| The 88th Infantry Division was activated at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma on 15
July 1942 under the command of Major General John E.
Sloan. On that day, standing on the dusty, hot parade ground, on behalf of
the fledgling Division, General Sloan accepted the challenge from the President
of the 88th Division Veterans Association to, take up the job we
didnt get done.
In response, referring to the Great War veterans present, General Sloan
assured onlookers that, their faith will be sustained, their record
maintained and the glory of the colors never will be sullied as long as one man
of the 88th still lives.
It was a solemn and demanding pledge, but one that the men of the 88th
would keep through some of the hardest-fought battles of the Second World War.
General Sloan drove the soldiers of the 88th hard, from activation
throughout all of its pre-deployment training. Comprised overwhelmingly of
draftees, after basic training for the Divisions recruits, small unit
training was conducted at Camp Gruber. Next, the 88th participated in Third
Army Louisiana Maneuvers #3 from mid-June 1943, and moved to Fort Sam Houston,
Texas, in late August before staging Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia in November.
From the Hampton Roads Port of Embarcation, the 88th sailed for North Africa,
arriving in Casablanca, French Morocco, on 15 December.
The Division next moved to Algeria just before the end of the year, and
conducted intensive training for employment in Italy. Under the command of the
Assistant Division Commander, Brigadier General Paul W. Kendall, an advance
party departed for Italy on 26 December, and went into the line as observers on
4-5 January, attached to 3rd, 34th, and 36th Infantry Divisions, and the
British 5th, 46th, and 56th Divisions. On 3 January 1944, a member of this
advance echelon became the 88ths first KIA when Sergeant William A.
Streuli of Paterson, New Jersey (A forward observer in B/339th Field Artillery
Battalion) was killed by fragments from a bomb dropped by a Luftwaffe
aircraft in the 34th Infantry Division sector. Lieutenant Elwin Ricketts,
Battery B Executive Officer, became the first WIA when he was wounded in the
same attack.
The main body of the 88th was transported to Italy in early February 1944,
arriving in the Naples area in increments as they were ferried across from
Oran, Algeria. The first Division unit into the line was 2nd Battalion, 351st
Infantry, which relieved elements of the Texas Divisions 141st Infantry
Regiment near Cervaro on 27 February. Early the next day, firing in support of
a French unit, the first artillery round fired in combat by an 88th DIVARTY
unit was sent downrange by Battery C, 913th Field Artillery Battalion. Its
target was a registration point at the Monte Cassino Abbey, the rubble of which
was occupied by the Germans after the Allies bombed it, and not before.
The entire Division moved into the line on 4 March, and at 1000 hours on 5
March 1944 assumed responsibility for the sector previously occupied by the
British 5th Division. At the same time, the 88th came under the control of the
British X Corps, and deployed its three infantry regiments on line from the
Mediterranean into the foothills to the east. Opposing the 88th in the strong
fortified positions of the Gustav Line, were the German 71st and 94th
Infantry Divisions.
The Blue Devil infantry spent the next two months occupying and improving
defensive positions and patrolling, while DIVARTY fired harassing and
interdiction missions at German positions and suspected and known lines of
communication.
At 2300 on 11 May, American, British, British Commonwealth, French, and
Polish guns began a massive barrage, behind which the entire Allied front in
Italy began their last attack on the Gustav Line. Finally, the first US Army
division comprised primarily of draftees would be tested in the crucible of a
major operation.
In less than an hour, the 350th Infantry Regiment captured Mt. Damiano, key
terrain overlooking the flank of the French units attacking on the
Divisions right. In that action, Staff Sergeant Charles W. Shea of
F/350th took charge of his platoon after the platoon leader was killed and the
platoon sergeant was wounded, and led an assault which knocked the defenders
out of their well-prepared positions. For his actions that day, Staff Sergeant
Shea became the first Blue Devil to earn the Medal of
Honor.
The rest of the Division also pushed hard and forced the stubborn foe off
the Gustav Line. The 351st Infantry stormed into Santa Maria Infante and
engaged in a particularly bitter battle with the German defenders there. After
more than two days of vicious combat, the 351st seized Santa Maria, and any
doubts that a well-trained draftee division could fight as well as
Regular Army or National Guard units were dispelled.
As the 349th Infantry Regiment passed through the 351st and continued the
attack to the north, the 88ths operations took on aspects of a pursuit,
one of the most challengingand exhaustingmissions possible for an
infantry unit in mountains. Yet the elements of the Division doggedly pursued
the withdrawing Germans, annihilating them where they chose to stand, and
chasing them up and over the endless Italian hills. Through towns like Itri,
Fondi, and Roccgorga, the Blue Devils drove on toward Rome, effectively
destroying the German 94th Infantry Division in the process. So badly
battered was the 94th that it had to be withdrawn to Germany for
reconstitution, and did not return to combat until October.
Surging northward, elements of the 88th made contact with Allied units
breaking out of the Anzio beachhead on 29 May, and were the first to enter the
Eternal CityRome on 4 June.
After the fall of Rome, the 88th was pulled out of the line to refit and
prepare for subsequent operations. Those operations began on 5 July, when the
Division relieved the 1st Armored Division in the vicinity of Pomerance.
As the British, British Commonwealth, and French colonial forces opened
their drive to the Germans next line of defense, the Gothic Line above
the River Arno, they attacked on the east of the 88th toward Firenze. At the
same time, other US forces attacked toward Livorno on the west coast. Between
these, the 88th was ordered to seize Volterra, an ancient Etruscan fortress
town with a spectacular view of its approaches for miles around.
The Division attacked Volterra at 0500 on 8 July with the 349th and 350th
Infantry Regiments abreast, with the 351st in reserve. Intending to envelop the
objective from both sides, the attack successfully drove the defenders of the
veteran 90th Panzer Grenadier Division from their choice terrain.
Volterra was secure by 2200 hours.
While performing security duties on the Divisions left flank, the
351st Infantry Regiment unexpectedly ran into a hornets nest near
Laiatico on 9 July. Here, the regiment encountered Grenadier Regiment
1060, an element of the recently-disbanded 92nd Infantry Division
now attached to the 362nd Infantry Division, as well as other elements
of the 90th Panzer Grenadiers. After being initially repulsed on 11
July, the regiment attacked again on the 12th with the 2nd and 3rd Battalions
up and the 1st in reserve. The 3rd Battalion tore into the 1060ths 1st
Battalion, destroying it and killing the enemy battalion commander. By the
early morning of 13 July, all regimental objectives were secure; for its part
in the attack, the 3rd Battalion, 351st Infantry Regiment was later awarded the
Distinguished Unit Citation.
By 25 July, the Fifth Armys offensive power had been spent; the loss
of VI Corps and its veteran 3rd, 36th, and 45th Infantry Divisions to the
impending invasion of Southern France prevented it from continuing the drive
further to the north. The removal of the French Expeditionary Corps for
participation in the same operation also diminished Allied combat power in
Italy. Above the Arno, the units of the Germans Army Group Southwest
were finishing their preparations for defense of the Gothic Line, and the
Allied forces of the US Fifth and British Eighth Armies were going to require
every ounce of power they could muster to breach the heavily fortified line in
the mountains that ran from the Ligurian coast in the east to the Adriatic in
the west.
Perhaps the most significant change in the 88ths history to that point
occurred in August 1944, when Major General Sloan was transferred first to a
hospital in Italy, then to the States for treatment of a recurring disease.
General Sloan had built the division from activation through all of its
training, and had led the 88th into combat. A tough and demanding trainer, his
insistence on excellence had paid off in victory and saved lives
and
proven that the US Armys divisions made up primarily of
conscriptsthe largest category of units, just coming into the line in
1944could be highly effective on the battlefield.
General Sloan was succeeded by the Divisions Assistant Commander,
Brigadier General Paul W. Kendall. Kendall had
served with the 88th through stateside training and had established a very
visible presence throughout the Divisions combat to that point. His
succession to Division command seemed only natural to the most of the Blue
Devils, and while General Sloan would be missed, the turbulence inevitably
created by the departure of any respected and experienced leader was certainly
greatly attenuated by General Kendalls assumption of command.
Allied forces in Italy attacked toward the Gothic Line on 10 September, and
penetrated it in the central and Adriatic sectors, but the Germans remained
ensconced in their mountain fortifications in the west, and it was up to the
Blue Devils to drive them out in their zone. The Divisions history,
The Blue Devils in Italy, sums up the Gothic Line assault this way.
Each veteran and survivor has his own personal tale of horror, his
own nightmare of those forty-four days and nights which blended together in one
long drawn-out hell. It has been said that all the mornings were dark,
all the days were just different colors of gray and all the nights were
black. And all the time up in those mountains north of Florence was just
borrowed time. The terrain was so rough the Germans figured that no troops in
the world could get through the few heavily defended mountain passes. But the
Blue Devils made it, through the passes or over the mountain tops. The weather
was so bad that the Germans thought no foot soldiers or vehicles could possibly
operate in the mud and slime. But the Blue Devils walked and rode throught the
worst of it. The defenses and concrete, mined emplacements were so formidable
that the Germans estimated they were impregnable. But the Blue Devils stormed
and shattered the biggest and the best of them. (page 126)
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Perhaps the most spectacular fighting of that raw, rainy autumn took place
on three craggy mountain peaks in late September and early October. On 27
September, elements of the 350th Infantry Regiment linked up with Italian
partisans and occupied Mt. Battaglia without opposition. However, over the next
six days, the Green Devils of the German 1st Parachute Division
attacked fiercely and without surcease in an effort to seize this key terrain.
Their efforts were in vain, however, as the 350th committed everything it had,
including headquarters clerks, and threw back every assault to retain the
critical mountain top. Casualties were grave50% of the regiment, with all
but one company commander killed or woundedand acts of extraordinary
valor had been almost common. For its part in the brutal fighting on Mt.
Battaglia, the 2nd Battalion, 350th Infantry was later
awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation, and for his gallantry and
intrepidityat the cost of his lifeCaptain Robert Roeder, CO of Company G, was awarded the
Medal of Honor.
While the 350th was grimly holding on to Mt. Battaglia, the 349th Infantry
Regiment was attacking the village of Belvedere enroute to its objective, Mt.
Grande. At Belvedere, it earned laurels of its own, if from a distinctly
different source. Referring to the 349ths assault, a German officer
captured in the fighting there remarked to his captors that, In nine
years of service, I have fought in Poland, Russia, and Italynever have I
seen such spirit I would be the proudest man in the world if I could command a
unit such as the one which took Belvedere. Few comments could be more
telling than a profound compliment from an opponent. Even as the Kraut
Killers (349th) and Battle Mountain (350th) regiments were
engaged in these ferocious and costly actions, the 351st Infantry Regiment was
locked in its own ferocious struggle for Mt. Capello. As the author of The Blue
Devils in Italy put it, The battle for Capello
was a struggle
between German soldiers who would not withdraw and American troops who would
not be stopped. (p. 133) The fighting raged for days, sometimes literally
at bayonet point,until the 1st and 2nd Battalions secured the top of the
mountain. For its part in the battle, the 2nd
Battalion, 351st Infantry Regiment was later awarded the Distinguished Unit
Citation.
Opposed by elements of the Luftwaffes elite 1st Parachute
Division (the defenders of Monte Cassino earlier in the year), the 88th
slugged forward through seemingly endless mountains toward the Po Plain. In the
total of 44 days of rain, mud, terror, ferocity, and blood that was the
campaign in the North Appenines for the Blue Devils, there were many tactical
victories, but no ultimate operational success. Like the rest of the fighting
elements of the Fifth Army, the Divisions soldiers were just too
exhausted to push further. Company G, 351st came closest to breaking through,
but was literally wiped out at Vedriano, on the very verge of the Po Valley
southeast of Bologna, on 24 October.
The 88th went over to the defensive in late October and patrolled, improved
positions, and rehabilitated its combat troops as best it could through the
oncoming winter of 1944-45. The Division relieved the 85th Infantry Division in
its sector on 22 November, and was in turn itself relieved for general
rehabilitation on 13 January.
After a brief interval out of the line, the Blue Devils were again committed
on 24 January in relief of the 91st Infantry Division near Loiano and
Livergnano. After more patrolling and maintenance of defensive positions, the
Division was pulled out of the line again for further rehabilitation, but also
special training intended to prepare it for the impending spring offensive.
That offensive, which would finally defeat the Wehrmacht in Italy, commenced
on April Fools Day with a supporting attack by the 92nd Infantry Division
on the Ligurian coast in the west to draw German forces away from the point of
the impending main effort.
Another supporting attack, in much greater strength, was launched by the
British Eighth Army on the Adriatic coast on 9 April. Finally, with the German
reserves being decisively committed to meet these attacks at the extreme ends
of the line in Italy, on 14 April, Fifth Army jumped off in the main attack
against the German center.
The 88ths attack began at 2230 hours on 15 April, as its infantry
regiments lunged toward Monterumici. In two days of fearsome fighting, the Blue
Devils knocked the German defenders off the key ridge; they could not have
known it at the time, but the German defense of Monterumici was the last
well-organized resistance that the 88th would encounter.
Once past Monterumici, the 88th was on its way across the Po and to the
Alps. Verona fell on 25 April, followed by Vicenza three days later. German
forces in Italy surrendered on 2 May, although it took until early the next day
to notify all Blue Devil units of the capitulation. On 4 May, elements of the
349th Infantry Regiment linked up with units from the 103rd Infantry
Divisions 409th Infantry Regiment coming down from Austriawhere
German forces had yet to surrenderin the Brenner Pass, marking the
long-sought union of Allied forces attacking from Italy with those which had
originally landed in France and fought their wary through the Reich.
The Blue Devil Divisions accomplishments in its 344 days in combat
reflect the valor, commitment, and unwavering devotion to duty of its soldiers.
Not on ly did the 88th earn high praise from the likes of General Mark Clark,
Commanding General of Fifth Army and a widely-recognized hard taskmaster, but
it was even grudgingly admired by experienced enemy senior officers.
Generalmajor Karl-Lothar Schulz, Commanding General of the famed 1st Parachute
Division and one of only 159 recipients of the Knights Cross with with
Oak Leaf and Swords, told his interrogators, the 88th Division is the
best Division we have ever fought against. A written estimate of enemy
unit effectiveness prepared by German intelligence echoed Schulzs
sentiments. It rated the 88th, a very good division with excellent
fighting material. It also noted that after VI Corps departed for France
that the 88th was the best US division in Italy, with very
good leadership.
In its 344 days of combat, the 88th Infantry Division lost 2,298 men killed
in action (258 more died of wounds) and 9,225 men wounded. Although the cost
was high, the Blue Devilsas the first of the draftee
divisions to see combatproved that well-trained, well-led American
citizen-soldiers were equal or superior to anything the vaunted Wehrmacht could
muster, under even the most arduous of circumstances. With the victory to which
they contributed so much accomplished, their General Sloans pledge to
keep faith with the Divisions veterans and to uphold the Divisions
standards was fulfilled.

Sources.
Delaney, John P. The Blue Devils in Italy. Washington, D.C.: The
Infantry Journal Press, 1947.
Griess, Thomas (ed.) The Second World War: Europe and the
Mediterranean. Wayne, New Jersey: Avery Publishing Group, 1989.
Madej, W. Victor. German Army Order of Battle: Field Army and Officer
Corps, 1939-1945. Game Publishing Company, Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1985.
. Hitler's Dying Ground: Description and Destruction of the German
Army. Game Publishing Company, Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1985.
. Hitler's Elite Guards: Waffen-SS, Parachutists, U-Boats.
Game Publishing Company, Allentown, Pennsylvania., 1985.
Schmitz, Peter and Klaus-Jürgen Thies. Die Truppenkennzeichen der
Verbände und Einheiten der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen-SS und ihre
Einsätze im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945. Band I: Das Heer. (The Unit
Insignia of the Organizations and Units of the German Armed Forces and
Waffen-SS and their Operations in the Second World War, 1939-1945. Volume I:
The Army.) Osnabrück, Niedersachsen, Germany, 1987.
Stanton, Shelby. Order of Battle: U.S. Army, World War II. Novato,
California: Presidio Press, 1984.
Monthly Operations Reports, 349th, 350th, and 351st Infantry Regiments,
April 1944 - April 1945.
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