|
107th
Engineers Reorganize to Fight as Infantry
The Nine Hours
That Limited the Battle of the Bulge
By
BG Leonard C. Ward (Ret)
Bullingen, Belgium--After midnight, during
the early hours of December 17, 1944, in winter snow and
cold, in the darkness and growing chaos of a startling
German counterattack through the Siegfried Line into
small communities of eastern Belgium, engineers from
Michigan's 107th (then, 254th) Engineer Battalion were
ordered to shed their vehicles and engineer equipment and
reorganize to fight as infantry.
Before first light, while organizing a
defensive position south of the village of Bullingen,
with Company C forward and Company B blocking the road
from Honsfeld, they were confronted by the enemy,
mechanized infantry with tanks and half-tracks. It was
the spearhead of the Sixth Panzer Army attack, led by Lt.
Col. Joachim Peiper, who had already massacred 19
American prisoners of war, would dispose of 50 more that
day, 200 others and 100 Belgians and, ten miles later,
execute 86 in the infamous Malmedy Massacre.
At about 6:00 a.m., while still dark, Company
B, armed only with small arms, machine guns, and rocket
launchers, faced Peiper's tanks and forced him to turn
back. A half-hour later, Peiper attempted another assault
but was turned back again. As daylight broke the 254th
received orders to withdraw through Bullingen where a new
line was being formed.
Next, Peiper, already in need of gasoline,
sent a patrol of five tanks and several half-tracks north
to Wirtzfeld through Bullingen. This time, the patrol
overran Company B. They refueled and then resumed
movement to the north, overtaking miscellaneous fleeing
vehicles of numerous units, but missing elements of the
254th on foot off-road. But the patrol soon took heavy
losses from tank destroyers near Wirtzfeld and was forced
to return south. While retreating, the patrol captured a
number of Company C men caught in the open. They were
herded back to Bullingen, where they were searched,
relieved of their watches, and one, who understood
German, heard they were to be executed.
Suddenly, the cloud cover opened and American
P-47 fighter-bombers attacked Peiper's ten-mile column of
tanks and vehicles. At the head, captive Americans were
quickly distributed and used as human shields. The
attacking pilots, realizing the engineer's plight,
circled low in frustration and departed to other targets.
As cloud cover returned, the Americans were loaded into a
truck but a sudden burst of artillery fire allowed them
to flee into adjacent houses and basements where they
hid. As time passed, their lieutenant allowed them to
make their way back to friendly lines, should they
choose. Three left. They moved north through open fields
to the woods. They hid until dark and then moved west
where they met up with an infantry unit. There they were
given rifles and augmented the defense. Days later they
were sent back to their battalion, which had gathered
west of Elsenborn. The others, hiding in the basements,
ended up in POW camps or missing.
Meanwhile, the 254th had established another
line of defense on a ridge a few hundred yards west of
Bullingen. The line could be seen from town and appeared
strong; it deflected the enemy point to the south. In
attack preparation, German artillery began shelling the
position about 1300 hours just as the 254th dropped back
toward the next ridge, a stronger position still blocking
routes to the northwest, west, and north. Peiper then
abandoned the attack direction and moved southwest toward
St. Vith. Having resisted several vicious attacks from
successive positions during nine hours, relief finally
arrived from 35-miles away at 1500 hours. The Michigan
Engineers were relieved in place by the 26th Infantry of
the Big Red One, the 1st U. S. Infantry Division.
The actions of the 254th enabled the securing
of the V Corps right flank, permitted the evacuation of
large stores of gasoline and rations sorely needed by the
enemy and denied the enemy the use of three vital routes
of approach. Their determination contributed to the
ultimate failure of the German's counterattack.
The 254th Engineer Combat Battalion was
awarded the Presidential Unit Citation and the French
Croix de Guerre. The significance of their contribution
is even greater than the citations portray.
Delay. Denial. Deflection. They held the
North Shoulder for nine hours and enabled it to remain
held on that spot! They denied three intended routes and
significant enabling resupplies! They deflected the
planned strategic direction of Hitler's desperate attack
and it never was regained subsequently! The gift of nine
hours for all commanders to contain the penetration had
more result than just holding the North Shoulder of the
Battle of the Bulge!!!!!!! It limited the extent of the
Battle of the Bulge, the largest battle ever fought by
the United States Army!
Without the nine hours, would the North
Shoulder have held? Would Hitlers Strategic
Direction have been regained? Would greater success and
much earlier success, Liege and the Meuse River, have
been gained?
The 107th Engineer Battalion, reorganized for
28-months as the 254th in England and Europe, spent a
total of five years, two months and seven days serving in
World War II. With the 112th Engineers (Ohio), the 107th
Engineers served in the 1121st Engineer Combat Group as
corps troops, usually in V Corps, FIRST Army. They
supported fifteen fighting divisions in the eleven-
month, 1,372-mile advance from OMAHA Beach to PILSEN,
Czechoslovakia. With Michigans 107th Reconnaissance
Squadron overhead before, during, and after D- Day, the
107th Engineers were the only Michigan element in the
Normandy Assault Landing Force.
Units in the 107th Engineer lineage are now
stationed entirely in the Upper Peninsula at Ishpeming,
Calumet, Baraga, Ironwood, Iron River, Gladstone, and
Sault Ste. Marie.
Brig.
Gen. Ward is a former Director of the Army National
Guard, Hq Department of the Army. He was G3 and Asst Div
Cmdr of Michigans 46th Infantry Division. Before,
during, and after World War II he served in the 107th
Engineers; except from 1943 to VE-Day he served on the
staff of the 1121st Engineer Combat Group with the
Michigan Engineers.
|