Posted on 12/20/2006 5:22:46 PM PST by cold666pack
Can someone with military knowledge tell me what this title tells them?
"34th Signal Company Chronicle: Cassino and Its Abbey"
I know the author served in the 34th Infantry Division of the US Army, bur from this title, is it safe to assume he fought in Germany where there is an Abbey of Monte Cassino?
Not knowledgable about this type of terminology at all, and would be very grateful for some insight, so as to not make stupid mistakes when writing about it.
thx. that helps.
Thanks for the link to the book. My Grandma's brother was with the 34th; he spent the last two years of the war as a "guest" in Germany after being captured at Anzio. We have some newspaper articles from when he returned (he described the camp, guards, etc.), the original "MIA" telegram, and some photos from N. Africa.
I think I will pick up the book for some additional stories.
the author is from Pennsylvania though.
sorry, i was confused. I see now they were fighting the Germans IN Italy, where the Abbey was located. my bad.
I've got a few old WWII documentaries, Frank Capra type, the Battle of Cassino was a bloody one.
Most people dont know, almost 50% of all the deaths of US troops in Europe in WWII happened in Italy.
You're most welcome!!
Here's an interesting site.
http://www.sspxafrica.com/documents/2005_JanFeb/Bombing_of_Montecassino.htm
According to this 11 monks stayed in the abbey and only one died but he died of Typhoid.
And that for some reason the US had no problem bombing the crap out of this huge church, and that some people saw this as really nasty.
PLEASE DO NOT PILE ON, I LOVE THE USA.
Signal Company is communications, the name's from back in the days they when they used flags, but by WW2 it was radios, field phones and the like. Signal Company Chronicle is probably the company newsletter. Company is a unit, bigger than a platoon, smaller than a batallion.
Looking back, I'd say that people should have had a problem with bombing the abbey, starting with the commanding general. It was really nasty, and it caused a lot of allied casualties too.
Above I said John Huston, but I think you are right, it was Frank Capra, not Huston.
If you have a family connection with those events, I can recommend it even more.
The Ernie Pyle book called "Here is Your War" also covers the campaigns in N. Africa and Sicily.
Dad's unit was the 109th Combat Engineer Bn. He was at Anzio (but didn't go in w/ the first wave), then they went up the Italian mountains in the winter of 43-44.
PLEASE DO NOT PILE ON, I LOVE THE USA.
We also had no problem installing a second sun in the sky over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. But hey, if a country wants to start a war, unpleasant consequences are inevitable. I can't ell from your post if you are criticising the bombing or the lack of regret evidenced by the Americans, who were being ground up like sausage in the mountains of Italy
At Cassino, it was only after several attempts to capture the hill had failed that bombing of the monastery was authorized. So, I put the blame squarely where it belongs: on the Germans, for declaring war on the United States on 12/8/41 and then for using a monastery as a military strong point.
The 34th ID has a very proud legacy (and the legacy is still going on today).
Yeah, that's how I heard the story. The allies made multiple attempts, but no troops from any country could take the hill -- until someone decided to let the Poles have a go. They fought ferociously (almost suicidally) and finally won.
Didn't the Nisei troops in the 442nd have a part in this too? I thought this was where Sen. Inouye lost his arm.
As I understand it, that movie was never released because it made General Mark Clark look like an incompentent buffoon. Clark ordered attack after attack against the German (Gustav) line, in the face of murderous fire. Terrible casualties were incurred, many from some Texas-only infantry units. Commanders of those units curse Clark's name to this day.
I won't get into who was to blame for the destruction of Monte Casino, but it was a terrible tragedy. It was one of the oldest monuments of Christian European Civilization.
The Abbey at Montecasino was founded by Saint Benedict himself, the founder of the Benedictine order and the savior of European civilization.
It was destroyed four times: By the Langoberds, by the Saracens, by an earthquake, and by allied bombing.
According to most accounts, the first time it was bombed there were no German troops in it. Only lated, after the first bombing, did they move in. So, I suppose you can blame both the American and British commanders and the Germans for this destruction of an ancient and venerable monastery.
Here's a brief extract of a generally good history of the several battles of Montecasino at Wikepedia, concerning the bombing that did most of the damage:
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