The Day of Battle (105 page)

Read The Day of Battle Online

Authors: Rick Atkinson

Tags: #General, #Europe, #Military, #History, #bought-and-paid-for, #Non-Fiction, #War, #World War II, #World War; 1939-1945, #Campaigns, #Italy

BOOK: The Day of Battle
9.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

They had much in common
: Larrabee, 13 (“
loved the military side
”); Maurice Matloff, “Mr. Roosevelt’s Three Wars: FDR as War Leader,” Harmon Lecture, No. 6, U.S. Air Force Academy, 1964, 6 (“
diversionist tendencies
”); Pogue, 316 (
combat casualty figures
); Meacham, 228 (“
a wonderful old Tory
”).

Churchill could draw near:
Larrabee, 644; OH, Stephen T. Early, June 9, 1947, MHI, OCMH, WWII, General Miscl (“
wished to have things done
”); Richard Overy,
Why the Allies Won,
261 (“
Not a tidy mind
”); Larrabee, 644 (“
He
decides”).

He reduced his own political philosophy:
Overy, 260; Larrabee, 626 (
Four Freedoms
); Kimball, ed., vol. I, 337 (“
same decade
”); Elliott Roosevelt,
As He Saw It,
130 (“
on the decline
”).

America was ascendant
: memo, Robert Sherwood to Harry Hopkins, May 13, 1943, H.L. Hopkins Papers, Sherwood Collection, book 7, TRIDENT, box 329, FDR Lib.

But if Britain was on the decline:
Harold Macmillan,
War Diaries,
316 (“
great
torso”); Roosevelt, 126 (
sinus condition
); Matloff, “Mr. Roosevelt’s Three Wars,” 4–5.

Negotiations resumed: GS
IV, 419 (“
spirit of the chase
”); Garland, 21 (
refused to concede
);
FRUS
, 114 (“
extremely difficult
”).

It was a curious compromise:
msg, WD to DDE, #278, May 26, 1943, CCS cables, OCMH, NARA RG 319, 270/19/6/3, box 243;
GS
IV, 432.

The baby had been cut:
Danchev, 407.

TRIDENT
had another week:
diary, Henry A. Wallace, May 24, 1943, micro, FDR Lib (“
We Anglo-Saxons
”); Danchev (
fourteen stone steps
); Fraser, 346–47 (
two rare bird books
).

Rarely content: FRUS,
May 23, 1943; Doris Kearns Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time,
439 (
exhausted president
); Leahy, 162; Moran, 103–4 (“
a very tired man
”).

Harry Hopkins warned:
Goodwin, 439 (“
spoiled boy
”);
FRUS,
198 (“
piece of baggage
”); Moran, 111 (“
too much for us
”).

Still, the sweep of his rhetoric:
Gerald Pawle,
The War and Colonel Warden,
234; Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill,
vol. VII, 409 (“
War is full of mysteries
”);
Times
(London), May 20, 1943, 4 (“
By singleness of purpose
”); Grace Tully,
F.D.R., My Boss,
329 (“
catch phrases
”).

For the first time:
Harriman and Abel, 211; Leahy, 165 (“
mellow light
”);
FRUS,
377 (“
complete meeting of minds
”).


over-egged the pudding
”: Brian Holden Reid, “The Italian Campaign, 1943–1945: A Reappraisal of Allied Generalship,”
Journal of Strategic Studies,
vol. 13, no. 1 (March 1990), 128+.


the best I could get
”: Leahy, 163.

The dispatch of Allied armies:
Matloff, 76, 244.

Perhaps the greatest achievement:
André Malraux (“Let victory belong to those who made war without liking it”), quoted by Jean-Paul Sartre,
Modern Times,
cited in Danchev, xxvi.

At four
P.M.
on Tuesday:
PREM 4/72/3, UK NA.

Roosevelt sat in the armless wheelchair:
Seale, 947, 976–77 (
bulletproof glass
);
FRUS,
211–20 (
899th press conference
);
Times
(London), May 27, 1943, 1 (“
shaking the life
”).

C
HAPTER
1: A
CROSS THE
M
IDDLE
S
EA

Forcing the World Back to Reason

The sun beat down:
corr, Heinz Seltmann to author, June 9, 2005 (
neckties
); memo, GSP, No. 57, June 17, 1943, NARA RG 338, II Corps, plans & policy file, box 146 (
$25 fine
).

Algiers seethed:
Eric Sevareid,
Not So Wild a Dream,
362 (
merchant mariners
); Paul W. Brown,
The Whorehouse of the World,
134–35 (“
El Alamein
”); Benjamin A. Dickson, “G-2 Journal: Algiers to the Elbe,” MHI, 76 (“
Sand in your shoes
”); Peter Schrijvers,
The Crash of Ruin,
120 (
index fingers
).

Electric streetcars:
memo, DDE to E. Hughes, July 23, 1943, PP-pres, DDE Lib, box 58 (
amnesty
); Malcolm S. McLean, “Adventures in Occupied Areas,” ts, 1975, MHI, 31–32 (“
every conceivable
”); Sevareid, 361 (
young Frenchmen
and
Hotel Aletti
); F. Eugene Liggett, “No, Not Yet: Military Memoirs,” ts, n.d., ASEQ, 158th FA, 45th Div., MHI (
pantaloons
); “History, Mediterranean Base Section, Sept. 1942–May 1944,” CMH, 9-4 CA, 1944 (
ban on prostitution
).

Above it all
: “History of Allied Forces Headquarters,” CMH, 8-4 AD, vol. 2, Sept. 1945, sketch.

Hewitt lowered his salute:
“U.S. Naval Operations in the Northwestern African-Mediterranean Theater,” ts, n.d., HKH papers, box 3, NHC, 18.

With the ceremony at an end:
“History of Allied Forces Headquarters,” 243–46 (
approached four thousand
); “The Administrative History of the Eighth Fleet,” ts, n.d., U.S. Naval History Division, #139, folder 3, 9–10 (
twelve thousand
); “Notes for Meeting with Colonel Warden,” Jan. 14, 1944, NARA RG 331, AFHQ micro, R-225-B (
seven undersea cables
); S. W. Roskill,
The War at Sea, 1939

1945,
vol. III, part 1, 127 (“
Carry out
”).

He was a fighting admiral:
OH, Floride Hewitt Taylor to author, Apr. 12, 2005, Newport, R.I.; L.S.B. Shapiro,
They Left the Back Door Open,
118 (“
well-upholstered
”); OH, HKH, John T. Mason, 1961, Col U OHRO, 5–6 (“
Softly Now
”); “Keuffel & Esser correspondence,” HKH, NHC, box 2; George Sessions Perry, “Why Don’t They Write About Hewitt?,”
Saturday Evening Post,
Dec. 16, 1944, 22+ (“
does his barking
”); OH, HKH, n.d., Julian Boit and James Riley, NHC, box 6, 1–2, 9 (
soup kitchen
).

He called for his staff car:
Walter Karig,
Battle Report: The Atlantic War,
233; David Williams,
Liners in Battledress,
151–53 (
false bow wave
); Ivan H. “Cy” Peterman, “U.S.S.
Savannah,

Philadelphia Inquirer,
Sept. 1943, SEM, box 55, NHC; Pyle, 6–7 (
Precautions against fire
).

Hewitt’s flagship:
war log, U.S.S.
Monrovia,
NARA RG 38, OCNO, WWII war diaries, box 1233; Karig, 233 (
ten to twenty officers
); A. J. Redway, “Admiral Jerauld Wright: The Life and Recollections of the Supreme Allied Commander,” ts, 1995, NHC, 295 (
fourteen hundred men
); action report, U.S.S.
Monrovia,
July 17, 1943, NARA RG 38, OCNO, WWII Action & Operational Reports, box 1231 (
200,000 rounds
).

Twenty typists:
Alexander S. Cochran, “Chicken or Eggs? Operations
TORCH
and
HUSKY
and U.S. Army Amphibious Doctrine,” paper, 14th Naval History Symposium, USNA, Sept. 1999.

Hewitt could remember:
Perry, “Why Don’t They Write About Hewitt?”; OH, Floride Hewitt Taylor to author, Apr. 12, 2005.

More than three thousand:
No two lists agree on the total number of vessels in
HUSKY;
estimates generally range from 2,500 to 3,200. Roskill, 127;
SSA,
28; HKH, AAR, “The Sicilian Campaign,” n.d., 1; “The Administrative History of the Eighth Fleet,” 20 (“
the most gigantic fleet
”).

tiny fortified island of Pantelleria:
Edith C. Rodgers, “The Reduction of Pantelleria and Adjacent Islands,” May 1947, AAF Historical Studies, No. 52, Air Historical Office, 40–45; “Allied Commander-in-Chief’s Report, Pantelleria Operations, June 1943,” 59–60; MEB, “The Fall of Pantelleria and the Pelagian Islands,” Feb. 1959, NARA RG 319, E 145, OCMH, R-Series Manuscripts, 270/19/30-31/6-2, R-115, 24–32a; memo, “Lessons from Operations Against Pantelleria,” July 12, 1943, AFHQ, “Survey and Analysis,” Pantelleria, CMH, Geog Italy, 384.3; Solly Zuckerman,
From Apes to Warlords,
185–95.

A map of the Mediterranean:
Robert A. Hewitt, SOOHP, Earl D. Bevan, 1982, MHI, 126; Thaddeus V. Tuleja, “H. Kent Hewitt,” in Stephen Howarth, ed.,
Men of War,
315 (
two variables
).

nine new variations of landing craft:
S.W.C. Pack,
Operation Husky,
44; Evelyn M. Cherpak, ed.,
The Memoirs of Admiral H. Kent Hewitt,
181 (
never been to sea
); “Notes on the Planning and Assault Phases of the Sicilian Campaign,” Combined Operations HQ Bulletin No. Y/1, Oct. 1943, 4 (
little was known
).

Much had been learned:
Harold Larson, “Handling Army Cargo in the Second World War,” ts, 1945, CMH, 4-13.1 AA 19, 242, 250 (
Schenectady Plan
); H. H. Dunham, “U.S. Army Transportation and the Conquest of Sicily,” Mongraph No. 13, March 1945, NARA RG 336, Chief of Transportation, ASF, Historical Program Files, box 141, 29 (
no plans for loading
); Walter B. Smith, “Mediterranean Operations,” Oct. 13, 1943, ANSCOL, L-2-43, SM-67, NARA RG 334, NWC Lib, 4 (
neglected to make room
); HKH, AAR, “The Sicilian Campaign,” n.d., 47 (
Every unit pleaded
).

Despite the risk:
AAR, Amphibious Force Transport QM, U.S. Atlantic Fleet, Aug. 6, 1943, in Army Observers, Amphibious Forces, MHI, 1–2; William Reginald Wheeler, ed.,
The Road to Victory: A History of Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation in World War II,
99; “The Administrative History of the Eighth Fleet,” 35 (
no bread pans
).

gas shells:
Eventually the mustard would turn up in several Sicilian ammo dumps, including a stockpile fifty miles inland at Nicosia, three weeks into the campaign. “History of Ordnance Service in the Mediterranean Theater, Nov. 1942–Nov. 1945,” CMH, 8-4 JA, 54.


I was frequently partisan
”: “The Reminiscences of George W. Bauernschmidt,” 1969–70, USNI OHD, 160.

A satire of censorship regulations
: John Mason Brown,
To All Hands,
193–94.

One airman tried to comply
: Fred Howard,
Whistle While You Wait
, 160; Steve Kluger,
Yank,
101 (“
headed for trouble
”).

More than half a million
: “Summary of Activities,” analysis and control div., NATOUSA, June 1, 1944, CMH, 3; Brown,
To All Hands,
7 (
civilian occupations
).


fierce world of death
”: Pyle, 2.

In the seven weeks
: E. N. Harmon to GCM, Aug. 13, 1943, GCM Lib, corr, box 70 (“
question of discipline
”); JPL, 13–14 (“
felt very sorry
”); Bernard Stambler, “Campaign in Sicily,” ts, n.d., vol. 2, CMH, 2-3.7 AA.L, 3 (“
self-maiming
”); corr, Joseph T. Dawson to family, May 22, 1943, 16th Inf, MRC-FDM (“
self-commiseration
”).


sense of the soldiering self
”: Samuel Hynes,
The Soldiers’ Tale,
151;
They were young:
“Age of Soldiers in Civil War, World War I and World War II,” Legislative and Policy Precedent File, 183/122, NARA RG 407, 270/49/17/7, box 34; John Muirhead,
Those Who Fall,
9 (“
our youth
”).


our most democratic war”:
Samuel Hynes, introduction,
Reporting World War II,
one-vol. abridgment, xx;
The Princeton Class of 1942 During World War II
; Lynn H. Nicholas,
The Rape of Europa,
223 (“
men of a new profession
”).

And what did they believe:
“Extract from Monthly Sanitary Report,” Aug. 31, 1943, MWC, corr, Citadel, box 3; Eric Larrabee,
Commander in Chief,
626 (
Four Freedoms
); Chandler, vol. II, 1276 (“
less than half
”); Margaret Bourke-White,
Purple Heart Valley,
73 (“
I was drafted
”).

Their pervasive

civilianness
”: Brown,
To All Hands,
224; Donald McB. Curtis,
The Song of the Fighting First,
132; Lawrence D. Collins,
The 56th Evac Hospital,
90; Paul Dickson,
War Slang,
113–23;
Three Years,
389 (
A single crude acronym
).

Yet they held:
Brown,
To All Hands,
224; George Biddle,
Artist at War,
123; John Sloan Brown,
Draftee Division,
103 (“
lick those bastards
”).

The same surveys:
Larrabee, 626.

Other books

The Alpine Journey by Mary Daheim
Ghost Thorns by Jonathan Moeller
The Kiss by Danielle Steel
Summerblood by Tom Deitz
Urge to Kill by John Lutz
Safe Without You by Ward, H.
House of Cards by W. J. May, Chelsa Jillard, Book Cover By Design
The Mark of Halam by Thomas Ryan
Lindsay's Surprise Crush by Angela Darling