| Salerno
was one of the bloodier, more critical operations of the Second
World War. For a time the action hung in the balance as strong
enemy counterattacks smashed and threatened the very existence
of the initial beachhead. This was the opening struggle of the
long and bitter Italian campaign. The
Fifth Army held the beachhead at Salerno for four days but
were danger of losing it to advancing German assaults and
needed assistance quick. The only choice was to utilize the
504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, which had been performing
mock assaults, in an effort to provide relief to the dwindling
forces of the Fifth Army.
On September 13, 1943 1st and 2nd Battalions
were alerted that they would be performing a parachute assault.
"Another dry run", was the cynical comment of most
men. Nevertheless, each man gave his equipment a last minute
check - just in case. Early chow was eaten and immediately
afterward the troops fell in at their bivouac areas in the
appointed plane loading formations; then marched to the battered
and roofless hangars where they picked up their chutes.
The first troopers to board planes were
the Pathfinders of the 504th who would be establishing and
mark the drop zone which was located in the middle of the
Fifth Army. These men devised a plan to mark the drop zone
with a flaming "T" using sand and gasoline.
While the Pathfinders were on their way
to the fight, the rest of 1st and 2nd Battalion were hard
at work. Officers were checking maps and information to decipher
the best course of action to help save the Fifth Army and
save the beachhead. Noncommissioned officers had soldiers
hard at work issuing parachutes, performing maintenance checks
on weapons, and starting to load planes. None of these paratroopers
knew the location of this jump or what type of fighting was
expected. It was not until the men were seated in the planes
that the mission was disclosed. In probably the quickest briefing
of any comparable operation of the war, men of the 504th were
informed that the Fifth Army beachhead in Italy was in grave
danger of being breached and that the 504th was to jump behind
friendly lines in the vicinity of the threatened breakthrough
in order to stem the German advance.
Under the cover of darkness the planes
left for the beachhead. Flying in a column formation they
passed over the clearly marked DZ and unloaded their much
needed support. With the exception of eight planes which failed
to navigate properly to the DZ, but whose planeloads were
subsequently accounted for, there was little difficulty or
confusion experienced in completing the operation. The regiment
assembled quickly and moved to the sounds of cannon and small
arms fire within the hour. Later checks revealed that, amazingly,
only 75 men had suffered injuries as a result of the jump.
In exactly eight hours the 504th had been notified of its
mission, briefed, loaded into planes, jumped on its assigned
drop zone, and committed against the enemy.
By dawn the regiment was firmly emplaced
in a defensive sector three miles from Paestum and Southwest
of Albanella. The days of the 14th and 15th of September were
spent in anticipation of a tank attack that threatened from
the Calore River region to the North. The 2nd Battalion assisted
in the repulsing of one tank attack across the Sele River
while E Company, on a reconnaissance in force of the same
area, encountered scattered and small elements of the enemy.
The regimental recon platoon patrolled the area several miles
to the front and battalions also sent out reconnaissance and
combat patrols of their own with particular emphasis on the
Altavilla sector. Hostile artillery fire was spasmodic and
largely interdictory in character. Air activity was confined
principally to friendly craft, though the enemy in groups
of two and three would occasionally make an appearance over
504th positions only to be driven off by intense fire from
supporting anti-aircraft units. On the morning of the 16th,
the regiment marched four miles to occupy the town of Albanella,
where at noon, Colonel Tucker issued to the battalion commanders
the order to seize and hold the high ground surmounting Altavilla.
The area in the region of Altavilla for several years had
been a firing range for a German artillery school; consequently
there was no problem of range, deflection, or prepared concentrations
that the enemy had not solved long before the advent of the
Americans. Needless to say, hostile artillery and mortar fire
was extremely accurate and capable of pinpointing with lethal
concentrations such vital features as wells, trails, and draws.
During the three days that the 504th occupied the several
hills behind Altavilla, approximately 30 paratroopers died,
150 were wounded, and one man was missing in action.
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Tucker's
Devils prepare to save the Salerno Beachhead
The 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment
gets ready for their airborne operation into Paestum - September
13, 1941
Image size: 26 1/2" wide x 15 1/2"
high.
| Eight
Hours To Glory by James
Dietz |
| Limited Edition, Signed
and Numbered Print. |
US
$175 |
|
|
Eight Hours to Glory - Tucker's Devils
prepare to save the Salerno Beachhead, is dedicated in commemoration
of the 60th Anniversary of the designation of the 82nd as
an Airborne Division and in honor of the World War II Devil
veterans and heroes who undertook this mission, which is still
regarded as history's greatest example of the mobility of
the airborne paratroopers.
The days that followed were, in the words
of General Mark Clark, Commander of the 5th Army, "responsible
for saving the Salerno beachhead." They included repelling
tank attacks and small enemy forces. As the 504th took the
high ground at Altavilla, the enemy counterattacked, and on
the night of the 17th, it became evident that help had to
be secured if the 504th, now completely cut off from friendly
forces, was to hold these key positions so necessary for the
security of the beachhead. The Commander of 6th Corps, General
Dawley, suggested the unit withdraw. Epitomizing the determined
spirit of the Regiment, Colonel Tucker vehemently replied,
"Retreat, Hell! -- Send me my other battalion!"
The 3rd Battalion then rejoined the 504th, the enemy was repulsed,
and the Salerno beachhead was saved. This, the first contact
with the enemy for men of the 504th since Sicily and the first
time that the regiment had been committed as a unit in any
single tactical operation, was a battle that turned the tide
of the German onslaught on the Salerno beachhead and frustrated
their attempts to contain the Fifth Army within the confines
of the coastal plain reaching as far as Altavilla. On 1 October
1943, the 504th became the first infantry unit to enter Naples
and 3rd Battalion became the first US parachute unit to receive
a Presidential Unit Citation as a result of the fierce fighting.
The 504th fought hard in all battles they
encountered in Italy. Nothing reflected this more than a diary
entry of a German officer found at Anzio. The passage read:
American parachutists...devils in baggy
pants...are less than 100 meters from my outpost line. I can't
sleep at night; they pop up from nowhere and we never know
when or how they will strike next. Seems like the black-hearted
devils are everywhere...
To this day the paratroopers of the 504th
PIR are still known as "The Devils".


Colonel R. H. Tucker
Commanding Officer of the 504th
Parachute Infantry
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