When describing the 101st Airborne Division and the remnants of the 60th and 28th Divisions in Bastogne, many historians will tell you that the Americans were surrounded.
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That is accurate but it is insufficiently descriptive. "Surrounded" does not really come close to representing the odds stacked up against our Paratroopers by mid-day on Friday.
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A group of 18,000 Paratroopers, including approximately 2,000 untrained replacement troops who had never seen combat, were facing 45,000 fighters from the Fifth Panzer Army’s XLVII Panzer Corps with the newest Tiger tanks.
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The Paratroopers were led by an acting commander.
They were low on ammunition, and their medical detachment was destroyed earlier that morning.
The Tiger tanks severed the last open road south out of Bastogne, completing a full encirclement of our boys.
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To any rational observer, Bastogne was lost.
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Shakespeare told us in “As You Like It" that misery makes some men beggars and other men kings.
In this misery, in this incredible adversity, in a muddy, snow-dusted godforsaken Belgian town, the Paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division emerged as kings.
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Around 11:30 AM: Two German officers with two German enlisted troops waving a white flag approached the 101st's Staff Sergeant Carl Dickinson, Technical Sergeant Oswald Butler, and medic Private First Class Ernest Premetz.
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One of the Germans, speaking English, told the Americans that he had a message for the commanding officer.
Carl Dickinson [pictured here] and Oswald Butler blindfolded the two officers and escorted them to their command post. Premetz remained with the two enlisted.
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The German officers were escorted to the command post of F Company, 327th Glider Infantry Regiment [a subordinate unit of the 101st Airborne].
The command post was basically a large foxhole located in a wooded area about a quarter-mile away
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At the command post, the German officers met the F Company Commander, Captain James Adams. The Germans handed Captain Adams this letter.
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The letter, signed by this man, Heinrich Freiherr von Lüttwitz, commander of the XLVII Panzer Corps, offered the 101st a dignified exit from an impossible situation. The Americans had two hours to surrender, or the German tanks would close in and kill everyone.
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Leaving the blindfolded German officers with his troops, Captain Adams set off to find General McAuliffe, the acting 101st Airborne Division commander.
It took 50 minutes for the note to reach McAuliffe.
By that time, the general had 70 minutes to surrender.
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It took him about 9 seconds to make a decision. “Nuts!” he said. (In 1940’s America “Nuts” was an expression of anger, akin to “Go to hell!").
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McAuliffe wrote that an 8-word answer on the bottom of the German note and directed that it be delivered back to the German officers.
He wrote 8 words: To the German Commander. Nuts!
-The American Commander
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This man, Colonel Joseph Harper, the commander of the 327th Glider Regiment, carried the note back to the German officers and removed their blindfolds.
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The German officers did not understand McAuliffe's note. They thought it may have been the start of some kind of surrender negotiation
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Colonel Harper explained that they were mistaken; “Nuts!” meant that the Americans were absolutely not going to surrender.
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The Germans were stunned. “We will kill many Americans. We will close in on you."
“Be on your way,” Harper politely told them to depart.
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Everything described above is accurate. This account is confirmed by four first-hand reports (to include one written by one of the German officers) in original source documents on file at the Army Heritage Center in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
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This exchange would grow to become one of the most legendary stories in American military history.
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Due to this story, Tony McAuliffe has become a global symbol of the grit and pride of the 101st Airborne Division.
Pictured here is the general's bust in Place McAuliffe, a square near the center of Bastogne named in Tony’s honor.
FINAL
For the next five days, inspired by their gritty commander, the men of the 101st Airborne Division would fight like lions.
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Maxwell Taylor is just now returning to the fight from DC as his 101st is fully encircled.
Lawton Collins' VII Corps & Matthew Ridgway's XVIII ABN Corps are barely hanging on in the North.
Now another fabled General enters the drama.
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For the most part, the Allies are holding the line and keeping the Germans from advancing too far.
However, the German main push [see the center of this map] now starts to widen and moves north [6th Panzer Army] and south [5th Panzer Army] of Bastogne.
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Patton's Third Army is called in to try to cut the Panzer Divisions off from the South.
Early morning, the 82nd Airborne Division digs in along the front lines in the Ardennes' northern sector.
A tank destroyer from the 7th Armored Division moving back passes a lone 82nd trooper digging a foxhole.
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The vehicle commander, unsure of his location, stops the vehicle and asks the trooper if this is the frontline.
The trooper, Private First Class Thomas Martin, replies, “Are you looking for a safe place?” The tank destroyer commander replies that he is.
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Martin, a paratrooper armed a mere rifle, talking to a commander in an armored vehicle: “Well, buddy, just pull your vehicle behind me. I am the 82nd Airborne and this is as far as the bastards are going!”
The tank destroyer commander is amazed by Martin's confidence.
Katherine Flynn Nolan, an Army nurse w/ the 53rd Field Hospital during the #BattleoftheBulge, was an angel in that frozen hell. Kate's platoon established a hospital in a Belgian school. Throughout the fighting, she treated US and German troops.
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In the Ardennes, Kate and her platoon suffered through the same conditions as all Soldiers.
In a 2014 interview with @AmericanLegion, she still recalled the brutal cold: “We were in tents with nothing but a pot-belly stove.”
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Kate's platoon treated the seriously wounded. "Keeping them warm & keeping them alive was our job." The platoon moved around from one infantry unit to another. "We had four hours to get the tents up and be ready for patients. Sometimes they came in b/f we were ready."
1 of 16: WE ARE ALL JEWS HERE: THE STORY OF RODDIE EDMONDS
One of the most moving and relevant stories of the Battle of the Bulge, or any American Soldier in any war, is that of Master Sergeant Roddie Edmonds, a Knoxville, Tennessee native, who served with the 106th Infantry.
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Roddie was captured early on in the Battle of the Bulge, on December 19th, when Panzer forces plowed through his unit.
He, along with almost his entire regiment, was forced to surrender.
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The men were transported to the Stalag IX-A POW camp in Ziegenhain, Germany.
Roddie was the senior enlisted American Soldier at the site. As such, he was the conduit between all American Soldiers and their German captors.
Hey there! It's us! Thanks for following our Battle of the Bulge series!
Got time for a quick thread on Allied intelligence and German deception? Just give us 19 tweets.
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Many of you have pointed out how critical we’ve been of the Allied generals in our Battle of the Bulge series thus far. We’ve mentioned the remarkable failure of Allied intelligence that led to the smashing initial success of the Ardennes Counteroffensive.
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We should mention, however, as some of you have in our DMs, the totality of circumstances weighing on the matter led Eisenhower and Bradly to believe the German forces had nothing left in terms of a counterpunch in the Ardennes.
Back to our no-b.s. Battle of the Bulge account. Here we are in Bastogne, mid-day, Wednesday, December 20, 1944.
Let's take a look at the 101st Airborne's force array.
[if you haven't been following along, may be worth going back through our threads]
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Many accounts of the 101st in Bastogne would lead you to believe that [acting commander] Tony McAuliffe’s 101st Airborne fought alone against a multi-German corps attack. Not true.
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The 101st finds odds & ends laying about: engineer, artillery, & armor elements that were in the area when the German counteroffensive started & had survived the initial thrust. McAuliffe smartly takes these bits and pieces and incorporates them into his interior lines.