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Soldier:
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Robert H.
Searl |
| Date:
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August
1944 |
| Location:
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Falaise, France |
| Unit: |
56th Signal Battalion |
The 56th Signal Battalion of the United States
Army, was re-activated at Fort Jackson, South Carolina on January
23, 1941 from a Cadre supplied from the 50th Signal Battalion located
at Camp McCoy, Wisconsin. In May 1941, the unit was complemented
with a group of 460 Selective Service Civilian Draftees from the
reception Centers at Camp Dix, NJ and Camp Upton, NY and initially
assigned to the First Corps. The period of service for the personnel
was to be for a period of one year in accordance with existing governmental
regulation. As a result of the December 7, 1941 action by the Japanese
at Pearl Harbor, and the declaration of war, the one year period
of service was extended.
On June 1942 the Battalion left Fort Jackson for
the staging area at Fort Dix, NJ and sailed the North Atlantic Ocean
aboard the troopship SS Argentina, in convoy from the New York Port
of Embarkation on July 1, 1942. The convoy arrived at Duncan, Scotland
on July 12, 1942 and the unit was ferried across the Irish Sea to
Belfast, Northern Ireland. During the stay in Northern Ireland the
Battalion was assigned to the Fifth Corps and encamped at Carrickfergus
and Lurgan where the unit strength was depleted in order to furnish
manpower to other Signal units preparing for the North Africa Campaigns.
Movement from Northern Ireland to Bristol, England was completed
in November 1942 where the unit was reorganized with plans for additional
equipment and personnel. An additional wire construction Company
was added to the organization in January 1943 in Cadre form. During
June 1943, many of the additions and replacements to the Battalion
arrived directly from the Shenango Replacement Depot located in
Camp Reynolds, Pa.
On June 6, 1944, elements of the Battalion engaged
in OPERATION NEPTUNE landed on Omaha Beach, France with the First
Army to furnish ship to shore communications for V Corps Headquarters
and wire, radio and messenger communications for the Divisions and
Corps troops ashore. During the Normandy campaign the Battalion
performed normal communication functions, but following the Allied
breakthrough, across France Belgium and Luxemburg, the Battalion
was fully extended. Radio and messenger communications were continuous
and wire networks were installed to the extent that supplies of
wire and gasoline were available.
The winter Ardennes campaign proved the most trying
test for the 56th Signal Battalion. Enemy shelling on all wire axis,
mud, sleet and snow and impossible travel conditions required herculean
efforts to keep communications functioning. At the end of hostilities,
May 9, 1945 the Battalion had reached Pilsen, Czechoslovakia. My
service with the Battalion began in May 1941 in the wire communications
group and I remained with the Battalion in that capacity throughout,
including the Initial D-Day Assault on the Normandy beaches to the
end of hostilities in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia in May 1945. Our mission
was to closely follow the actual combat troops and to ensure communications
between the various units.
The assignment and close proximity to the fighting
troops enabled involvement in the loss of life and devastation.
I landed on the sandy beach of Normandy on the morning of D+1 aboard
a Higgins landing craft and the prior days losses were evidenced
by the sand covered, partially hidden fallen troops of the early
hours of the attack and the masses of twisted metal of small boats
and vehicles. The menace of enemy heavy artillery was a constant
threat aimed at the landing operation that seemed like a steady
flow of ship to shore reinforcements without any regard for the
shelling. The fallen casualties, some piled on the beach area in
orderly fashion, all wore the olive drab uniform of the American
forces.
As recalled a short time later, this bloodstained
olive drab was in sharp contrast to the slate blue uniform of the
enemy forces as seen in grotesque positions of death found at the
scene of the encirclement and slaughter in the area of Falaise,
France in August 1944. There was no respite or escape for these
troops, almost completely surrounded and trapped, as both the air
and ground attack destroyed man, animal and machine without regard.
W itnessed and heard from vantage points outside the encirclement,
the air bombing attack was constant as was the sound of artillery.
When our unit passed through the area shortly after some of the
enemy had been able to escape through a small withdrawal route,
the amount of incredible destruction and loss of life was evident.
The pain and horror of war was found here with
both countless man and animal, some charred and burned, but still
recognizable. Vehicles and other war machines, still burning, were
upended and littered. Panzer Tanks, once powerful lethal weapons
of war, were reduced to smoking hulks, some with the fire wasted
bodies of once proud and majestic German youth draped in death across
the outside. In my 335 days of combat service in Europe, which included
the atrocities of the Buchenwald Concentration Camp, these recollected
scenes in Falaise were among the most horrid and appalling. In this
case, some that have experienced Falaise would say, justifiable
inhumanity. A blessing it was to move on in pursuit, with this unforgettable
scene behind us and the dreadful thoughts of those involved in the
cleansing, to restore the once beautiful countryside of the waste
and residue of war..
Battle Star Campaigns
Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland, Central Europe
Bronze Service Arrowhead - Initial Assault
335 Combat Days
1305 Combat Road Miles
R. H. Searl
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Personal
Photographs

Robert's personal warmap

Debris left in Falaise, France

Debris left in Falaise, France

Debris left in Falaise, France
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