Naples-Foggia
9 September 1943-21 January
1944
The summer of 1943 found the Allies optimistic about ultimate
victory. They had eliminated the Axis Powers in North
Africa, and their Sicilian campaign was going well. The
Russians had blunted the German offensive, and the Allied
Combined Bomber Offensive, designed to weaken German industrial
capacity, was gaining momentum. Although German U-boats
continued to operate in the Atlantic, they did so at increasing
risk to themselves and with gradually decreasing effectiveness.
In the Pacific, the Japanese were on the defensive. Allied
forces were advancing on New Guinea and New Georgia, and
the Japanese had withdrawn from the Aleutians. Only in
the China-Burma-India theater was the situation relatively
stagnant. The approval by the American and British Combined
Chiefs of Staff (CCS) on 26 July 1943 of an invasion of
the Italian mainland signaled an Allied return to the
European continent for the first time since 1940.
Strategic Setting
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Winston S. Churchill had met at Casablanca in January
1943 to discuss global strategy. Despite continued support
for the "Germany-first" policy adopted at the December
1941 Arcadia Conference, agreement on how to achieve
that goal was far from unanimous. Churchill urged expansion
of Allied operations in the Mediterranean. Roosevelt
wanted to undertake the massive buildup of men and equipment
needed for the cross-Channel invasion of France. Soviet
leader Joseph Stalin, preoccupied with the battle for
Stalingrad, was demanding immediate military initiatives
to draw German forces out of Russia. Thus for political,
strategic, operational, and logistical reasons, the
Allied leaders at Casablanca agreed to invade Sicily
(Operation HUSKY) in order to secure Mediterranean lines
of communications and resupply, divert German forces
from the Russian front, and drive Italy out of the war.
In May 1943 at the Trident Conference in Washington,
Allied leaders further clarified their strategy. Reluctantly,
the Americans agreed that a cross-Channel invasion (Operation
OVERLORD) was not feasible in 1943. The leaders confirmed
their decisions regarding Operation HUSKY and their
commitment to drive Italy from the war. The Combined
Chiefs of Staff directed General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
commanding Allied forces in the Mediterranean, to prepare
options for continuing the war in southern Europe after
overrunning Sicily.
Eisenhower's staff considered three primary courses
of action. U.S. planners wanted to move from Sicily
through Corsica and Sardinia into southern France. This
option would support the cross-Channel invasion by engaging
Axis forces in southern France, but might not drive
Italy out of the war. British planners favored a thrust
through Italy into the Adriatic area to support partisans
in the Balkans, bring Turkey into the war on the Allied
side, and shorten the lend-lease route to Russia. The
third option, a thrust up the Italian peninsula, would
tie down German forces, provide airfields for attacks
on Germany and the Balkans, and probably force Italy
out of the war. The latter course would remove twenty-nine
Italian divisions from the Balkans and five from France,
thus requiring Germany to provide troops to replace
the Italian garrison divisions. The visit of Churchill
and Army Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall to
Eisenhower late in May eliminated the Adriatic option.
With a final decision delayed, Eisenhower designated
two separate headquarters to work on plans for operations
after Sicily. One was to plan for an invasion of the
Italian mainland, the other for an invasion of Sardinia.
The invasion of Sicily on 10 July exceeded the Allies'
most optimistic expectations. Their forces suffered
lighter than expected casualties and made significant
progress in the first week of the campaign. On the basis
of Allied successes and reports of the Italian Army's
disintegration, General Marshall on 16 July proposed
a bold initiative to seize the port of Naples and the
airfields at Foggia, some fifty miles northeast, followed
by a drive on Rome. The concept was codenamed AVALANCHE.
Eisenhower's staff believed that an attack by the British
Eighth Army across the Strait of Messina and into the
Calabria area (Operation BAYTOWN) was a logical follow-on
to HUSKY. Allied resolve to attack the Italian mainland
was strengthened by the 25 July 1943 announcement that
King Victor Emmanuel III had removed Benito Mussolini
from power and appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio to
replace him. Eisenhower made his final decision on 16
August. The British Eighth Army would attack across
the Strait of Messina between 1 and 4 September and
tie down forces which might otherwise be used to oppose
an amphibious assault farther north. Approximately one
week later, on 9 September, Lt. Gen. Mark Clark's Fifth
Army would execute Operation AVALANCHE, an amphibious
landing near Naples.
Although Marshall had suggested Naples as the assault
site because of its port facilities, AVALANCHE planners
had to look elsewhere. A primary consideration was the
range of Allied fighter aircraft, which could not operate
effectively over Naples because of the distance from
their Sicilian bases. Additionally, the beaches near
Naples were unsuitable for landing operations. The adjacent
terrain, particularly the slopes of Mount Vesuvius,
dominated the shore, and heavily fortified positions
blocked routes inland. As an alternative, planners selected
the Salerno area. Some fifty miles south of Naples,
Salerno had a twenty-mile stretch of beach, favorable
landing gradients, and numerous exits to the main coastal
highway linking Salerno to Naples and Rome.
The Salerno site also had some drawbacks. The mountains
surrounding the Salerno plain would limit the depth
of the initial beachhead and expose the invading troops
to enemy observation, fire, and attack from higher ground.
The steep vertical banks of the Sele River, which divides
the plain into two sectors, would require assault forces
to bring ashore bridging equipment to link the forces
on either side of the river. Nevertheless, Salerno was
within range of Allied fighter aircraft based in Sicily,
and Salerno's Montecorvino airfield, when captured,
could sustain four fighter squadrons. Additionally,
compared to the Naples area, Salerno was lightly defended.
While the Allies were planning AVALANCHE, Hitler gave
Field Marshal Albert Kesselring responsibility for defending
southern Italy. Kesselring, an Italophile, believed
that Italy would refuse demands for an unconditional
surrender, and he expected to fight a delaying action
with his Italian allies until he could establish a permanent
defensive line in the Apennines north of Rome. Hitler
also developed plans in case Italy deserted the Axis
coalition. In such a situation, Field Marshal Erwin
Rommel, responsible for the defense of northern Italy,
was to occupy all important mountain passes, roads,
and railroads and disarm the Italians. Kesselring was
to disarm the Italians in the south and continue withdrawing
north. Kesselring and Rommel would remain coequal commanders,
each responsible for his own sector, under the German
High Command, until Kesselring moved into Rommel's
area.
German strength on the Italian peninsula increased
in mid-August when Rommel moved five infantry and two
panzer divisions from Germany into northern Italy.
A few days later, some 102,000 Axis forces fighting
in Sicily withdrew to Italy, crossing the Strait of
Messina when Allied forces failed to disrupt their retreat.
They increased German defensive strength on the Italian
mainland significantly.
The German Tenth Army, commanded by General
Heinrich von Vietinghoff, was established on 8 August
to facilitate Kesselring's control of operations. Its
45,000 men had the mission of defending the heel of
Italy and evacuating Calabria (the toe) when the Allies
attacked. In conjunction with the Italian Seventh
Army, Vietinghoff had three German divisions to
hold the Naples-Salerno area and secure routes of withdrawal
to Rome. The Hermann Goering Division was on
the Naples plain, the 15th Panzer Grenadier Division
was to its north, and the 16th Panzer Division
had responsibility for defending the Salerno area
to the south.
At 0430 on 3 September, the British Eighth Army initiated
BAYTOWN, crossing the Strait of Messina against light
resistance. The Badoglio government, in response to
an Allied ultimatum, signed a secret armistice agreement
that same day. On 8 September 1943, formal announcement
of the Italian surrender was made, and German units
moved quickly to disarm their former allies and assume
responsibility for defense of the entire peninsula.
The next day, in a hastily planned operation named SLAPSTICK,
and by prior agreement with the Italians, 3,600 men
of the British 1st Paratroop Division landed unopposed
at the port of Taranto in the Italian heel. The main
effort in the invasion of the Italian mainland was to
take place at Salerno a few days later.
Operations
In the early morning hours of 9 September, the approximately
450 ships of Operation AVALANCHE assembled off the Salerno
coast. Elements had sailed from Sicily and from Tripoli,
Oran, and Bizerte in North Africa, some as early as
5 and 6 September.
German aircraft had attacked part of the fleet, so
Kesselring knew that an Allied assault force was assembling
but was uncertain where the blow would fall. German
units were on alert, but were unable to defend all possible
invasion sites.
General Sir Harold Alexander commanded the Allied 15th
Army Group, composed of Montgomery's British Eighth
Army and Mark Clark's U.S. Fifth Army. Clark, a World
War I veteran who had recently commanded a U.S. corps
and had been Eisenhower's deputy for Operation TORCH,
commanded the invasion force. The Fifth Army comprised
the British 10 Corps, commanded by Lt. Gen. Sir Richard
L. McCreery, and the U.S. VI Corps, commanded by Maj.
Gen. Ernest J. Dawley.

Map: Invasion of Italy
The invasion force's assault echelon consisted of two
British divisions (the 46th and 56th) from 10 Corps,
but because of a shortage of landing craft, only one
division from VI Corps participated: the U.S. 36th Infantry
Division, a Texas National Guard unit commanded by Maj.
Gen. Fred L. Walker. Three U.S. Ranger battalions, commanded
by Lt. Col. William 0. Darby, and the 2d and 41st British
Commandos were also in the assault element. Two regimental
combat teams from the U.S. 45th Division, an Arizona
National Guard unit commanded by Maj. Gen. Troy Middleton,
served as a seaborne reserve.
The
Gulf of Salerno. (National Archives)
Clark expected to meet some 39,000 enemy troops on
D-day and about 100,000 three days later after German
reinforcements rushed to Salerno. He hoped to land 125,000
Allied troops. The British 10 Corps on the left was
to land its two divisions abreast south of Salerno.
The U.S. Rangers and the British Commandos were to land
at beaches west of Salerno and secure the left flank
by seizing key passes through the mountainous Sorrento
peninsula between Naples and Salerno. Control of the
passes would permit a rapid exit from the Salerno plain
and protect the beachhead from German counterattack
from the north. Once the British 10 Corps was reinforced
by the British 7th Armoured Division beginning on D
plus 5, McCreery's corps would swing north and advance
toward Naples.
On the right, after the U.S. 36th Infantry Division
was ashore, the U.S. 45th Infantry Division and other
American units were to follow as soon as possible. The
U.S. 34th Infantry Division, a North Dakota National
Guard unit commanded by Maj. Gen. Charles Ryder, the
U.S. 3d Infantry Division, commanded by Maj. Gen. Lucian
Truscott, and the U.S. 1st Armored Division, commanded
by Maj. Gen. Ernest N. Harmon, would come ashore through
Naples, which Clark believed would be in Allied hands
by D plus 13, or 23 September. The U.S. 82d Airborne
Division, commanded by Maj. Gen. Matthew Ridgway, was
to be held in reserve on Sicily. Plans to drop the 82d
as a diversion along the Volturno River, sixty miles
north of Salerno, and on Rome, had been canceled. Eventually
Clark's Fifth Army would link up with Montgomery's British
Eighth Army advancing from BAYTOWN.
The amphibious assault began early on the morning of
9 September 1943. U.S. Rangers hit the beach unopposed
at 0310, twenty minutes in advance of the main assault
force, and moved quickly inland to seize their objectives.
British Commandos captured the town of Salerno against
light opposition. The British 10 Corps landed under
a heavy naval bombardment, meeting significant opposition
as its soldiers fought their way inland. The untested
men of the U.S. 36th Infantry Division came ashore at
0330 without supporting fire, hoping to surprise the
Germans. Although the leading elements took heavy casualties,
all six waves of the 36th Division assault element were
on the beach by 0610. Two companies of German infantry
that had been on the Salerno beach judiciously withdrew
inland as the assault began. Nevertheless, the Americans
encountered small but intense resistance as they fought
their way off the beaches.
Early German Luftwaffe attacks on the invasion
force slackened near dawn as Allied aircraft from Sicily
and supporting carriers appeared over the beachhead.
Local German commanders reacted to the invasion force
piecemeal. Fifteen tanks of the 16th Panzer
Division made the first significant counterattack
against the beachhead at 0700 but were driven off by
a combination of naval gunfire, artillery, infantry,
and engineers. However, German artillery and mortar
fire, as well as continued forays by tank and infantry
units, soon disrupted the orderly flow of Allied forces
across the beach. Significantly, U.S. artillery and
armor units were delayed coming ashore and disorganized
when they arrived. Amid the confusion, many leading
assault elements found themselves facing enemy tanks
without adequate antiarmor weapons, and only through
determination and individual heroism were some American
forces able to move inland. In such cases, the actions
of men like Sgt. Joseph M. Logan of Company I, 3d Battalion,
141st Infantry, were critical. When his unit was pinned
down by machine gun fire coming from a stone wall near
the beach, Sergeant Logan advanced some 200 yards toward
the gun. With bullets striking around him, he killed
three Germans who attacked from a gap in the wall. Under
a stream of heavy fire, he rushed the machine gun position
and killed the gunners and then turned the weapon on
the enemy. For his heroic actions Sergeant Logan was
awarded the Medal of Honor.

Map: Fifth Army Landings
Small-scale and seemingly disorganized German counterattacks
continued throughout the day but were repulsed as Fifth
Army strengthened its lodgment. Reinforcements, support
troops, and supplies poured ashore. By nightfall, the
British 10 Corps was three miles inland and had advanced
to the Montecorvino airfield. On the right, the U.S.
VI Corps, which had met only limited opposition after
leaving the beach, was some five miles inland. Separated
by the Sele River, each corps operated independently
with only minimal contact. But despite the fact that
the landing force was in four separated beachheads,
by dusk of D-day the situation looked favorable for
the Allies.
While the AVALANCHE invasion force was moving ashore,
German forces in southern Italy, as planned, were conducting
a deliberate withdrawal northward following the Eighth
Army landings. General Kesselring, although occupied
with the Italian surrender, was not surprised by the
Salerno invasion. With one division in place at Salerno
and two others immediately available, and with LXXVI
Panzer Corps withdrawing from southern Italy
and soon available for employment, he directed General
Vietinghoff to contain the beachhead. Vietinghoff, in
turn, directed the 16th Panzer Division to prevent
any deep Allied penetration until reinforcements arrived.
On 10 September he concentrated the 16th Panzer Division
against the British 10 Corps, blocking its progress
while awaiting the arrival of LXXVI Corps. At
first, Vietinghoff was optimistic, believing he could
push the invasion force into the sea. Eighth Army was
still 120 miles to the south and-had to traverse difficult
terrain to reach the beachhead. Coincidentally, General
Montgomery had decided on 9 September to halt his advance
for two days to rest and resupply his forces, buying
more time for the German counterattacks at Salerno.
Meanwhile General Clark, who had yet to establish his
headquarters ashore, was concerned because of the sketchy
reports from the beachhead on D-day. General Dawley
went ashore at 1300 and soon after began preparing to
assume command of the VI Corps troops in the beachhead,
earlier than originally scheduled. Elements of the U.S.
45th Division were also sent ashore during the night
of 9 September to reinforce the 36th Division. Over
the next two days, the 36th Division was able to consolidate
its position ashore and expand the beachhead because
of the withdrawal of most of the Germans in front of
the VI Corps. However, in the British 10 Corps sector,
intense fighting occurred as squads, platoons, and companies
engaged in fierce exchanges with stubborn pockets of
Germans who halted British advances and launched limited
counterattacks.
On 10 September Clark visited both corps. Progress
was satisfactory in the VI Corps sector, but the resistance
in front of the British and the separation between the
two Allied corps concerned him. Frustrated with the
apparent stalemate, Clark narrowed the British 10 Corps
zone of responsibility which would eventually allow
an attack north toward Naples. This realignment necessitated
moving the U.S. VI Corps' boundary four miles to the
north and assigning two regiments of the 45th Division
responsibility for the added zone. On 12 September Clark
moved his own headquarters ashore.
Although the shift in the corps' boundary facilitated
McCreery's operations, it stretched Dawley's American
corps to the limit and forced him to commit the corps
reserve to the battle. The VI Corps' problems were exacerbated
when Clark ordered Dawley to reinforce Darby's Rangers,
who were holding the northern passes in the British
10 Corps area, with a reinforced infantry battalion
from the 36th Infantry Division. By 13 December the
36th Infantry Division was occupying a 35-mile front,
well beyond what a full-strength division was expected
to defend.
The Germans rapidly reinforced the battle area, and
the Allied situation continued to deteriorate. Vietinghoff
launched a major counterattack against the Allied beachhead
on 13 September, albeit with divisions which were not
yet fully reconstituted after the fighting in Sicily.
The Hermann Goering and 15th Panzer Grenadier
Divisions attacked the British 10 Corps, while elements
of the 26th and 29th Panzer Grenadier and
the 16th Panzer Divisions drove against VI Corps
and the lightly defended area along the Sele River.
The Germans penetrated the American lines on the afternoon
of 13 September, overrunning a battalion of the 36th
Division and threatening the rear of the Allied position.
For a time, the situation was so precarious that Clark
directed his staff to begin planning to evacuate one
of the two beachheads and land its forces on the other.
American resistance stiffened along the Calore River
as artillery, tank, and tank destroyer units held their
ground, pouring shot after shot directly into the attacking
Germans. By nightfall the German attacks faltered, and
the Allies began to regroup.
General Clark had recognized early on 13 September
that his position was precarious. Seaborne reinforcements
from Sicily could not arrive in time, and British Eighth
Army advances were being slowed by heavily damaged roads
and logistic problems. Eisenhower had earlier made the
82d Airborne Division available to Fifth Army, and Clark
requested its use. The airborne unit represented the
only force that could move to the area rapidly enough
to make a difference. During the night of 13-14 September,
1,300 soldiers parachuted into the beachhead and immediately
moved into defensive positions bolstering the 36th Infantry
Division.
Throughout the daylight hours of 14 September, the
Germans attacked the entire Allied front, searching
for weaknesses. Their efforts were unsuccessful. Allied
heavy bombers, diverted from attacks on strategic targets
in Germany, interdicted German units and supplies flowing
toward the beachhead and struck German units in assembly
areas and attack positions. Reinforcements also arrived:
the British 7th Armoured Division began landing in the
10 Corps sector, and the 180th Infantry, the remaining
regiment of the 45th Infantry Division, landed behind
VI Corps to become the Fifth Army reserve. That night
another 2,100 82d Airborne soldiers landed on the beaches
south of Salerno to bolster the defense. By the evening
of 14 September, with more supplies ashore and reinforcements
arriving, the crisis had passed.
Waging
war against mud. (National Archives)
Although the two night airborne drops into the Salerno
beachhead had been executed flawlessly, another airborne
operation was less successful. The 509th Parachute Infantry
Battalion jumped some twenty miles north of the British
10 Corps on the evening of 14 September to disrupt German
resupply and communications lines. The paratroopers
had been ordered to harass the Germans for about five
days and then either to infiltrate to the beachhead
or to link up with advancing forces. Of the 40 planes
involved in the operation, only 15 dropped their cargo
within 4 miles of the drop zone; 23 planes scattered
paratroopers between 8 and 25 miles from the intended
target, and the drop site of the remaining 2 planes
was unknown. Of the 600 men who jumped, 400 made it
safely back to Allied hands several days later after
launching small raids in the German rear.
On 15 September, with the British Eighth Army still
some fifty miles to the south, Kesselring ordered a
final effort against the beachhead. The failure of the
attacks on 15 and 16 September indicated that the Allies
could not be dislodged, so Kesselring directed German
forces to begin an orderly delaying action and a withdrawal
north. On 16 and 17 September, against diminishing resistance,
Allied troops first consolidated their positions and
then began slowly to push out toward the enemy. But
many units needed time to rest, resupply, and reconstitute
their forces. The 1st Battalion of the 142d Infantry,
36th Infantry Division, for example, had seen its effective
strength reduced to sixty men; the 2d Battalion of the
143d Infantry, which had been in the Sele River corridor,
had almost ceased to exist as a unit. Meanwhile, the
British Eighth Army continued its advance as the Germans
disengaged at Salerno and withdrew north. By 19 September,
elements of Montgomery's and Clark's armies met at Auletta,
twenty miles east of Eboli.
Pack
train moves supplies in the mountains. (National Archives)
Salerno had been costly for both sides. German casualties
were estimated at 3,500. The Americans, who assaulted
the beaches under fire more lethal than that encountered
in earlier Mediterranean landings, also suffered approximately
3,500 casualties, while British losses were some 5,500.
After the battle for the beachhead had ended, the VI
Corps received a new commander. General Dawley had not
measured up to the expectations of his superiors and
Clark was particularly concerned about Dawley's failure
to anticipate the threat to VI Corps' weak left flank
on 12 September. With the concurrence of Eisenhower,
Clark replaced Dawley with Maj. Gen. John P. Lucas on
20 September.
Wreckage in the dockyards at Naples.
(National Archives)
While Alexander's subordinates in 15th Army Group,
Clark and Montgomery, looked to the north, Kesselring
planned a series of fortified lines across the Italian
peninsula. The Barbara Line, the first defensive belt,
was an ill-defined trace of barriers and hastily constructed
fortifications along the Volturno River, some twenty-five
miles north of Naples. The second belt was through Mignano,
fifty miles north of Naples and ninety miles south of
Rome, and extending east from the coast to Monte Camino,
Monte Maggiore, and Monte Sammucro. This became known
as the Bernhard or Reinhard Line. The third defensive
belt, twelve miles north of the Bernhard Line and anchored
on Monte Cassino and the Garigliano and Rapido Rivers,
was called the Gustav Line. Composed of interlocking
bunkers and fortifications, it was by far the most formidable
of the three lines. The Allies referred to these fortifications
collectively as the Winter Line. Kesselring directed
Vietinghoff to hold the Allies south of the first line
until 15 October to allow adequate preparation of these
fortifications.
The Allies gathered their strength in anticipation
of the attack toward Naples. From 9 September through
1 October, 190,000 troops, 30,000 vehicles, and 120,000
tons of supplies came ashore across the Salerno beach.
The remainder of the British 7th Armoured Division,
the U.S. 3d Infantry Division, and the last of General
Ridgway's 82d Airborne Division disembarked along with
the supplies which would facilitate the attack northward.
To secure the port of Naples, Clark knew that he would
have to move well north of the city after it was captured.
After selecting the Volturno River as the Fifth Army
objective, he ordered McCreery's 10 Corps to conduct
the main attack up the coast, sweeping around Mount
Vesuvius to reach the Naples plain. Lucas' VI Corps
was directed to move eastward into the interior, and
then wheel northward to protect McCreery's flank.
The British 10 Corps' attack toward the two major passes
of the Sorrento hill mass began on 23 September and
immediately met stiff resistance. Exploiting the rugged
terrain, the Germans used a small number of well-chosen
strongpoints to slow the numerically superior Allied
forces almost to a standstill. In addition, the defenders
carried out a scorched-earth policy as they retreated.
On one seventeen-mile stretch of road, they destroyed
twenty-five major bridges, forcing the Allies to ford
a series of rivers and streams against opposition and
then build bridges to facilitate the onward flow of
reinforcements and supplies.

Map: Allied Gains
McCreery's progress toward Naples was slow but nonetheless
steady. On 30 September British forces moved through
the eastern outskirts of Naples and continued north.
On 1 October Ridgway's 82d Airborne Division, reinforced
by Darby's Rangers, entered the city. Within three days
British patrols were at the Volturno River as German
forces withdrew behind that natural barrier. By 7 October,
the bulk of the British 10 Corps had closed on the Volturno.
Lucas' U.S. VI Corps had started its move inland on
20 September in preparation for the northward thrust.
Its troops confronted the same problems that bedeviled
McCreery's corps. Restricted to narrow roads through
steep mountain passes, the Allied routes of advance
were crisscrossed by fast-running streams in deep ravines.
German engineers had destroyed most of the bridges,
and German infantry doggedly defended crossing sites.
Often, it was only through the courage and heroism of
individual Americans that some semblance of forward
momentum was maintained. On 23 September, for example,
Cpl. James D. Slaton of the 45th Infantry Division was
lead scout of a squad which had been directed to eliminate
a German position delaying the advance of his company.
Moving ahead of his fellow soldiers, Slaton assaulted
the machine gun nest, killing the gunner with his bayonet.
Unable to extricate the bayonet, he detached it from
his rifle and shot another gunner. Subsequently, he
advanced under heavy fire and eliminated two more machine
gun positions with grenades and rifle fire, opening
the way for his company to advance. For his courageous
actions, Corporal Slaton was awarded the Medal of Honor.
As the VI Corps continued its slow push northward,
small infantry units, operating with little or no artillery
and armor support, continued to carry the battle. Mud,
rain, and cold became the troops' arch enemies. Units
used bulldozers and Bailey bridges to advance in stages.
Sure-footed pack mules became the primary resupply vehicle
in the rugged terrain.
Ultimately, the relentless pressure paid off. By the
end of September, the VI Corps had clawed its way through
sixty miles of mountains and rugged valleys and occupied
the south bank of the Volturno River. Meanwhile, to
the east, advancing against only light enemy resistance,
Montgomery's forces seized the vital Foggia airfield
complex on l October and outflanked German defensive
positions by employing a small amphibious raid to seize
the port and town of Termoli. On 9 October, Montgomery
paused to reorganize and resupply as the Germans occupied
defensive positions along the Trigno River.
The capture of Naples and the Foggia airfield formally
ended Operation AVALANCHE. The Allies suffered approximately
12,500 casualties (2,000 killed, 7,000 wounded, and
3,500 missing). Foggia, captured intact, would soon
be used by Allied bombers. Although Naples had been
a key objective in the Allied plan, its capture was
initially disappointing because it had been virtually
destroyed. The Allies had bombed and shelled the city,
but German demolition teams accounted for most of the
damage. Kesselring had been explicit about protecting
churches and monasteries, but nothing else was spared.
Departing Germans removed or destroyed all communications,
transportation, water, and power grids. They burned
hotels, mined buildings, collapsed bridges and ripped
out railroad tracks. Ships in the harbor were sunk,
adding to those already destroyed. To the credit of
the Allies, and despite intense German air raids, the
port of Naples was reopened to traffic within a week
of its capture. By the end of October, nearly 7,000
tons of supplies were flowing ashore daily, almost at
the prewar level. However, much rebuilding remained
to be done, and nearly 800,000 Neapolitans depended
upon the Allies for basic survival items for many months.
With Naples secure, the Allies turned their attention
to the north. In early October it appeared to Allied
planners that the Germans would withdraw slowly north,
perhaps pausing on good, defensible terrain south of
Rome, to gain time to complete fortification of their
main defensive line in the Pisa-Rimini area. This course
of action would shorten German lines of communications
and eliminate the threat of an Allied flank attack,
now possible because of the German withdrawal from Sardinia
and Corsica in September and early October. The advance
of Allied forces to the Pisa-Rimini line would gain
additional airfields near Rome and provide security
for all Allied airfields in central and southern Italy.
However, an advance to northern Italy might be difficult,
particularly if the Germans chose to defend south of
Rome. Moreover, in accordance with earlier agreements,
four American and three British battle-tested divisions
were withdrawn from the Mediterranean theater to participate
in the cross-Channel invasion of France. Concurrently,
an invasion of southern France was being planned which
would require additional troops from Italy. Alexander's
15th Army Group could no longer count on significant
reinforcements or massive air support as it attempted
a push toward Rome and beyond.
In mid-October, battle lines were drawn along the Volturno
and Trigno Rivers. The Volturno itself was a formidable
obstacle. Varying in width from 150 to 200 feet, and
normally running 3 to 5 feet deep, the river was in
flood stage and overflowing banks which were 5 to 15
feet high. Behind this barrier Vietinghoff placed the
35,000 men of the XIV Panzer Corps directly in
front of Fifth Army, while the equally formidable LXXVI
Panzer Corps opposed Eighth Army along the Trigno
River.
"December, South West of Venafro,
Italy," by Tom Craig. (Army Art Collection)
General Clark ordered a general assault on the Volturno
line for 13 and 14 October. Initially, Fifth Army attacked
with two corps abreast, each employing three divisions.
The Allies encountered strong resistance and purchased
each inch of progress with blood. A feint executed by
the U.S. 3d Infantry Division on VI Corps' left flank
deceived the Germans and contributed to Lucas' success.
The British 56th Division, repulsed in its zone, attacked
through the 3d Infantry Division sector and joined the
British 7th Armoured Division, the Desert Rats of North
Africa fame, and the U.S. 46th Infantry Division north
of the river. To the east, Montgomery's attacks also
proved successful. But Vietinghoff had held the Volturno
River line until 15 October as ordered. He directed
his soldiers to conduct a fighting delay northward to
the Barbara Line where the next major battles with the
Allies would take place.
Clark slowly pushed forward of the Volturno toward
Rome. Fifth Army divisions moved in column, usually
with a battalion leading each division. Progress was
steady but slow. Determined resistance at a roadblock
or ford often halted the advance, forcing units to struggle
through the mountains to envelop the obstacle. When
they finally conducted an assault on the position, the
Allies frequently would find that the Germans had melted
away. With the roadblock reduced or the ford secured,
the units would resume their forward progress, perhaps
to be halted only a few hundred yards farther on by
another obstacle. In twenty days during October across
a forty-mile front, Fifth Army forces advanced only
between fifteen and twenty miles. However, the Allies
finally breached the vague and ill-defined Barbara Line.
In the interim, German forces had laid 45,000 mines
in the Bernhard Line, and another 30,000 mines on its
approaches. By the end of October, Rome was still a
long way off.
The month-long struggle by the Allies as they advanced
from the Volturno River to the Bernhard Line brought
both Fifth and Eighth Armies near the point of exhaustion.
The Allies had pressed the Germans continuously, maintaining
the momentum of the attack. But with the drawdown for
OVERLORD, neither Clark nor Montgomery had the option
of pulling units out of the line for rest and rehabilitation.
Although Italy had declared war on Germany as a cobelligerent,
its contributions to the fighting would be minimal.
Additional reinforcements would not arrive until December
and January. On 15 November, succumbing to both weather
and fatigue, Clark received approval to halt Fifth Army's
progress for two weeks to enable his soldiers to rest,
refit, and regroup.
While German and Allied soldiers were fighting from
Salerno to the Bernhard Line, the politico-military
leaders on both sides made a series of decisions which
would affect the future of the Italian campaign. The
American secretary of state and the British and Russian
foreign secretaries met in Moscow from 19-30 October.
Concrete agreements on military matters were deferred,
but the secretaries produced the Four-Power Declaration
which laid the groundwork for establishing the United
Nations. Close on the heels of the Moscow Conference
came meetings between Roosevelt and Churchill at Cairo
with Chiang Kai-shek, at Tehran with Stalin, and again
at Cairo with their combined staffs. Lasting from 22
November-7 December, the Cairo-Tehran meetings confirmed
both OVERLORD and ANVIL (the invasion of northern and
southern France, respectively) for mid-1944; the Italian
theater was formally relegated to a position of secondary
importance. General Eisenhower would command the OVERLORD
forces gathering in southern England and be replaced
in the Mediterranean theater by Sir Henry Maitland Wilson.
Churchill insisted that Rome was still a prize. American
leaders agreed, but they limited the Allied advance
north of Rome to the Pisa-Rimini line in northern Italy.
They hoped that a continued advance would maintain enough
pressure on the Germans to keep them from diverting
forces to France or Russia without requiring significant
Allied reinforcements of men or supplies. The Americans,
however, were wary of continued British proposals to
attack Germany proper through the Alps or to expand
the Mediterranean theater into the Balkans or the Aegean.
The Germans also were reevaluating their commitment
to and command structure in Italy even as the Allies
debated the date for OVERLORD. Hitler had considered
placing Rommel in overall command of German forces in
Italy but instead selected Kesselring, who believed
that a defense south of Rome was feasible. Hitler transferred
Rommel to France and elevated Kesselring to supreme
commander in Italy and commander of Army Group C.
Kesselring quickly confirmed his strategy of holding
Italy south of Rome.
On the Allied side, events were in motion to break
the stalemate that had slowed the Allied advance through
mid-November. In early October, Clark had established
an amphibious task force to find alternatives to the
agonizingly slow and costly mountain warfare. On 8 November
Eisenhower, still in command of the Mediterranean theater,
decided on a two-pronged attack on Rome. While Montgomery's
and Clark's armies attacked the Winter Line, Clark's
VI Corps would conduct an amphibious assault at Anzio,
south of Rome and some forty-five miles behind the Gustav
Line. The Combined Chiefs of Staff approved Eisenhower's
request to keep sixty-eight LSTs (landing ship, tanks)
in the Mediterranean to support this assault but directed
him to release them by the end of January 1944 so that
they would be available for OVERLORD. The Fifth Army's
interim goal between mid-November and mid-January was
to continue moving north and prepare to link up with
the Anzio beachhead once it had been established.
By mid-November, Kesselring had 11 divisions in southern
Italy to oppose the Allies and another 12 divisions
in northern Italy. In contrast, by early December the
Allies would have 14 divisions and possibly 2 more by
the end of the year. The headquarters of the U.S. II
Corps, commanded by Maj. Gen. Geoffrey T. Keyes, had
arrived from Sicily and moved into the line between
the British 10 and U.S. VI Corps, assuming command of
the U.S. 3d and 36th Infantry Divisions. Clark's inventory
of units also included the Italian First Motorized Group
and the Canadian-American 1st Special Service Force,
a regimental-size commando unit commanded by U.S. Col.
Robert T. Frederick. In addition, the French Expeditionary
Corps, commanded by General Alphonse Juin and composed
of the 2d Moroccan and 3d Algerian Divisions, would
join Fifth Army in late November and December.
The arrival of these units eventually would allow VI
Corps to be pulled out of the line for the Anzio landings.
Two additional, green U.S. divisions, to replace those
pulled from the Mediterranean for OVERLORD, would not
arrive until January. Allied combat power was not simply
a product of the sheer number of divisions. It stemmed
from the numerical strength those divisions and their
combat support and combat service support units, augmented
by substantial tactical air support and an efficient
multiservice resupply effort. Fortunately for the Germans,
the rugged terrain, and now the winter weather, would
favor the defense.
The Allied offensive in Italy resumed on 20 November
when Montgomery attacked the Winter Line with three
divisions. Torrential rains stalled the assault for
a week. By 2 December Eighth Army was again on the move,
but both weather and German resistance slowed its progress.
Supply movement became increasingly difficult as roads
and Hails turned to mud. Tanks bogged down and casualties
mounted. On 27 December Montgomery halted well short
of the objectives. Two days later, he left for England
to assume command of the British and Canadian forces
scheduled to land in Normandy and was replaced by Lt.
Gen. Sir Oliver Leese.
The Fifth Army assault met equally stiff resistance.
To the east, VI Corps launched probing attacks on 29
November and subsequently attacked Monte Pantano and
the surrounding high ground. In the west, the British
10 Corps, already along the Garigliano River near the
coast, initiated demonstrations on 1 December to draw
German forces toward the coast and then attacked toward
Monte Camino. On the night of 2-3 December, II Corps
attacked in the center of the Fifth Army sector and
captured Monte Camino, but required another week to
clear it completely of Germans, who directed a number
of savage counterattacks at the advancing forces. As
a result of slow progress and limited reinforcements
and shipping, the Allies shelved the Anzio invasion
plans.
Continuing the Fifth Army drive, II Corps next took
on German defenses in the San Pietro area. The Italian
First Motorized Group, attached to II Corps, attacked
Monte Lungo on 8 December while the Americans attacked
Monte Sammucro and the key village of San Pietro. The
assaults received intensive artillery support. Over
75,000 rounds were fired in the first forty-eight hours
of the attack. The Italians received rough treatment
from the Germans, who enjoyed commanding positions and
superior fire power, and were forced back to their attack
positions. Of some 1,600 soldiers in the assault, Italian
casualties were 84 killed, 122 wounded, and 170 missing.
The 36th Division fared little better. It seized the
peak of Monte Sammucro but failed to clear the entire
mountain. German forces in San Pietro held out for over
a week in some of the fiercest and bloodiest fighting
of the campaign. Repetitive Allied assaults, including
a two-pronged tank-led attack during which most of the
armored vehicles were destroyed, incurred heavy losses.
Finally, on 16 December, to prevent envelopment following
an American surprise attack that had seized Monte Lungo,
the Germans abandoned San Pietro and withdrew to Monte
Porchia and the village of San Vittore. But the Allied
success had been costly. The battle for San Pietro had
cost the 36th Infantry Division i50 killed, 800 wounded,
and 250 missing; casualties for supporting airborne,
Ranger, and tank units were also high. Meanwhile, to
the east, VI Corps continued its attacks, seizing hills
and ridges often at heavy costs in terms of casualties
and nonbattle injuries. Finally, a year-end blizzard
gave the weary Fifth Army soldiers some respite from
combat, but the New Year held little hope for improved
conditions.
January brought significant changes in the Allied command
structure. As scheduled, British General Sir Henry Maitland
Wilson became Supreme Allied Commander of the Mediterranean
theater, replacing Eisenhower. U.S. Lt. Gen. Jacob L.
Devers became his deputy. With the British assumption
of primacy in the theater, Churchill's desire to press
toward Rome took on new life. Plans for the amphibious
landing at Anzio were dusted off and D-day was set for
late January. Fifth Army directed VI Corps to assault
Anzio with two divisions. The operation would have only
minimal supplies and a thin resupply line because of
the lack of adequate amphibious shipping available in
the theater. However, Clark was enthusiastic about the
plan, which would facilitate his drive to Rome. But
to relieve the beachhead, Fifth Army had the formidable
task of reaching and then assaulting across the Garigliano
and Rapido Rivers, rupturing the Gustav Line, and breaking
through its defenders.
To facilitate the amphibious assault preparation, the
newly arrived French Expeditionary Corps headquarters
replaced U.S. VI Corps headquarters on the eastern flank
of Fifth Army. Additionally, the presence of the U.S.
1st Armored Division gave Clark a strong mobile reserve
and exploitation force. Between 5 and 15 January 1944,
Fifth Army again moved forward across its entire front,
with II Corps conducting the main attack in the center
supported by French Expeditionary and British 10 Corps
secondary assaults. The 1st Special Service Force, supported
by two infancy battalions, seized Monte Majo in the
east and defended it during three days of fierce German
counterattacks. San Vittore fell on 6 January after
bitter fighting, and Monte La Chita and Monte Porchia
fell on the 7th.
Monte Sammucro with San Pietro
on the right. (National Archives)
To the west, Germans opposing the British 10 Corps
held out until 8 January, then withdrew to prevent being
trapped. Fifth Army continued to press the attack, and
a final assault on 14 January met only limited resistance.
The Germans had withdrawn behind the Rapido River the
previous night. The Fifth Army had broken the Bernhard
Line, but the formidable Gustav Line defenses and Rome
lay ahead.
Clark scheduled his attack on the Gustav Line in the
Garigliano-Liri-Rapido River area to support the 22
January Anzio invasion and draw German forces away from
the beachhead. The British 10 Corps crossed the Garigliano
River on the evening of 17 January. The 24,000 mines
that the Germans had emplaced along the river banks
failed to halt the crossing, which was made in boats
when flooding prevented the installation of assault
bridging. Faced with a ten-battalion bridgehead by the
next morning, Kesselring decided to reinforce the area
and prevent a rupture of the Gustav Line. Assured by
German intelligence chief Admiral Wilhelm Canaris that
the Allies would not conduct an amphibious assault in
Italy for some time, Kesselring sent the 29th and
9th Panzer Grenadier Divisions from the Rome
area to oppose the Allied penetration.
Although the British 10 Corps had expanded its bridgehead
to a width of ten miles by 20 January, it failed to
reach its objectives. Significantly, the Germans repulsed
the British 46th Division attack adjacent to the U.S.
II Corps area, leaving the Americans with an exposed
flank for their forthcoming assault. Faced with fresh
German forces, British 10 Corps efforts bogged down
and would make little progress for the rest of the month.
In the center, Clark had directed II Corps to conduct
the main attack along Highway 6 west of Monte Cassino.
The Americans were to cross the Rapido River, penetrate
the Gustav Line, and allow the 1st Armored Division
to pass through into the Liri valley, which was the
key to Anzio and Rome. Walker's 36th Infantry Division
was to lead the assault. However neither Walker nor
his corps commander, General Keyes, was optimistic.
The swiftly flowing Rapido River was twenty-five to
fifty feet wide, with steep banks. The Germans had diverted
the river upstream from the assault area, making the
approaches a sea of mud. From the heights of Monte Cassino
and Sant'Angelo, the Germans could observe and bring
fire on the entire area. Additionally, amphibious vehicles,
originally planned for the river crossing, had been
diverted to VI Corps to replace vehicles lost in practice
exercises for Anzio. The crossing would rely on rubber
and wooden assault boats provided by Army engineers.
Because of swampy banks and heavy German fire, the boats
were positioned several miles from the river and had
to be carried forward by the infancy just prior to the
attack. Nevertheless, despite many problems and against
the alternative suggestions of his subordinates, Clark
insisted that the II Corps attack proceed on schedule.
The 36th Infantry Division, with two regiments abreast,
attacked on the evening of 20 January. In the 141st
Infantry sector, enemy fire destroyed many of the assault
boats before they reached the river, where the swift
current and accurate German artillery fire hampered
efforts to construct bridges. Despite extensive land
mines, lost guides, and withering enemy fire, some 100
Americans managed to cross the river before German artillery
destroyed the last ponton bridge. With dawn rapidly
approaching, and unable to reinforce his forward forces
during daylight, the regimental commander halted the
attack and directed those soldiers in the bridgehead
to dig in and await help.
The 143d Infantry initially fared little better. Although
a number of its companies managed to cross the river,
German resistance quickly mounted, and withering fire
began destroying the regiment's bridging and boats.
The regimental commander was able to withdraw his men
to the relative safety of the near bank before they
were cut off. But the 36th Infantry Division attack
was obviously a dismal failure.
Despite these setbacks, Clark and Keyes instructed
Walker to resume the attack. Unfortunately, the efforts
of the 143d Infantry late in the afternoon of 21 January
mirrored those of the previous day. Approximately 250
soldiers reached the far bank of the river, but mines,
artillery, and intense enemy fire prevented reinforcement.
More boats were damaged and bridges destroyed by German
artillery. Fog and smoke prevented Fifth Army artillery
from effectively engaging enemy positions. By the afternoon
of 22 January, elements of the three battalions of the
143d on the German side of the river were withdrawn.
Meanwhile the 141st Infantry had again assaulted across
the Rapido at 2100 on 21 January. It found no survivors
of the bridgehead that had been established the previous
evening. As with the attack the day before, the 141st
came under heavy and effective German fire and counterattacks.
During the next day bridges and boats were destroyed,
communications were cut, and by evening all the officers
in the bridgehead except one were casualties. With the
bridges destroyed or swept away and all the boats out
of action, Walker could do little to help his trapped
soldiers. By late evening, all resistance on the far
bank ceased. Except for some forty men who swam back
across the river, the entire assault force was either
killed or captured.
The 36th Infantry Division suffered 1,681 casualties
in its controversial two-day attempt to force its way
across the "Bloody River." German losses were light,
and reports through their chain of command made only
passing reference to the II Corps attacks. Yet a postwar
congressional investigation into the abortive assaults
would exonerate all concerned. Clark maintained that
the repeated attacks on the Gustav Line in the Garigliano-Liri-Rapido
area were necessary to facilitate the scheduled Anzio
landings. The fact that the German reinforcements diverted
south to the Garigliano River greatly eased the Anzio
landings in the north. Nevertheless, The Naples-Foggia
Campaign, which formally ended on 21 January, had marked
the beginning of what would become an increasingly difficult
march up the spine of Italy.
Analysis
The Allied goals, established before the invasion of
Italy, were to gain control of the Mediterranean, keep
pressure on the Germans while building for the cross-Channel
attack, and force Italy to with draw from the war. All
agreed that bases in Italy would provide support for
the air war against German sources of supply in the
Balkans and the German industrial heartland itself.
These sound strategic goals were valid in 1943 and have
stood the test of time.
By late August, the Italian government had decided
to withdraw from the war and break relations with Germany.
The fall of Sicily had enhanced Allied control of the
Mediterranean but had not assured it. Prior to the invasion
of Italy, therefore, the Allied goals were far from
being totally satisfied, and an eager world watched
as the Allies launched first BAYTOWN and then AVALANCHE
to invade the European continent.
The success of BAYTOWN never seemed to be in doubt.
Supported by a secure chain of supply, and capitalizing
on German withdrawals, Eighth Army slowly cleared the
toe of the Italian boot and by 14 September was moving
up the Italian east coast. The Salerno landing, in conjunction
with the Italian capitulation, drew German forces northward
away from Eighth Army.
The fate of AVALANCHE was much less assured. The operation
lacked adequate amphibious shipping, and the forces
landed at Salerno were insufficient to hold the extensive
beachhead. Montgomery's failure to advance north as
rapidly as expected further jeopardized the thrust.
Fortunately, the German units defending the area were
not fully reconstituted from their fighting in Sicily.
Only the inability of German commanders effectively
to muster and direct their forces allowed Clark time
to reinforce the beachhead. The fact that he seriously
considered evacuation of part of the beachhead indicates
the gravity of the situation. The AVALANCHE force could
have been thrown into the sea. Thanks to extremely effective
naval and aviation support, quickly deployed airborne
reinforcements, the courage and capability of Allied
soldiers, and quite a bit of luck, the beachhead survived.
With the capture of Naples by Fifth Army and the Foggia
airfield complex by Eighth Army and Germany's unforced
withdrawal from Sardinia on 18 September and Corsica
on 3 October, most strategic goals of the Italian campaign
were met. The Allies had bases in southern Italy from
which to launch strategic air attacks on the Balkans
and Germany, the Mediterranean was secure, and German
divisions were tied down in Italy opposing the Allied
15th Army Group and holding those areas in northern
Italy, France, and the Balkans previously garrisoned
by their former Italian allies. Italy had become an
Allied cobelligerent, plans were being developed to
invade France both across the English Channel and from
the Mediterranean, and the Allied effort in Italy had
become a land campaign of minor strategic importance
in a secondary theater of operations.
With the benefit of hindsight, some have questioned
whether a continuation of an offensive campaign to gain
the Rome airfields and provide security for the airfields
in central and southern Italy was appropriate. The cost
of the Rapido crossing, and the Anzio invasion which
it supported, must be weighed against the limited strategic
gains.
No one can question the courage, capability, and tenacity
of the Allied soldiers who fought in Italy. In retrospect,
greater cooperation and coordination between British
and American leaders, a more realistic appraisal of
the strategic value of the campaign once control of
southern Italy was gained, and a better meshing of resources
and missions at the tactical level would have enhanced
the effectiveness and decreased the human cost of the
Naples-Foggia Campaign.
Nevertheless, from a strategic perspective, the Naples-Foggia
Campaign was an unqualified success. Notwithstanding
the Rapido incident and subsequent operations, a secure
Mediterranean, excellent bases from which to wage the
air war against the Germans, the engagement of at least
twenty-three German divisions, and Italy's change in
status to an Allied cobelligerent shortened the war
and contributed significantly to the defeat of Germany.
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