordinary heroism.
The degree of heroism required
is the same as that which
would warrant the award
of the Distinguished Service
Cross to an individual.
The Distinguished Unit Emblem
may be worn by all soldiers
who were assigned, or permanently
attached and present for
duty as members of the unit
in the action for which
it was cited. Persons who
join the unit later may
wear the emblem while serving
with the unit. The emblem
is a blue ribbon set in
a gold-colored metal frame
of laurel leaves.
As evidence
of the award, the unit displays
a dark blue streamer, with
the name of the action embroidered
in white, with its colors
or guidon.
The following
88th Infantry Division units
were awarded Distinguished
Unit Citations in recognition
of their collective heroism
in the actions listed. |
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The
Distinguished Unit Citation for
2nd Battalion,
350th Infantry Regiment
Is authorized by War Department
General Order 10, 1945
The 2nd Battalion,
350th Infantry Regiment is cited for
outstanding performance of duty in
action during the period 27 September
to 3 October 1944 at Mt. Battaglia,
Italy. The 2nd Battalion was assigned
the mission of seizing and holding
strategic Mt. Battaglia. For seven
days, in the face of incessant and
violent counterattacks by powerful
enemy forces, which at times included
elements of four divisions, this battalion
clung tenaciously to its positions
on the objective. Each attack was
preceded by artillery and mortar barrages
and climaxed by bitter fire fights,
use of flamethrowers by the enemy,
hand-to-hand combat, bayonet charges,
and grenade duels. The gallant officers
and men of this battalion repulsed
each attack with a marked display
of fighting ability and teamwork.
Evacuation of the wounded was extremely
difficult because of the inclement
weather conditions, the nature of
the terrain, and the fact that the
enemy artillery firing from the front
and both flanks, covered every route
of approach to Mt. Battaglia with
a hail of fire. Nevertheless, all
casualties were promptly evacuated
by teams of litter bearers who courageously
transported the wounded for long distances
through artillery barrages to a point
in the rear where further evacuation
could be carried on by ambulances.
All supplies were brought to the battalion's
positions by pack mules supplemented
by carrying parties. On several occasions
the ammunition supply became dangerously
low, and when the men exhausted their
hand grenades, they resorted to throwing
rocks at the oncoming enemy. Though
fighting under the most adverse battle
conditions, the officers and men of
this battalion displayed an indomitable
spirit that refused to waver under
the fiercest enemy attacks. The outstanding
fighting ability and magnificent courage
displayed by the 2nd Battalion, 350th
Infantry Regiment are exemplary of
the finest traditions of the Army
of the United States.
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The Distinguished Unit Citation for
2nd
Battalion, 351st Infantry Regiment
Is authorized by War Department General
Order 43, 1946
The 2nd Battalion,
351st Infantry Regiment is cited for
outstanding performance of duty in
action during the period 27 September
to 1 October 1944, near mt. Capello,
Itlay. The battalion was assigned
the mission of wresting the strategically
important Mt. Capello from a determined
and numerically superior German force.
In the face of a withering hail of
fire from all types of weapons, the
2nd Battalion launched its attack
down the barren, forward slopes of
Mt.Guasteto, Italy, eliminating a
strong reverse slope German position
in four violent assaults characterized
by bitter fire fights and vicious
hand-to-hand grenade duels. Although
outnumbered, the soldiers of this
organization maintained their captured
position, despite ruthless enemy counterattacks
preceded by intense artillery and
mortar barrages. Although suffering
from severe losses and confronted
by fanatical enemy resistance, the
courageous officers and men of the
2nd Battalion again resumed a full
scale offensive and, advancing by
infiltration, neutralizing resistance
by furious hand-to-hand fighting within
the German positions, gained a foothold
on the barren slopes of Mt. Capello.
Setting a commendable example of coolness
and efficiency in the face of great
danger, the 2nd Battalion fought grimly,
tenaciously maintaining its foothold,
despite the murderous enemy fire and
wave after wave of fresh enemy assault
troops. In a notable display of combat
skill, teamwork, and determination,
the men of the 2nd Battalion, because
of a shortage of ammunition, resorted
to using captured German machine guns
and grenades to meet the enemy onslaughts.
Utilizing personnel from battalion
headquarters as riflemen, because
of its heavily depleted effective
strength, the battalion, in a final
all-out assault, drove the enemy from
Mt. Capello, retaining this strategic
terrain feature, despite final desperate
enemy counterattacks. The timely capture
of this key enemy position frustrated
violent enemy efforts to hold terrain
of vital importance. A dangerous enemy
penetration between the 351st Infantry
Regiment and another hard-pressed
infantry regiment on the right was
averted by the heroic determination,
self-sacrifice, and unfailing devotion
to duty of the officers and men of
the 2nd Battalion, 351st Infantry
Regiment. The valorous performance
of the 2nd Battalion, 351st Infantry
Regiment, reflects great credit on
the personnel of the regiment and
upon the armed forces of the United
States.

Lieutenant
General John Lee, Commanding General
of US Army Forces in the Mediterranean
Theater, fastens the Distinguished
Unit Citation Streamer to the colors
of the 2nd Battalion 351st Infantry
Regiment. |

The Distinguished Unit Citation for
3rd
Battalion, 351st Infantry Regiment
Is authorized by War Department General
Order 6, 1945
The 3rd Battalion,
351st Infantry Regiment, is cited
for outstanding performance of duty
in action during the period 9 to 13
Jnly 1944 in the vicinity of Laiatico,
Italy. During the attack on strongly
fortified German positions in the
vicinity of Laiatico, the 3rd Battalion
occupied an advanced position devoid
of cover and with both flanks exposed,
and for three days withstood heavy
enemy artillery and mortar bombardments
as well as three vicious enemy counterattacks
supported by tanks. Displaying courage,
skill, and determined fighting spirit,
the battalion frustrated all enemy
efforts to defend the town and surrounding
strategic positions. On the fourth
day, the battalion launched a night
attack and penetrated the German stronghold
from the flanks and rear. Aggressively
exploiting its breakthrough, the battalion
seized a German regimental command
post after a savage hand-to-hand struggle
in the darkness and cut the main escape
route from the Laiatico hill mass.
As a result of the 3rd Battalion's
prodigious efforts, 425 prisoners
were taken, 250 Germans were killed
or wounded, and a large quantity of
enemy weapons were captured which
were promptly employed with telling
effect against the battered German
forces. The timely capture of this
key enemy defensive position compelled
the Germans to abandon a carefully
prepared, strongly defended line and
opened the route of advance to the
Arno River. The fearlessness, heroic
determinations and aggressive lighting
spirit of the officers and men of
the 3rd Battalion, 351st Infantry
Regiment, resulted in a performance
which brings honor to the armed forces
of the United States. |
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