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  751st Tank Battalion

May 27th, 2019

5/27/2019

3 Comments

 

            In Honor of Those Who Died
         at Anzio 75 Years Ago

        
It’s important on Memorial Day to honor those who gave their lives in service to our country, and to consider the reasons for their sacrifice.  Below are listed those men from the 751st Tank Battalion who were killed in action or went missing in action from May 23 to June 8, 1944.  During this two week period, the 751st participated in the breakout from Anzio and the subsequent liberation of Rome on June 4.  The men listed represent a more than three percent loss of the 750-man battalion in just two short weeks.   Kind of puts the sacrifice into perspective.


Killed In Action:

Irving T. Fraser, Jr., Captain
Victor E. Adoue, 1st Lieutenant
Robert L. Larson, 2nd Lieutenant
William H. Hopper, Staff Sergeant
Wiley O. Rush, Staff Sergeant
Ernest J. Bohman, Sergeant
Raymond R. Hoy, Sergeant
John J. Hunkler, Technician 4th Grade
John J. McNamee, Technician 4th Grade
Stanley L. Nemec, Technician 4th Grade
Howard L. Wade, Technician 4th Grade
John D. Doyle, Sr., Corporal
Elmer L. Johnson, Corporal
Glenmar L. Nelson, Corporal
William E. Noske, Corporal
William A. Woodard, Corporal
John J. Dougherty, Technician 5th Grade
Vernon Summers, Private First Class
Dorel L. Early, Private First Class
Arthur E. Garcia, Private First Class
Junior R. Jones, Private First Class
William G. Kemp, Private First Class
Fritz J. Lee, Private First Class
Bradley C. Penn, Private First Class
Valentine F. Santos, Private First Class
Arthur Rapp, Private First Class

 
Missing In Action:

Thomas H. Wingate, 1st Lieutenant
Eldon N. Dungy, Private First Class




3 Comments

June 4, 2014

6/4/2014

1 Comment

 

                     The Liberation of Rome
                                             June 4, 1944

On this day 70 years ago, after finally breaking out of the Anzio Beachhead, Allied forces liberated Rome, the first Axis capital to be captured.  The 751st Tank Battalion played an integral role in this event.  This was a tremendous achievement for the Allies, but it was overshadowed two days later by the cross-channel invasion at Normandy, “D-Day.”  And while the fighting raged on in France and Germany, Allied units in Italy, including the 751st, would continue fighting and dying for the next year with little of the media attention given those armies to the north. 

Those who participated in the Normandy landing deserve all the praise they’ve received for their role in defeating Nazi Germany.  But we should never forget that while the historic events of Normandy unfolded, the fighting continued unabated in other theaters around the globe.


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January 22nd, 2014

1/22/2014

25 Comments

 

Anzio
(Operation Shingle)
January 22, 1944-May 25, 1944

Picture
Take a moment to consider what our friends and relatives from the 751st Tank Battalion endured 70 years ago in the days and weeks following their landing at Anzio-Nettuno.  Consider the fact that even before they embarked upon their mission at Anzio-Nettuno, they had already undergone several hard battles since the landing at Salerno in September of the previous year, and before that, six months of bitter combat in the deserts of North Africa. 

While the landing at Anzio was initially unopposed by the Germans, the following four months would result in the toughest conditions the 751st Tank Battalion would encounter in the entire war.  Until the day he died in 2006, my father, Paul Neumiller, was haunted by the memories of the four months he and the 751st spent trapped on a beachhead ten miles long and seven miles deep.  Over the years, he shared a few of the more benign memories of Anzio with family and friends, while locking away the worst of them.

As he maneuvered his tank onto the beach at Anzio that January morning, Paul Neumiller and many of the men of the 751st were already battle-hardened.   But does “battle-hardened” merely suggest that the tankers of the 751st now had an expertise in warfare gained through their intense combat experiences?  In part, yes.  But in Paul’s case, at least, it also meant that he was no longer the man who had left the farm in North Dakota a year and a half earlier.  By now he seldom wrote home, drank whenever the opportunity presented itself, and took comfort not in letters from loved ones, but in the camaraderie of his front line buddies.  He was a man who saw no end in sight as far as the war was concerned, a man who, perhaps out of some sense of psychological self-preservation, had learned not to expect to see home again.  He had seen too many friends who he had known since basic training die appalling deaths, and knew of too many replacements for those friends who didn’t survive their first battles.  He was no longer under any self-delusions about his own chances for survival.  By January of 1944, the war for Paul and his comrades was not about global stability or the liberation of the oppressed, if it ever was, but about the personal struggle to live from one horrendous day to the next.  

Paul felt all these things even before he landed at Anzio, where he and his friends would face some of the worst combat conditions experienced by any American soldier in Europe during World War II.  He carried these thoughts ashore that day in 1944 without knowing that for the next four months he would be trapped with tens of thousands of other Allied soldiers in what the Germans would come to call “the largest self-sustaining P.O.W. camp in the world.”  And it would be another fourteen months before he would finally go home.

The Allies would finally break out of their prison at Anzio four months later on May 25, 1944, but in the meantime those tens of thousands of Allied soldiers would grapple daily with the enemy, and fate, in an effort to survive.  Thousands would perish.  Many thousands more would suffer broken bodies and tortured souls in an attempt to retain possession of their lives, and of a few square miles of Italian soil. 


                                                 *                             *                             *

In the coming months, I’ll post more details here of the torturous winter the 751st tolerated seven decades ago.  I’ll avoid the armchair quarterbacking common in much military writing, but will instead focus on the day to day struggle of the men of the 751st Tank Battalion.

Robert Neumiller



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    Robert Neumiller

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