Po Valley
5 April-8 May 1945

The Allies had begun their invasion of the Italian mainland
in early September 1943 with the promise of a quick drive
north, up the "soft underbelly" of Europe and into the
German heartland. Yet nineteen months later, after hard
fighting up the rugged mountainous spine of the narrow
Italian peninsula, such goals still eluded the Anglo-American
military leaders of the Mediterranean Theater. To be sure,
long before April 1945 Rome had fallen to Allied arms
and fascist Italy had been knocked almost completely out
of the war. But in the interval France had also been liberated,
and the Soviet Union had reclaimed almost all of its territory
previously conquered by the once invincible German war
machine.
Italy had in fact become a sideshow, a secondary theater,
since the spring of 1944 when the western Allies had
shifted their military resources north to support the
buildup and execution of Operation OVERLORD, the invasion
of Normandy. After that, there had been no turning back
on the Anglo-American side, with its main effort directed
east through the northern European plains. Thus, by
April Germany was besieged on three sides, although
the Allied forces in the south, those strung out along
the northern Apennines overlooking the Po Valley, were
now the farthest away from the tottering Third Reich.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill continued to
strongly support an advance from northern Italy into
the Balkans and southern Germany. However, the ability
of the Italian-based Allied armies to sustain such an
effort with minimal support in men and materiel seemed
problematic.
Strategic
Setting
In 1944 the 15th Army Group, under Field Marshal Sir
Harold R. L. G. Alexander, consisted of Lt. Gen. Mark
W. Clark's U.S. Fifth Army and Lt. Gen. Oliver Leese's
British Eighth Army. By midyear these forces had ended
the stalemates on the Gustav Line, advanced up the Liri
valley, captured Rome, and pursued retreating Axis forces
north across the Arno River into the northern Apennines
Mountains, on the very edge of the Po Valley, in the
heart of northern Italy.
In December 1944 Lt. Gen. Lucian K. Truscott, Jr.,
replaced General Clark as commander of the Fifth Army,
following the latter's departure to become the new 15th
Army Group commander. Before Truscott took command,
however, the Allied offensive in the northern Apennines
had ground to a halt. Both Allied armies were exhausted.
Personnel, equipment, and supplies had been siphoned
off to support operations in northwestern Europe and
elsewhere. The ensuing lack of resources, combined with
the harsh winter weather, rugged terrain, and stiff
enemy resistance, had left the Allies short of their
immediate goal, the heavily fortified communications
center of Bologna, a few miles to the north in central
Italy.
The
Appennines (National
Archives)
General Truscott, a hell-for-leather cavalryman, was
no stranger to the Mediterranean. He had commanded the
U.S. 3d Infantry Division through campaigns in Sicily,
southern Italy, and Anzio. In February 1944, during
the darkest days at Anzio, Truscott had replaced Maj.
Gen. John P. Lucas as VI Corps chief and had reinvigorated
the command. After the Anzio breakout in May, he led
the VI Corps through Rome, then in the invasion of southern
France (Operation ANVIL-DRAGOON), and finally in pursuit
of German forces in the Rhone Valley and northward.
As 1945 opened the Allies still faced an organized
and deter mined foe in Italy consisting of twenty-four
German and five Italian fascist divisions. The Axis
units were divided among the Tenth Fourteenth, and
Ligurian Armies, all under Army Group C ant
General Heinrich von Vietinghoff's command. Lt. Gen.
Joachim von Lemelson commanded the Fourteenth Army,
consisting of the L Mountain and XVI Panzer
Corps, which opposed Truscott's Fifth Army in the
west. Opposite the British Eighth Army to the east was
the German Tenth Army, commanded by Lt. Gen.
Traugott Herr, with the I Parachute and LXXVI
Panzer Corps. The city of Bologna, still in Axis
hands, constituted the boundary line for both sides.
The majority of Axis troops in Italy were experienced
veterans who belonged to relatively intact units. Although
fairly well led and supplied in 1944, they lacked vehicles,
firepower, and air support, and by early 1945 they were
experiencing increasingly troublesome short ages in
nearly every category of equipment. Yet the winter's
respite had allowed them some opportunity to rest and
to construct a defensive system in three lines that
maximized the tactical potential of the rugged Italian
terrain.
Their first defensive line, along the northern Apennines,
protected Bologna and blocked entry into the east-west
Po Valley, about fifty miles farther north. The Fourteenth
Army had built fortifications on steep mountain
fingers that were anchored on higher ridgelines and
consisted of mutually supporting positions to provide
optimum observation and fields of fire. Although the
mountain fingers widened as they neared the flat valley
floors, the valleys themselves were fenced in by trees,
hedgerows, and dikes, which restricted cross-country
mobility and provided excellent cover. In addition,
the Po River's southern tributaries emerged from the
mountains to cross the valley floors, intersecting at
possible routes of advance and serving as potential
defensive positions.
The Axis generals planned to anchor their second defensive
line along the Po River itself. From its source in northwestern
Italy, the Po meandered east to the Adriatic Sea. The
river varied in width from 130 to 500 yards and was
often bordered by levees which served as nature fortifications
made stronger by field works on both banks. As in northern
Europe, the towns and villages along the river would
provide natural fortifications, while the more developed
east-west road system would ease the resupply movements
of the defenders.
The third line, in the Alpine foothills, extended east
and west of Lake Garda. Dubbed the Adige Line, after
the river of the Sam name, these defenses were designed
to cover a last-ditch Axis withdrawal into northeast
Italy and Austria. The Adige Line, with its intricate
system of trenches, dugouts, and machine-gun emplacements,
was reminiscent of World War I. If stoutly defended
it could be the toughest line yet encountered in Italy.

Map: Breakthrough into the Po Valley
Despite these apparent advantages, the Axis operated
under significant handicaps imposed by Adolf Hitler,
by the Wehrmacht High Command, and by Germany's growing
shortages in manpower and equipment. The top Axis commanders
in Italy had repeatedly asked to withdraw from the Apennines
to the stronger positions along the Po River before
the expected Allied offensive. Permission was always
flatly denied and Hitler's subsequent directives compelled
local commanders to hold their positions until enemy
action forced their retreat. Rigid adherence to this
policy posed many risks for the defenders and made it
difficult, if not impossible, to conduct organized withdrawals
in the face of overwhelming Allied superiority in ground
mobility and air power.
As the Axis feverishly dug in, the U.S. Fifth and British
Eighth Armies prepared for the coming battle. The Allied
troops were exhausted from months of fighting in late
1944, and the first four months of 1945 were marked
by intensive efforts to rebuild combat strength and
morale. Front-line units rotated to rear areas for rest,
relaxation, and training; replacements were worked into
tired units; and damaged or worn equipment was replaced
or rebuilt. Administrators and logisticians requisitioned,
hoarded, and stockpiled equipment and supplies, especially
artillery ammunition. Fuel pipelines were built, reconnaissance
conducted supply points planned and bridging equipment
collected. However, due to the shortages caused by the
equipment and manpower demands of other theaters, this
process took time. In the end Allied manpower and artillery
superiority, critical in the rugged Italian terrain,
was no more than about two or three to one.
By early 1945 the Fifth Army contained about 270,000
soldiers (with over 30,000 more awaiting assignments
in replacement depots), over 2,000 artillery pieces
and mortars, and thousands of vehicles, all positioned
along a 120-mile front extending east from the Ligurian
coast, across the crest of the Apennines, to a point
southeast of Bologna.
Aerial view of the Po River (National
Archives)
The commander's major combat units included five U.S.
infantry divisions (the 34th, 85th, 88th, 91st, and
92d), the U.S. 10th Mountain and 1st Armored Divisions,
the Japanese-American 442d Regiment, as well as the
1st Brazilian Infantry Division, the free Italian Legnano
Combat Group, and the 6th South African Armored Division.
The U.S. IV Corps in the west, under Maj. Gen. Willis
D. Crittenberger, and the U.S. II Corps in the east,
under Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Keyes, shared control of the
ten division equivalents.
On the Fifth Army's right flank was the British Eighth
Army, commanded since 1 October 1944 by General Sir
Richard L. McCreery. Containing the Polish 2d Corps
and the British 5th, 10th, and 13th Corps, the Eighth
Army controlled eight divisions from four different
nations, as well as four free Italian battle groups
and a Jewish brigade. By April 1945 their line extended
from the Bologna area east to the Adriatic, ten miles
north of Ravenna.
General Clark scheduled a new general offensive to
begin in early April 1945. Unlike prior campaigns in
Italy, he clearly assigned the major role to American
forces. Prior to the main offensive, D-day minus 5,
the U.S. 92d Infantry Division was to launch a diversionary
attack, Operation SECOND WIND, to capture Massa along
the Ligurian coast. Then, on 9 April the Eighth Army
was to penetrate enemy defenses east of Bologna, drawing
enemy reserves from the vital communications hub.
Following these diversions, the 15th Army Group's main
effort, Operation CRAFTSMAN, would be launched by Fifth
Army forces around 11 April. Initially, Fifth Army units
were to penetrate the enemy's defenses west of Bologna,
move into the southern Po Valley, and then capture Bologna
itself. Rather than destroying the German forces, the
initial phase of CRAFTSMAN thus focused on penetrating
the Axis front and seizing enough terrain to provide
a base for further operations in the Po Valley. Truscott
intended to attack with forces from both corps advancing
side by side along two major avenues, staggering the
assaults to allow the maximum concentration of air and
artillery support for each. Crittenberger's IV Corps
would attack first, west of Highways 64 and 65 which
lead north to Bologna. One day later, Keyes' II Corps
would attack north along Highway 65 and take Bologna.
During Phase II, both Allied armies would continue north
toward the Bondeno-Ferrara area, thirty miles north
of Bologna, trapping Axis forces south of the Po River.
Finally, Phase III would see the combined Allied armies
cross the Po and advance to Verona, fifty miles farther
north, before fanning out into northern Italy, Austria,
and Yugoslavia, completing the destruction of the Axis
forces in southern Europe.
Operations
On 5 April 1945, the U.S. 92d Infantry Division began
its diversionary attack on the Ligurian coast. Bloodied
by an Axis counteroffensive in December 1944 and again
during an offensive in the Serchio River valley in February
1945, the now veteran 92d Division, preceded by air
and artillery bombardments, attacked before dawn with
the 370th Infantry and the attached 442d Regimental
Combat Team. As troops of the 370th advanced through
the foothills along the coastal highway toward Massa,
they received heavy enemy fire and were halted.
Farther inland, however, Nisei soldiers of the 442d
scaled the Apuan Alps to outflank Massa from the east.
During the advance near Seravezza, Company A of the
regiment's 100th Battalion was pinned down by heavy
enemy fire. When his squad leader was wounded in action,
Pfc. Sadao S. Munemori took over. In several frontal,
solitary attacks through direct enemy fire, he knocked
out two enemy machine guns with grenades. Withdrawing
under murderous fire to his own position, Munemori had
nearly reached the safety of a shell crateroccupied
by two of his comrades when an unexploded grenade bounced
off his helmet and rolled toward them. Rising again
into the withering fire, he dove for the grenade and
smothered its blast with his body. By his swift and
heroic action, he saved two of his comrades at the cost
of his own life and was posthumously awarded the Medal
of Honor. After several days of such savage fighting,
the 442d captured Massa, and by 11 April pushed north
to the famed marble quarries of Carrara. Here, determined
enemy resistance stopped the American drive for over
a week.
To the east, on the Adriatic coast, Polish, Indian,
New Zealander, and British soldiers of the Eighth Army
surged forward on 9 April after a massive air and artillery
barrage. For the next several days they engaged Axis
forces of the 26th Panzer, 98th Infantry, 362d Infantry,
4th Parachute, and 42d Jaeger Divisions across
the entire front, gradually pushing them north toward
the vital Argenta gap, just west of the impassable Comacchio
Lagoon. In spite of the stubborn resistance of German
Tenth Army soldiers, the British 78th Division
seized the Argenta gap on 18 April, thereby threatening
to turn the entire Axis flank.
The Eighth Army's successes set the stage for the Fifth
Army's main effort. Planned for 12 April, the offensive
was postponed when dense fog engulfed most Allied air
fields. With conditions on 13 April no better, forecasts
for the following day were equally dismal. On 14 April
1945, the IV Corps was still waiting for the word to
advance, but the first weather updates that morning
were gloomy. As the sun rose it began to burn the fog
away, and fighter-bombers of the XXII Tactical Air Command
became airborne. Shortly thereafter, at about 0900,
Truscott ordered the Fifth Army's ground attack to commence.
Crittenberger, the IV Corps commander, initially planned
to advance north against the Fourteenth Army with
the 10th Mountain and 1st Armored Divisions moving abreast
between the Panaro and Reno River valleys. They would
stagger their attacks to allow concentrated fire support
for each unit and to facilitate the 10th Mountain Division's
seizure of the Rocca Rofferno massif, north of the Pra
del Bianco basin, a small bowl-shaped valley marking
the division's starting position. Control of these and
successive heights would ease the 1st Armored Division's
attack to the east and pave the way for the seizure
of the village of Ponte Samoggia, twenty miles farther
north, midway on the Modena-Bologna highway on the southern
edge of the Po Valley plane.
"Vergato" by Radulovic (Army Art
Collection)
The crossing of the Pra del Bianco was a critical first
step in breaking through the Axis defenses. Guarded
by minefields and numerous strong points, the overlooking
heights provided enemy soldiers of the 334th, 94th
Infantry, and 90th Panzer Grenadier Divisions
of the LI Mountain and XIV Panzer Corps
with excellent defensive positions and fields of
observation. Nonetheless, after forty minutes of air
attacks and thirty-five minutes of artillery preparation,
the 10th Mountain Division began its advance. Although
the Americans quickly discovered that the Axis defenses
were still largely intact, they doggedly pushed forward.
During this assault, Pfc. John D. Magrath's unit, Company
G, 85th Infantry, 10th Mountain Division, was pinned
down by heavy enemy fire. Volunteering to act as a scout
and armed only with a rifle, Magrath charged headlong
into the withering fire, killing two Germans and wounding
three others who were manning a machine gun. Carrying
the captured enemy weapon across an open field, Magrath
destroyed two more enemy machine-gun nests before circling
behind four other Germans, killing them with a burst
as they fired on his company. Spotting another enemy
position to his right, he knelt with the machine gun
in his arms and exchanged fire with the Germans until
he had killed two and wounded three more. Then, with
the enemy continuing to pour mortar and artillery fire
on his company's position, Magrath again volunteered
to brave the shelling to collect reports of casualties.
While carrying out this last task, he was struck and
killed by enemy fire, posthumously winning the Medal
of Honor. With such soldiers, the 10th Mountain Division
seized the basin and the hills to the north by the evening
of the fourteenth, but its gains had been made at the
cost of over 550 casualties.
To the east, the 1st Armored Division had launched
a two-pronged northward attack in the Reno River valley
along Highway 64 and the adjacent heights. At 1750 hours
the 81st Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron began the offensive
by storming the heavily defended town of Vergato, just
west of the river. Within two hours the Americans controlled
half of the town, but were halted by fierce enemy mortar
and machine-gun fire that required them to engage in
costly house-to-house fighting before resuming their
drive north.
West of the two attacking American divisions, the Brazilian
Expeditionary Force also joined the fray. Early morning
patrols had entered the town of Montese, west of the
Pra del Bianco, without making contact with the 334th
Division, but a larger force moving into the area
later in the day encountered strong resistance from
an alerted enemy, and a sharp firelight ensued. After
a lengthy and bitter engagement the Brazilians forced
the enemy to withdraw.
For much of the next four days, 15-18 April, the IV
Corps area was the scene of intense ground action as
the 10th Mountain and 1st Armored Divisions slowly pushed
northward, expelling Axis forces from Monte Pigna, Monte
Mantino, Monte Mosca, Monte Pero, and the Reno River
valley. As elsewhere during the Italian campaign, the
fighting consisted of fierce small-unit actions that
moved from ridgeline to ridgeline, and from valley town
to valley town, accounting for heavy casualties on both
sides. Yet American firepower superiority and aggressive
infantry attacks slowly pushed back troops of the 94th
Infantry and 90th Panzer Grenadier Divisions,
XIVPanzer Corps, who fought stubbornly but futilely
to halt the Americans. Although the IV Corps had advanced
only six miles by 19 April, U.S. Army soldiers were
beginning to detect signs that the first Axis defensive
line in the northern Apennines was about to give way.
To the immediate east, Keyes' II Corps pursued its
own offensive. During the afternoon of 15 April over
760 heavy bombers of the Mediterranean Allied Strategic
Air Force, concentrating on the rectangular area between
Highways 64 and 65 and the defenses around Bologna,
pounded the fifteen miles of lines facing the II Corps
held by the 65th Division and 8th Mountain
Division of the XIV Panzer Corps and the
1st Parachute and 305th Infantry Divisions
of the I Parachute Corps. An additional 200
medium bombers and 120 fighter-bombers of the XXII Tactical
Air Command then hammered targets immediately opposite
the II Corps in the Monte Sole area and in the Reno
valley north to the town of Praduro, about halfway to
Bologna. The 6th South African Armored Division and
the U.S. 88th Infantry Division opened the ground offensive
just after nightfall, moving toward objectives between
Highways 64 and 65. By the end of the first day, the
South Africans had gained control of Monte Sole, opening
the way north up Highway 64 and the Reno River valley.
Meanwhile, the 88th Infantry Division attacked enemy
positions on the Monterumici hill mass and Monte Adone,
the dominant terrain features west of Highway 65 and
the key to Axis resistance in the area. Throughout the
night and into the next day the 88th Division battered
at the Axis defenses in small-unit battles reminiscent
of the struggles for the Gustav and Gothic Lines the
year before. By nightfall, however, both features remained
in enemy hands.
Farther east, the U.S. 91st and 34th Infantry Divisions
attacked north along Highway 65 in the Savena River
valley with similar results. The defending 65th Division
had heavily fortified the ridgelines on both sides
of the valley, and stiff resistance immediately stopped
the American drive.
On the morning of 17 April the Americans renewed their
attacks across the II Corps front against a wavering
but still determined enemy. Building on its previous
gains, the 88th Infantry Division succeeded in taking
most of the Monterumici hill mass, raising hopes of
an imminent breakthrough in the II Corps area. To exploit
a possible breach in the Axis line, Truscott released
the U.S. 85th Infantry Division, then in Fifth Army
reserve, to Keyes to assist with what he hoped would
be the final northward push by the 6th South African
Armored and the 88th Infantry Divisions. But simultaneously
he redeployed the 1st Armored Division from the IV Corps'
eastern flank to the west so that it could exploit any
break in the Axis line toward Modena and northward.
By nightfall on the seventeenth, the 10th Mountain
Division had succeeded in punching through the remaining
portions of the enemy's first defensive line, and other
successes soon followed. Only a rapidly disintegrating
Axis force and then about thirty miles of relatively
flat terrain stood between the IV Corps and the Po River
itself. To the east, aware of the threat to their flank
from IV Corps advances, Axis units facing the II Corps
also began to withdraw as rapidly as possible toward
the Po. In the face of superior Allied air and ground
forces, and with negligible reserves, the Germans had
little chance of containing the emerging American breakthrough.
The complexion and pace of the battle began to change
on 18-19 April as five armored infantry columns of the
repositioned U.S. 1st Armored Division began to drive
up the Samoggia River valley west of the 10th Mountain
Division. The 90th Panzer Grenadier Division resisted
with its few remaining tanks in a series of sharp, one-on-one
armored engagements that were very rare for the Italian
campaign, but ultimately gave way after sustaining heavy
losses.
Map: The Spring Offensive
With the Brazilians and the 1st Armored Division dealing
with the bulk of Axis forces in the Samoggia valley,
the 10th Mountain Division advanced six miles due north,
taking some 2,900 Axis prisoners and capturing Monte
San Michele, just twelve miles short of Ponte Samoggia.
Pushing three miles beyond the leading troops halted
for the night to allow reserves and support elements
to catch up. To the east, the 85th Infantry Division
advanced against light opposition, keeping pace with
the 10th Mountain Division.
Farther east and closer to Bologna, the II Corps hammered
at the enemy. By dawn on 18 April, Keyes' units had
accelerated their advance, pursuing the rapidly withdrawing
German forces. With the U.S. 88th Infantry Division
pushing northwest against scattered resistance, the
91st Infantry Division unfurled the Stars and Stripes
atop formidable Monte Adone—a visible confirmation that
the stalemate on II Corps' front was finally broken.
As Axis defenses cracked, the bulk of the Fifth Army
passed west of Bologna and Generals Keyes and Crittenberger
repositioned their units for the final push out of the
Apennines.
The turning point in the spring offensive came on 20
April, with both the Fifth and Eighth Armies in position
to launch high-speed armored advances from the Apennines
foothills toward the Po River crossings. Given the flat
terrain and excellent road network in the Po Valley,
unlike anything yet encountered during the Italian campaign,
15th Army Group orders now emphasized a faster-paced
offensive where speed and mobility could be exploited
to destroy surviving enemy forces before they escaped.
The Italian campaign would become a race between Allied
and Axis forces to reach the Po River first and the
Alpine foothills beyond. Truscott ordered II Corps units
to capture or isolate Bologna and to encircle Axis forces
south of the river by linking with the Eighth Army at
Bondeno, about twenty miles north of Bologna. To the
west, along the coast, the 92d Infantry Division prepared
to advance to La Spezia and then on to Genoa. In between
he wanted the 1st Armored Division to mop up the remaining
Axis forces in the foothills southwest of Ponte Samoggia,
capture Modena, and drive for the Po. Meanwhile, the
10th Mountain Division, now pouring from the foothills,
cut Highway 9 between Bologna and Modena, took Ponte
Samoggia itself, and also moved north.
To increase the pace and strength of his northward
advance, on 20 April Truscott ordered the 6th South
African Armored Division and 85th Infantry Division
to join the all-out drive for the Po as soon as they
left the Apennines foothills. Elsewhere on the II Corps
front, the 91st Division continued its operations west
of Bologna, while the 34th Infantry Division advanced
on both sides of Highway 65 to the southern outskirts
of the city.
By 21 April the Allies had completed the transition
to a large-unit, fast-paced, and highly mechanized pursuit.
The final units of Crittenberger's IV Corps emerged
from the Apennines foothills with the 1st Armored Division
on the left, the 10th Mountain Division in the center,
and the 85th Infantry Division on the right. Truscott's
first priority was to have Crittenberger expand his
base in the Po Valley and cross the Panaro River north
of Bologna before the enemy could reorganize there.
On the left, the 1st Armored Division turned northwest
along Highway 9, heading for Modena. In the center and
on the right, a motorized task force of the 10th Mountain
Division passed through Ponte Samoggia and advanced
fifteen miles farther, seizing a bridge across the Panaro
River intact. The rest of the division followed, while
a steady stream of prisoners flowed to the rear. On
IV Corps' right, the 85th Infantry Division relieved
10th Mountain Division rear detachments before crossing
the Panaro River farther east.
In the II Corps zone, Bologna fell to the U.S. 34th
Infantry Division on the morning of 21 April, but General
Truscott left the city to his Italian troops and sent
the 34th west toward Modena. By reinforcing the IV Corps'
left flank, he hoped to isolate enemy divisions still
retreating from the northern Apennines and to deny them
Po River crossings west of the 1st Armored Division.
Attaching the 34th Division to the IV Corps, he instructed
Crittenberger to put it astride Highway 9 between the
1st Armored Division and the Brazilian Expeditionary
Force. Subsequently, the 34th Division reached Modena
on 23 April and continued its attack northwest along
Highway 9 toward Reggio, ten miles farther. Meanwhile,
the 6th South African Armored Division led the II Corps'
advance to the Panaro River and on to the Po, with the
U.S. 88th Infantry Division mopping up the rear areas
of Axis stragglers. On their right, the 91st Division
skirted the western outskirts of Bologna, captured the
airport, and continued north, rapidly approaching the
Panaro.
By dawn on 22 April the entire Fifth Army was well
into the Po Valley. On the right flank, Axis forces
attempted in vain to prevent the juncture of the Fifth
and Eighth Armies, desperately trying to buy time for
small detachments of their comrades to escape. But the
Allied onslaught, now moving at full speed, quickly
swept aside the hasty defenses erected by the 1st
and 4th Parachute Divisions, overwhelming
and annihilating numerous Axis rear-guard detachments
in the process.
Prisoners were captured by the tens
of thousands in the Po Valley and marched to the rear,
often unguarded or guarded by only one or two men.
(National Archives)
In the west, the 10th Mountain Division's spearhead
reached the Po River at San Benedetto, thirty miles
north of Ponte Samoggia, on the evening of 22 April.
By midnight, the rest of the division had arrived' and
river-crossing equipment followed. Masses of destroyed
enemy materiel littered the south bank of the Po, showing
the devastating effects of Allied air power. Not one
bridge remained standing. As the 10th Mountain Division
waited to cross, the 1st Armored Division skirted Modena
over a captured Panaro River bridge four miles north
of Highway 9, then moved west, reaching a southwestern
loop of the Po on 23 April. The units' armored vehicles
then spread out along several miles of the river's southern
bank to block crossings by any remaining enemy soldiers
bypassed in the headlong race for the river. The rapid
American advance along the forty-mile-wide front had
left many pockets of Axis soldiers, and special task
forces were now created to mop up rear areas as the
main Allied units pressed farther northward. Ultimately,
over 100,000 Axis troops were forced to surrender in
the areas south of the river.
Although the majority of the Po River bridges were
destroyed, the U.S. 85th Infantry Division, like other
fast-moving Fifth Army units, had been able to take
many spans south of the Po intact, such as the Panaro
River bridge at Camposanto, eleven miles north of Ponte
Samoggia. Early on 22 April, fearing efforts of enemy
rear-guard units to destroy the span, a sergeant from
the division's 310th Engineer Battalion quickly plunged
into the river, cut the demolition wires under enemy
fire, and saved the structure from destruction. Once
across, the 310th repelled an enemy attempt to retake
the bridge and to hold the town. As one regiment cleared
Camposanto and secured the span, another swung to the
left, crossed the bridge seven miles south at Bomporto,
and quickly covered the intervening twenty-four miles
of territory, arriving at the Po River just before noon
on 23 April 1945. The division then cleared the south
bank, capturing hundreds of prisoners and much equipment
in the process. Later in the day a westward shift of
corps boundaries caused the 85th Division to relinquish
some of its territory to the 88th Division, which had
only left the Panaro River early that morning. The 85th
then prepared to cross the Po River in force the next
day.
By 24 April the entire Fifth Army front had reached
the Po. In the west, IV Corps units advanced west, northwest,
and north, pushing forward bridging equipment for an
offensive across the river. In the 10th Division area,
fifty M-2 assault boats enabled the unit to begin ferrying
troops across at noon. Air bursts from German artillery
caused some casualties, but enemy actions failed to
significantly delay the crossings here or elsewhere.
Once on the far bank, the 10th Mountain quickly secured
its bridgehead. By 1800 hours two regiments were on
the far bank, with the division's third regiment crossing
during the night.
To the east, British Eighth Army units were within
miles of the Po River by nightfall on 23 April, with
the British 6th Armored Division at Bondeno, the 8th
Indian Infantry Division ten miles farther east, moving
through Ferrara, and the British 56th Infantry Division
nearing Polesella, another ten miles to the east. The
Italian Garibaldi Combat Group, soon to be joined by
the Italian Cremona Battle Group, was closing on the
Po River delta.
In the center of the Allied line, the II Corps reshuffled
its units before crossing the Po. Keyes wanted the 88th
and 91st Infantry and the 6th South African Armored
Divisions to establish independent bridgeheads. On the
right, the South Africans became responsible for maintaining
contact with the British Eighth Army left flank, while
the 91st Division moved to the center, and the 88th
Division concentrated on the left. At noon on 24 April,
the 88th crossed the Po River at two spots against patchy
resistance, followed the next day by the 91st in the
center and the South Africans on the corps right wing.
M-2
Treadway Pontoon Bridge under construction across
the
Po River near Ostiglia (National Archives)
Meanwhile, as the 10th Mountain Division awaited the
completion of heavier spans across the Po, other IV
Corps units drove due west. On the IV Corps' left, the
Brazilian Expeditionary Force protected the flank of
the 34th Infantry Division, which reached Reggio, about
fifteen miles west of Modena, early on 24 April. Above
Modena and Reggio, 1st Armored Division task forces
along the Po River's southern bank blocked all remaining
escape routes. The division now prepared to put armored
elements across the Po in the 10th Mountain Division's
zone to protect the flank of its projected advance north
into the Alpine foothills.
To take advantage of the deteriorating enemy situation
and the feeble resistance along the Po River, Truscott
discarded plans for a slow, deliberate river crossing,
and instead issued instructions to jump the river as
quickly as possible and press the attack. He wanted
the Fifth Army to shift its advance northwest toward
Verona, about sixty miles above Bologna in the Alpine
foothills. Its capture would deepen the rupture between
the German Fourteenth and Tenth Armies, block
escape routes to the Brenner Pass, and breach the Adige
Line before it could be fully manned.
Lack of bridging threatened to delay his plans. With
no permanent spans surviving Allied air bombardments,
a variety of amphibious craft, rubber rafts, wooden
boats, and ferries were pressed into service to carry
men and light equipment across the river. But heavy
equipment had to await the construction of pontoon bridges.
Since 15th Army Group plans had assumed that II Corps
would be first to reach the river, the Fifth Army now
had to push additional bridging for the IV Corps forward
on already overcrowded roads. Nevertheless, through
the efforts of Army engineers, pontoon and treadway
bridges spanned the river within two days of the first
crossings.
Over the next three days, 24-26 April, Fifth Army forces
erupted from their Po River bridgeheads and split the
Axis forces in Italy. In the center, Fifth Army divisions
raced for Verona. The 10th Mountain Division started
north after midnight on 24 April, and by 0945 hours
the next morning had advanced twenty miles to the airport
at Villafranca, just southwest of Verona. On its right,
the 85th Division moved from the Po River shortly before
noon on 25 April, stopping within ten miles of Verona
by nightfall. Only slightly farther east, the 88th Division
also started north early on 25 April, moving by foot,
jeeps, captured vehicles, and bicycles, and covering
the forty miles to the outskirts of Verona in just one
day.
Operations on the Army's flanks continued apace. On
the left, the Brazilians and the 34th Infantry and 1st
Armored Divisions pushed west and northwest along Highway
9 toward Piacenza on the Po River, fifty miles west
of Reggio. On the right the U.S. 91st Infantry Division
also began its advance north from the Po, with the South
African armor on its right, heading toward the Adige
River town of Legnago, ten miles farther. Verona fell
on 26 April 1945 as three American divisions converged
on the city. The 88th Division secured the town at daybreak
after a vicious night battle. Just after dawn the forward
elements of the 10th Mountain Division roared into town,
followed two hours later by the 85th Division. The seizure
of Verona now brought the Fifth Army up to the final
Axis defensive line in Italy, fully prepared to implement
Phase III of Operation CRAFTSMAN.
The Adige Line's intricate system of trenches, dugouts,
and machine-gun positions in the Alpine foothills varied
in depth from 1,000 to 5,000 yards. Yet, as imposing
as it was, the Fifth Army's rapid advance had not allowed
the enemy to fully man the defenses. Even if the time
had been available, however, the Axis now lacked the
materiel and manpower to organize a cohesive barrier.
Fifth Army orders for the final phase of operations
emphasized blocking the retreat of enemy troops south
of the Alps. The Allied advance from this point more
closely resembled a tactical march than a combat operation
as most Axis units had disintegrated into small groups
of harried soldiers retreating as best they could under
intense Allied pressure. Therefore, after the IV Corps
had secured Verona, General Truscott decided to send
the II Corps northeast to help the Eighth Army in its
drive to capture Padua, Venice, and Treviso.
The II Corps' 88th Division crossed the Adige River
at Verona on 26 April and prepared to move northeast
about twenty-five miles to Vicenza. About twenty miles
to the southeast, the 91st Division crossed the Adige
at Legnano, securing the 88th Division's right flank.
Generals Truscott and Keyes personally observed the
91st Division's passage over the Adige, concerned with
the level of resistance encountered. If the crossing
went uncontested, both men reasoned, it would show that
the enemy was more interested in surviving than in making
a stand from their prepared positions on the Adige Line.
The American generals soon had their answer. Although
the soldiers of the 91st were harassed by sporadic German
artillery fire, the division crossed largely unopposed
by any organized, coherent force. Meanwhile, to the
right of the 91st Division, the 6th South African Armored
Division advanced in the area between the Adige and
Po Rivers, stretching out to Eighth Army units farther
east and encountering equally weak resistance.
Truscott now directed IV Corps units to seal the Brenner
Pass in the north and destroy the Ligurian Army in the
west. Moving quickly, the 10th Mountain Division's lead
element, Task Force Darby, commanded by Col. William
O. Darby of Ranger fame, left Verona on 26 April for
nearby Lake Garda, where it soon worked its way up the
eastern shore. On the 10th Mountain Division's right
flank the 85th Division moved uncontested through the
Adige Line north of Verona and went into Fifth Army
reserve on 27 April.
To the west, the 1st Armored Division began sealing
all possible escape routes into Austria and Switzerland
along the Po Valley's northern rim from Lake Garda,
fifty miles west to Lake Como. On the 1st Armored Division's
left, the 34th Infantry Division drove west, taking
the towns of Parma, Fidenza, and Piacenza in quick succession
and gathering large numbers of prisoners. In the far
west, along the Italian Riviera, north of La Spezia,
the soldiers of the U.S. 92d Infantry Division encountered
only slight opposition as they swept up the coastal
highway toward the port city of Genoa. As the lead elements
of the division entered the city without opposition
on the morning of 27 April, they discovered that the
4,000-man Axis garrison had already surrendered to Italian
partisans the day before.
Even as Fifth and Eighth Army units spread across northern
Italy, secret negotiations to end the fighting between
the Germans and Allies had begun to produce results.
Underway since February, through the efforts of Italian
and Swiss middlemen, they had been conducted primarily
by Allen Dulles, the U.S. Office of Strategic Services
agent in Bern, Switzerland, and Lt. Gen. Karl Wolff,
the senior SS officer in Italy. Wolff, and later General
von Vietinghoff, hoped to gain either the cooperation
or the acquiescence of the western Allies for a continuation
of Germany's war against the Soviet Union using Axis
forces then engaged in Italy. Although neither Dulles
nor Allied military leaders shared or even seriously
considered Wolff's goals, they were interested in any
possibility of ending the fighting in Italy without
further bloodshed.
A series of formal secret negotiations thus opened
between the western Allies and Wolff's representatives
in March and April. With the overwhelming success of
Allied offensives everywhere robbing the Axis negotiators
of any remaining bargaining power, German emissaries
arrived at the 15th Army Group headquarters in Caserta,
Italy, on 28 April to arrange a cease-fire and the unconditional
surrender of the remaining Axis forces south of the
Alps. They signed the appropriate documents at 1400
hours the next day and agreed to a cease-fire along
the entire Italian front at 1200 hours on 2 May 1945.
The devastating impact of the Allied offensive in April,
however, had so shattered Axis communications and unit
cohesion that the 15th Army Group agreed to withhold
announcement of the cease-fire for three days, until
late on 2 May, to provide enemy commanders the opportunity
to notify their scattered units. In the meantime, the
fighting continued.
By 28 April Truscott's Fifth Army stretched from the
French border in the west to the Verona area in the
east, curving in and out of the Alpine foothills. His
forces still fought battles between 28 April and 2 May,
and men still died, but for the most part American and
Allied troops rolled across northern and northwestern
Italy without encountering serious opposition. The stream
of prisoners taken since mid-April turned into a deluge
during the last days of the campaign, and several combat
units left the front lines to guard the tens of thousands
of Axis soldiers swelling makeshift prisoner-of-war
camps throughout northern Italy.
To the north the 10th Mountain Division continued to
advance up Lake Garda's eastern shore, through the Alpine
valleys leading to the Brenner Pass, the narrow defiles
often blocked by last-ditch enemy rear guards. On 30
April, in response to reports that Benito Mussolini
and other top Fascist officials were in a villa on the
western shore, elements of the division crossed the
lake to discover that their intelligence was false.
Indeed the Americans soon learned that Communist partisans
had executed Mussolini near Lake Como on 28 April, his
body later being strung up by its heels on the Piazzale
Loreto in nearby Milan. The American 10th Mountain troops
reached the northern end of Lake Garda on 30 April,
where Colonel Darby was killed by a random enemy artillery
shell, just days before the end of hostilities. By the
time of the final surrender on 2 May, the division had
taken the towns of Riva, Torbole, and Nago, and was
ready to advance into the Alps.
Immediately south of the Alps, the 1st Armored Division
continued to drive westward on 27 April, meeting Italian
partisans from Milan who reported that they had already
liberated the city, a fact U.S. troops confirmed two
days later. On the afternoon of 30 April General Crittenberger
and a composite command representing the entire IV Corps
entered Milan, the largest city in northern Italy. In
the meantime, the 1st Armored Division had moved west
and southwest of the city, clearing small pockets of
resistance and reaching out twenty miles farther west
to the Ticino River by 2 May. Behind it, the 34th Division
continued its clearing operations until it relieved
the 1st Armored Division north of Milan, sealing off
any Axis elements still attempting to withdraw north.
South of Milan, the Brazilian Expeditionary Force bottled
up the 148th Grenadier and Italia Bersaglieri
Divisions on 28 April. On the following day the
German commander surrendered; during the next twenty-four
hours the Brazilians collected over 13,500 prisoners.
By 1 May clearing operations had ended, and a Brazilian
task force joined the 92d Division at Alessandria, forty-five
miles southwest of Milan, while the Japanese-Americans
soldiers of the 442d Regimental Combat Team entered
Turin, about fifty miles farther west, later that day.
By 30 April the last organized Axis force in northwest
Italy, the Ligurian Army, composed of the German
LXXV Corps and the Italian Corps Lombardia,
capitulated. For the next forty-eight hours, as
the appropriate orders trickled down from the headquarters
of what remained of Army Group C, the Ligurian
Army's subordinate units surrendered piecemeal to
IV Corps troops.
General von Senger surrenders to
General Clark at Fifteenth Army Headquarters. (National
Archives)
In northeastern Italy the 88th Division left the Adige
River for Vicenza, arriving on 28 April. Soldiers
of the division cleared the city in bitter house-to-house
fighting before moving farther north, stretching out
along Highway 11 between Verona and Vicenza. There they
captured thousands of retreating enemy soldiers before
sealing the last escape route north. On the last day
of April, Truscott transferred the 85th Infantry Division
from IV to II Corps, and on the following day both the
85th and 88th Infantry Divisions beta northward advance,
moving along the Piave River toward the U.S. Seventh
Army moving south from Germany, a juncture accomplished
on 4 May. Elsewhere, the 91st Infantry and the 6th South
African Armored Divisions protected the flank of British
Eighth Army forces driving north and northeast, the
latter reaching Trieste where they joined Tito's Yugoslavian
Communist partisans on 2 May.
That evening the 15th Army Group headquarters transmitted
the cease-fire orders throughout northern Italy, and
the remaining Axis forces laid down their arms within
the next forty-eight hours. On the afternoon of 3 May
1945, Generals Truscott and McCreery attended a ceremony
at 15th Army Group headquarters in Caserta, where Lt.
Gen. Fridolin von Senger und Etterlin, Vietinghoff's
representative, formally surrendered the remaining Axis
forces in Italy to General Clark, which ended World
War II in the Mediterranean.
Analysis
For the Allied armies in Italy, the Po Valley offensive
climaxed the long and bloody Italian campaign. When
the spring offensive opened, it initially appeared that
its course might continue the pattern of the previous
months and battles in Italy, becoming another slow,
arduous advance over rugged terrain, in poor weather,
against a determined, well-entrenched, and skillful
enemy. However, by April 1945 the superbly led and combat-hardened
Allied 15th Army Group, a truly multinational force,
enjoyed an overwhelming numerical superiority on the
ground and in the air. On the other side, Axis forces
had been worn down by years of combat on many fronts;
they were plagued by poor political leadership at the
top as well as shortages of nearly everything needed
to wage a successful defensive war. By April 1945 factors
such as terrain, weather, combat experience, and able
military leadership, that had for months allowed the
Axis to trade space for time in Italy could no longer
compensate for the simple lack of manpower, air support,
and materiel. By the end of the first two weeks of the
campaign both sides realized that the end of the war
in Italy was in sight, and that all the Allies needed
to complete the destruction of Axis forces was the skillful
application of overwhelming pressure, a feat largely
accomplished within ten days, by 2 May 1945.
By the time of the cease-fire in Italy, the U.S. Fifth
Army had been in continuous combat for 602 days, well
over twenty months, far longer than any U. S. field
army during World War II. During the entire Italian
campaign, Allied losses had exceeded 312,000, of which
60 percent, or about 189,000, were sustained by Fifth
Army units. Of the total losses, 31,886 were killed,
including 19,475 Americans, the remainder of the dead
being British and Commonwealth troops, Brazilians, Poles,
Frenchmen, free Italians, and members of the Jewish
brigade. German losses in Italy were estimated at over
434,600, including 48,000 killed in action and over
214,000 missing, the majority of the latter presumed
dead.
What had started as a limited Allied assault on the
"soft underbelly of Europe" in mid-1943, an invasion
to tie down Axis forces and push Italy from the war,
by 1944 had become a full operational theater of its
own, involving upwards of five hundred thousand Allied
troops at its peak. Although considered a sideshow from
mid-1944 on, the soldiers involved in the Italian campaign
succeeded in the vast majority of the goals which the
Allied high command had set for them. From the invasion
of Sicily in July 1943 until the final Axis surrender
just south of the Alps in May 1945, the Allied armies
in Italy had battled north over one thousand miles of
mountainous terrain, through inclement weather, against
a capable and determined enemy. Only the overwhelming
Allied materiel and manpower resources and the countless
heroic acts of hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers
in small unit actions of a type unique to the war in
Italy overcame the Axis forces. Primarily, the Allied
soldiers' determination and aggressive spirit forced
Germany to divert considerable men and materiel from
other, more significant fronts in an ultimately unsuccessful
effort to halt the Allied drive north.
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