[1 of 19]

76 years ago tonight, James Hendrix [and we're not talking about the one who briefly served in the 101st], a bazooka man with the 4th Armored Division, was on patrol near Assenois, Belgium.
[2 of 19]

The day after Christmas saw James' 4th Armored Division put pressure on the final German holdout ahead of the southern sector in Bastogne.
[3 of 19]

The 19-year-old had a tough life up to that point.

The oldest of 14 children in Lepanto, Arkansas, he had to leave school in the third grade to work in the fields with his sharecropper father.
[4 of 19]

On December 26, 1944, he was with the leading element engaged in the final thrust to break through to Bastogne.
[5 of 19]

~ 7PM, his element is halted by a fierce combination of artillery and small arms fire.

A Panzer element is moving directly toward his company [Company C, 53rd Armored Infantry Battalion].
[6 of 19]

James is having none of it. He jumps out of his half-track and advanced against two 88mm guns with only his rifle, forcing the German mortar crews to surrender.

He isn't done.
[7 of 19]

James then runs to the aid of two 4th Armored Division Soldiers, holding off two German machine guns until the wounded men were evacuated.

He isn't done.
[8 of 19]

Braving enemy sniper fire and exploding mines, he then runs to pull another wounded Soldier out of a burning half-track.

He pulls the man out, extinguishes his clothes, and treats the man's wounds.
[9 of 19]

After the war, he was invited to the White House to receive the Medal of Honor from President Harry Truman presented James with the Medal of Honor in a White House ceremony.

James had never heard of the Medal of Honor and was honored to meet his president.
[10 of 19]

The night before the ceremony, the Willard Hotel in DC where James and his Family were staying, refused the Hendrix family entry into its dining room.

The reason: James' father did not have a jacket and tie.
[11 of 19]

James, who felt he lacked the social graces for the White House, was terrified he'd somehow embarrass his unit in the presence of Truman, but James and the humble Missouri farmer's son hit it off.
[12 of 19]

But James' story doesn't end there.
[13 of 19]

After the war, James reenlist to serve as a Paratrooper.

In 1949, a catastrophic mishap during a training jump on Fort Benning: James' main T-7 chute got caught in his left boot buckle as he exited the C-47. He smartly opened his reserve.
[14 of 19]

Upon opening, James' reserve wrapped around his main chute. He was in a free fall.

~ 300 feet from James wrestled the reserve free and it partially opened.
[15 of 19]

Moments before hitting the ground, he formed a "V" with his body -- keeping head and feet high, grabbing his ankles.

He landed on his back in a plowed field, cushioned enough by the remnants of the chutes to escape with only severe bruises.
[16 of 19]

Hearing this story, Harry Truman invited James back to the White House.

Truman told James he couldn't believe their luck: he somehow was reelected president and James somehow survived a parachute failure.
[17 of 19]

Truman legitimately saw himself in James: a simple man who rose to greatness when his Nation needed it.
[18 of 19]

James fought in the Korean War and retired as an Army Master Sergeant in 1965.
[END]

James died of throat cancer at age 77 in 2002. He left behind four daughters and eight grandchildren.

What a set of stories he left them with.

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More from @18airbornecorps

28 Dec
[1 of 9]

Back to the Battle of the Bulge.

He's late.

Thursday, December 28, 1944, ~ 2:30 PM.

Delayed by fog and snowbanks, Eisenhower's command train pulls into a rail siding in the Belgian town of Hasselt three hours behind schedule. Image
[2 of 9]

Ike is there to meet with Monty.

Ike needs to get the bellicose Brit on board with this plan [we're calling it the "middle option" plan] we showed you yesterday. Image
[3 of 9]

Monty is good with the plan, but he believes it's too early to counterattack.

Monty makes his case: intel suggests another (final) impending German attack, so we should build up our defenses & wait rather than attack. Image
Read 9 tweets
27 Dec
1 of 9:

Back to our continuing Twitter reenactment of the Battle of the Bulge

If you haven’t been following along, you’ll need to at least read this thread.

2 of 9:

Here's the situation on Wednesday, December 27, 1944: The Allies, feeling confident they can hold the Germans, look to settle on a plan to erase the bulge.

Montgomery still has a lot of concerns about the Patton / Ridgway / Collins plan.
3 of 9:

Many on here have been very critical of Monty (@shelby3a is certainly no fan) but Monty's not the only one who had reservations about this simultaneous push directly north south.
Read 9 tweets
27 Dec
[1 of 7]

This #SundayMorning morning, we remember General Patton's prayer for good weather to rescue the American Soldiers and Belgian citizens encircled by German forces in Bastogne during the #BattleOfTheBulge.
[2 of 7]

On December 22, 1944, foul skies, dark clouds, and limited visibility negated Patton's advantages in air power and movement and maneuver over the Panzer force enemies.
[3 of 7]

With his Third Army approaching the Ardennes, Patton ordered that all ~ 250,000 Soldiers under his command be issued a small card with this prayer.
Read 8 tweets
26 Dec
[1 of 9]

KILL SHOT

So let's step back from Bastogne a bit here. Let's zoom out from the tactical to the operational.
[2 of 9]

On this day 76 years ago, this fella, Lawton Collins, the VII Corps Commander, meets with Matthew Ridgway in the XVIII Airborne headquarters in Werbomont, Belgium.

Together, Collins & Ridgway devise a plan to take advantage of momentum gained by Patton's 3rd Army.
[3 of 9]

The plan: a kill shot.

The VII Corps & XVIII Corps attack from the North while Patton's 3rd Army pushes north and cuts off the Germans from the South. Essentially, they'll meet in the middle of the bulge, leaving an isolated pocket of German tank forces on each side.
Read 9 tweets
26 Dec
A KING ENTERS BASTOGNE

The Battle of the Bulge Continues

[1 of 12]
[2 of 12]

Benedict Arnold's thrust at Saratoga.

The defeat of Pickett's Charge.

The first 48 hours of the American Meuse-Argonne offensive in WWI
[3 of 12]

The Great Moments in battle can serve as characters unto themselves, role players shifting the ground beneath a tragedy.
Read 12 tweets
25 Dec
[1 of 20]

Christmas Day, 1944, Battle of the Bulge Day 9

Many American Soldiers (and probably many on the other side) hoped for a repeat of the WWI Christmas truce. No such luck.
[2 of 20]

Leaders are neither side were interested in losing momentum.

Remember, at this time, our boys held a tenuous thin line against the best combined armed force the German army could muster. We weren’t going to entertain the idea of a truce.

The fight continued.
[3 of 20]

The weather cleared enough to allow Allied bombers to fully enter the fight [all sectors] for the first time since the German counteroffensive began on December 16th.

While skies lightened, it actually grew colder on the ground. It was absolutely freezing.
Read 20 tweets

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