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Manzella M. Joseph
29th Infantry Division
115th Infantry Regiment
Company B
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D-Day
A I was on this LST
in the channel waiting to hit the beach when I was woke up by the sixteen inch
guns and the rockets that were aimed at the Omaha beach from the two Battleship
that were next to the LST. It was a hell of a sight.
About eleven am we were on our way
to the beach and the captain said he was going to give us a dry landing so
when we got to the beach he pulled back as we would have to wade to the beach
as that spot was to deep. As we were going into the beach I had to go to the
bow of the ship the put on a flame thrower as the ship was pulling back an 88
shell fell were the bow of the ship was so if the captain had not said he was
going to give us a dry landing I would not be here now and a lot of others
would have been killed.
The only ones that would know about
that will be me and the captain of that LST. May be 1 or 2 crew members.
When I got up on the road above the cliff at Omaha Beach, we assembled and my
Staff Sgt came up to me and told me my friend was captured or was dead as they
went on patrol and hadn't came back yet. As we were standing around this
Sergeant. He moved everyone around me I told him, after I put a 45 in his belly, that I would
count to three and if they were not pull back away from me I was going to shoot
him. What happened was that he had everyone come over were I was and as I had a
flame thrower on my back and was a big enough target as it was I didn't need
anyone around me so that we would be a bigger target. I started to count and
did not get one out and he move them.
That night we were behind an hedgerow
and the Germans were shooting machine guns fire at us all night long and they
hit some Sergeant. My Staff Sergeant came and told me. I don't know why he came
and told me what was going on all night as I was only a PFC. We came across
some German tank, truck, motorcycle with sidecar, town car vw all with Germans
bodies all burned up in them I will remember that as long as I am alive.
June 7th
After a night of intense machine gun
fire over our heads we started to go forward as we were going forward I tried
out the flame thrower and it did not fire so I tossed it to the ground and had
to go to the road to get a gun from a dead soldier. I had no trouble finding
one as a whole squad of soldiers were laying dead on that road. We didn't meet
any Germans that day so at night we slept in a fox hole the next day I woke up
to see the first lieutenant looking at me if it had been a German we would have
been killed.
What happen the third person that
was on guard went to sleep and did not wake anyone up and we all were so beat
that we just slept all night even if you told me that before we did I would
have told you that you were nuts how can anyone sleep with all that noise.
June 8th
After we got out of that fox hole we took off and when we got near some woods I
saw a friend of mine on a stretcher he was shot in the rear end, I told him I
told you to keep you rear end down. We keep walking and about five o'clock I had to go as we were in
this field I just pulled my pants down and went that was the first time I went
and only time as long as I was in combat.
That night the Lieutenant told this
person that was to wake me up the night before and I to set up a machine gun
and watch it so again we took turns and the next thing I heard was my name
being called he forgot to wake me up again, well we never got to do anything
together again. The forth day nothing happened we just walked from one field
into an other. Things got hot on the fifth day.
June 9th
Nothing worth reporting happened on
this day.....
June 10th
On the fifth day three of us were
walking into this farm and there were cows up in the trees laying all over the
area in chunks. There was a farmer milking his cows and when he saw us he
picked up his milk bucket and came runing to us we tryed to tell him not to
come but he would not stop until we drank some of his milk. After we drank some
of his milk he left and we went on our way. We came to a road and join the rest
of the Company as we were walking down the road we came under fire from some
Germans in a farmhouse across the road after we got rid of them we left and as
we left I tap the GI ahead of me but he did not move as I went by I saw
he had taking a bullet in his left ear he didn't even move so that was the 5th
day.
June 11th
The Lieutenant told me to go to C.
company and to tell them that we would be on there right he gave me two other
GIs and also told us not to engage any Germans. I told him what if we met any
Germans are we to tell them we can't engage you so you go your way and we will
go the other way, So he told forget what I said if you meet any do what you
have to do. Any way after we met C Company and told them we were on there right
we were walking back to met up with our company.
As we were walking on this road and
as we came around the bend in the road we came upon this village in the middle
of the road were a group of people when we got close to them there were about
24 ladies standing around a priest. When we got closer they told us that there
were nine Germans in a house and as they were telling us these we heard a tank
coming down the road we hid, and after we saw that it was one of ours we stop
him and told the tank commander that there were Germans in that house and we
left as we got to the end of the road we heard a boom so I think they just
destroy the house.
June 12th
After we made the left turn we
walked about a quarter mile and we heard some firing and I looked over this
hedgerow and saw four of our G.I. dead, I went to an opening and as I stuck my
nose out to see what was going on a bullet hit the ground just in front of my
nose and I got some dirt in my face. I left that spot and found my Lieutenant
Stone and he told me to take the other two soldiers and go to that farm house
and tell everyone there to get out and if they did not to make them leave.
So we went in but the only ones
there were a older man and his wife so I told them they had to leave but they
didn't want to so I had to force them to leave. After we left the house we
joined our company which was pin down by the river and looked on as one of our
airplane drop a bomb on the Germans on the other side of the river but it
didn't do any good and that was the only bomb that was drop on them.
After the plane drop it bomb one of
the soldiers that was in the woods said that he was hit so I tried to go to him
I got to a tree and told him to leave that place but then he said he was hit
again I told him to leave again and that was when I felt like if someone
slapped my right hand I look at it and my middle finger was all blooded up a
and was just hanging there by a thread. I went back to the hedgerow and told a
soldier to bandage it but he was so scared to do it and as I tried to get him
to bandage my hand the Germans open up with a burst from there machine gun and
hit me in the legs I told that soldier that I was hit in the legs and to
bandage my hand but he would not bandage so I got mad at him you don't want to know
what I said to him.
Anyway I stood up and took off all
my gear and pick up a soldier that was hit on the hip and could not walk and
carried him up the hill and drop him in the gully I then went crossed the road
and saw a medic and Lieutenant Stone and told the medic about the solider that
I left in the cully the medic said we will get to him
after we get you fixed up. After he finish bandage me up, a Jeep with a litter
on it and took me to a field hospital I don't know if they picked up that
solider.
After they
took me to the field hospital they put me in this tent that they put up I don't
know how long it was but it looked like it was quarter mile long. I was the
first one to be put in there and it wasn't long before it was full up. There
was an older French man that moan all night long I didn't get any sleep. The
next morning the thirteen of June the nurse came to give out breakfast and said
none for you and gave me a shot in the arm and the next thing it was 2 a.m. the next day. The fourteen of June.
I woke up and
the first thing I said were is my breakfast the nurse came over and said
"shhhh" you are wakening up the other soldiers but I kept asked for
my breakfast so she said if I give you some orange juice will be still I said
ok I took one sip and went back to sleep.
In the
afternoon they put me in a plane a DC 3 I believe and said you are going home.
Well the right engine would not start so they tried the left engine and it
started so they tried the right one again and it stilled didn't start so they
took us off the plane and put us in the ducks and put us on the hospital ship
that was in the channel and we stayed there for three nights. Every night the
Germans Planes would come over and bomb the beach and the ack-ack guns shells
would hit the deck of the ship and scare you. After the hospital ship was
filled we left for England when we got there they took us off the ship and put us in a hospital for the
night.
After
we got to England the next
day we were transferred to a hospital in England to recuperate after I was heal I was sent back to France were I traveled from one
place to another for 14 teen months.
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